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Mike_T
Participant
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Route specific subnet out second ISP interface

Hi,

Need some assistance setting up policy based routing or a static route. Basically just looking to route traffic from one VLAN out a secondary ISP link. Reading through the Policy based routing article SK100500 this does not give me the scenario. There is no way to specific "internet" as a destination.

Source: 192.168.178.x  -  Destination: Internet  -  Gateway - ISP 2 (eth1)

See my mspaint diagram below. Can anyone advise how i would route this traffic our my second ISP link?

Any advice/assistance would be great!

Cheers,

Called checkpoint support, they didnt really understand what i meant, even after i drew them a basic diagram in paint.

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1 Solution

Accepted Solutions
KennyManrique
Advisor

Hi Mike,


PBR is based on IP and Ports, there is no Internet Object as on regular policy.

To route VLAN178 through ISP2 and assuming ISP1 is configured as your default route, yo have to do the following:

1. Create a new PBR table of type Default Route that points to ISP2 next hop address.

2. Add a new PBR rule with source Inbound Interface of VLAN178 (I'm assuming is locally conected on a subinterface ethx.178) who uses the PBR table created earlier. On this case, you can't solely use the segment 192.168.178.X/XX since the Firewall probably has an IP address on this segment and could derive on unwanted behavior.


Please note the following:

- Hide behind Gateway NAT or Hide Behind IP (on ISP2 range) must be configured for VLAN178's Network Object to allow traffic leave the ISP2 interface with correct IP address. If you use Hide behind IP, Proxy ARP may be neccesary

- Since PBR is processed before regular Routing Table, if you follow the two steps mentioned above, all traffic from VLAN178 will be redirected to ISP2 link no matter which is the final destination. If you want to route to local networks, you will have to create a new PBR table including those you need to reach locally and specify the output interface (like a copy of your routing table); after that you need to create a PBR rule with lower priority pointing to this table.

- There is no automatic failover, so if ISP2 is down on some place along the path; all traffic still be sent to this link.

- If you have ISP Redundancy configured, PBR is bypassed.

Regards.

View solution in original post

6 Replies
KennyManrique
Advisor

Hi Mike,


PBR is based on IP and Ports, there is no Internet Object as on regular policy.

To route VLAN178 through ISP2 and assuming ISP1 is configured as your default route, yo have to do the following:

1. Create a new PBR table of type Default Route that points to ISP2 next hop address.

2. Add a new PBR rule with source Inbound Interface of VLAN178 (I'm assuming is locally conected on a subinterface ethx.178) who uses the PBR table created earlier. On this case, you can't solely use the segment 192.168.178.X/XX since the Firewall probably has an IP address on this segment and could derive on unwanted behavior.


Please note the following:

- Hide behind Gateway NAT or Hide Behind IP (on ISP2 range) must be configured for VLAN178's Network Object to allow traffic leave the ISP2 interface with correct IP address. If you use Hide behind IP, Proxy ARP may be neccesary

- Since PBR is processed before regular Routing Table, if you follow the two steps mentioned above, all traffic from VLAN178 will be redirected to ISP2 link no matter which is the final destination. If you want to route to local networks, you will have to create a new PBR table including those you need to reach locally and specify the output interface (like a copy of your routing table); after that you need to create a PBR rule with lower priority pointing to this table.

- There is no automatic failover, so if ISP2 is down on some place along the path; all traffic still be sent to this link.

- If you have ISP Redundancy configured, PBR is bypassed.

Regards.

Mike_T
Participant

Wow! , thanks for the detailed response. Didn't expect that!

Will be giving this a shot today. Cheers

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Mike_T
Participant

Just reporting back that this worked perfectly. not sure why checkpoint support couldn't have pointed me in this direction. Cheers.

KennyManrique
Advisor

It's great to know that, Mike!

We're here to help.

Regards.

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Freco_Wong
Participant

Hello Kenny,

 

My situation is same and used PBR with default route too. Except the copy of routes from original routing table, may I know is there require to add route for directly attached networks? Thanks~

 

Regards,

Freco

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KennyManrique
Advisor

Hi, sorry for the late answer, I wasnt available on the community for a while.

When you're using default route statement, all traffic goes through that interface. So is neccesary to add each directly connected network entry to a PBR Rule/Table before the default route entry.

If I remember correctly, without the additional network entries, you're able to reach all firewall interfaces on any net (as long you have firewall permissions) but not beyond that.

Regards.

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