Dear Support, I would like to know that if I weight the link more than the data or internet usage, it will run in and out of the link with the highest weight, for example, ISP1 = 2, ISP2 = 5, it will run on the ISP2 line, right? And If I set it like this and find that it still runs on ISP1, what should I do? And if we set the weight equal, what principle is used to select it? Another question, can NBR combine Link Load balancing? For example, I have ISP1 = 1G and ISP2 = 1G, which command should I use to combine the Bnadwidth to 2G? Thank you and Best Regard. |
Dear sir, Good day. The "weight" in load balancing refers to which port the packet prefers touse. For example, if you set the load balancing on 2 WAN ports, the weight of WAN 1is 1 and that of the WAN 2 is 2, the traffic will use the WAN 2 interface whoseweight is 2 preferentially. If you have 3 packets, 2 will use WAN 2(weight2), and 1 will use WAN 1(weight1). For optimal results, it is recommended to turn on the source in and source out on WAN. If the weight are equal, the traffic will in & out from both ISP equally. Best regards, Lex |
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