Hi, in case anyone is still looking for a solution to routing WAN1 to one specific IP, and WAN2 to all others, here's how I've set it up via GUI:
1. Set static IP on the device that should use WAN1 to something lower than 128
2. Set the DHCP to issue IPs starting from .128
3. Setup WAN routes so that your static IP uses WAN1 and IPs starting from .128 are using WAN2, like in the attached picture. In case the picture doesn't show - source IP should be 192.168.2.128/25 for the WAN2 - that's the main thing here that allows traffic from WAN2 to DHCP hosts.
the router itself is still switching between the WANs on every request
Great thread guys, thx.
There is option in transmission config file: "bind-address-ipv4": "*.*.*.*"
I use it to redirect all trafic to and from transmission (runnig on the router) to my second wan (WISP).
Hi, in case anyone is still looking for a solution to routing WAN1 to one specific IP, and WAN2 to all others, here's how I've set it up via GUI:
1. Set static IP on the device that should use WAN1 to something lower than 128
2. Set the DHCP to issue IPs starting from .128
3. Setup WAN routes so that your static IP uses WAN1 and IPs starting from .128 are using WAN2, like in the attached picture. In case the picture doesn't show - source IP should be 192.168.2.128/25 for the WAN2 - that's the main thing here that allows traffic from WAN2 to DHCP hosts.
Check this out:Thanks. I've been looking for a solution against manually routing each device as well. However, can I understand what "/25" is suppose to mean?
Thank you I've been searching all day for this. Was looking for a way to randomly assign half of my users to DSL modem 1 (WAN1) and the other half to DSL modem 2 (WAN2) as DSL is our only option, the ISP does not allow bonded DSL in this location (remote Hawaii), and we desperately needed a way to spread out the traffic at this B&B.Hi, in case anyone is still looking for a solution to routing WAN1 to one specific IP, and WAN2 to all others, here's how I've set it up via GUI:
1. Set static IP on the device that should use WAN1 to something lower than 128
2. Set the DHCP to issue IPs starting from .128
3. Setup WAN routes so that your static IP uses WAN1 and IPs starting from .128 are using WAN2, like in the attached picture. In case the picture doesn't show - source IP should be 192.168.2.128/25 for the WAN2 - that's the main thing here that allows traffic from WAN2 to DHCP hosts.
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