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# feb/11/2022 11:00:55 by RouterOS 7.2rc3 | |
# software id = 9QK9-C798 | |
# | |
# model = RB5009UG+S+ | |
# serial number = XXXXXXXXXX | |
/ip settings set allow-fast-path=no | |
/interface bridge add admin-mac=FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF auto-mac=no name=bridge | |
/interface bridge port add bridge=bridge ingress-filtering=no interface=ether3 | |
/interface bridge port add bridge=bridge ingress-filtering=no interface=ether4 | |
/interface bridge port add bridge=bridge ingress-filtering=no interface=ether5 | |
/interface list add name=WAN | |
/interface list add name=LAN | |
/interface list member add interface=bridge list=LAN | |
/interface list member add interface=ether1 list=WAN | |
/interface list member add interface=ether2 list=WAN | |
#/interface bridge port add bridge=bridge ingress-filtering=no interface=ether6 | |
#/interface bridge port add bridge=bridge ingress-filtering=no interface=ether7 | |
#/interface bridge port add bridge=bridge ingress-filtering=no interface=ether8 | |
#/interface bridge port add bridge=bridge ingress-filtering=no interface=sfp-sfpplus1 | |
/ip address add address=192.168.88.1/24 interface=bridge network=192.168.88.0 | |
/ip dns static add address=192.168.88.1 name=router.lan | |
/ip pool add name=pool1 ranges=192.168.88.10-192.168.88.254 | |
/ip dhcp-server add address-pool=pool1 interface=bridge name=dhcp1 | |
/ip dhcp-server network add address=192.168.88.0/24 dns-server=192.168.88.1 gateway=192.168.88.1 | |
/ip dhcp-client add interface=ether1 add-default-route=no script=":if (\$bound=1) do={\r\ | |
\n /ip/route/set [find where comment=\"ISP1\"] gateway=\$\"gateway-address\"\r\ | |
\n}\r\ | |
\n\r\ | |
\n/ip/firewall/connection/remove [find connection-mark=\"ISP1_conn\"]\r\ | |
\n/ip/firewall/connection/remove [find connection-mark=\"ISP2_conn\"]\r\ | |
\n" use-peer-dns=no use-peer-ntp=no | |
/ip dhcp-client add interface=ether2 add-default-route=no script=":if (\$bound=1) do={\r\ | |
\n /ip/route/set [find where comment=\"ISP2\"] gateway=\$\"gateway-address\"\r\ | |
\n}\r\ | |
\n\r\ | |
\n/ip/firewall/connection/remove [find connection-mark=\"ISP1_conn\"]\r\ | |
\n/ip/firewall/connection/remove [find connection-mark=\"ISP2_conn\"]" use-peer-dns=no use-peer-ntp=no | |
/routing table add fib name=to_ISP1 | |
/routing table add fib name=to_ISP2 | |
/ip route | |
# recursive routes for ECMP default gateways, dst-address are public DNS servers | |
add distance=1 dst-address=9.9.9.9/32 gateway=ether1 scope=10 target-scope=10 comment=ISP1 | |
add distance=1 dst-address=8.26.56.26/32 gateway=ether2 scope=10 target-scope=10 comment=ISP2 | |
# ECMP default gateways | |
add check-gateway=ping distance=1 dst-address=0.0.0.0/0 gateway=9.9.9.9 scope=10 target-scope=11 | |
add check-gateway=ping distance=1 dst-address=0.0.0.0/0 gateway=8.26.56.26 scope=10 target-scope=11 | |
# recursive routes for default gateways, dst-address are public DNS servers | |
add dst-address=64.6.64.6/32 gateway=ether1 scope=10 comment="ISP1" | |
add dst-address=208.67.220.220/32 gateway=ether1 scope=10 comment="ISP1" | |
add dst-address=208.67.222.222/32 gateway=ether2 scope=10 comment="ISP2" | |
add dst-address=64.6.65.6/32 gateway=ether2 scope=10 comment="ISP2" | |
# load-balanced w/ auto failover default gateways | |
add check-gateway=ping distance=1 dst-address=0.0.0.0/0 gateway=64.6.64.6 routing-table=to_ISP1 scope=10 target-scope=11 | |
add check-gateway=ping distance=2 dst-address=0.0.0.0/0 gateway=64.6.65.6 routing-table=to_ISP1 scope=10 target-scope=11 | |
add check-gateway=ping distance=1 dst-address=0.0.0.0/0 gateway=208.67.222.222 routing-table=to_ISP2 scope=10 target-scope=11 | |
add check-gateway=ping distance=2 dst-address=0.0.0.0/0 gateway=208.67.220.220 routing-table=to_ISP2 scope=10 target-scope=11 | |
/ip firewall address-list add address=192.168.88.0/24 list=local | |
/ip firewall mangle | |
add action=accept chain=prerouting comment="bridge access" dst-address-list=local in-interface-list=LAN | |
# WAN to LAN | |
add action=mark-connection chain=prerouting connection-mark=no-mark connection-state=established,related in-interface=ether1 new-connection-mark=ISP1_conn \ | |
passthrough=yes | |
add action=mark-connection chain=prerouting connection-mark=no-mark connection-state=established,related in-interface=ether2 new-connection-mark=ISP2_conn \ | |
passthrough=yes | |
# PCC mangles | |
add action=mark-connection chain=prerouting connection-mark=no-mark dst-address-list=!local dst-address-type=!local in-interface-list=LAN new-connection-mark=ISP1_conn passthrough=yes per-connection-classifier=both-addresses-and-ports:2/0 | |
add action=mark-connection chain=prerouting connection-mark=no-mark dst-address-list=!local dst-address-type=!local in-interface-list=LAN new-connection-mark=ISP2_conn passthrough=yes per-connection-classifier=both-addresses-and-ports:2/1 | |
add action=mark-routing chain=prerouting connection-mark=ISP1_conn in-interface-list=LAN new-routing-mark=to_ISP1 passthrough=yes | |
add action=mark-routing chain=prerouting connection-mark=ISP2_conn in-interface-list=LAN new-routing-mark=to_ISP2 passthrough=yes | |
add action=mark-routing chain=output connection-mark=ISP1_conn dst-address-list=!local new-routing-mark=to_ISP1 passthrough=yes | |
add action=mark-routing chain=output connection-mark=ISP2_conn dst-address-list=!local new-routing-mark=to_ISP2 passthrough=yes | |
# masquerade | |
/ip firewall nat add action=masquerade chain=srcnat ipsec-policy=out,none out-interface-list=WAN |
I haven't yet had success with the routing side of the config.
Hello, thanks for posting it. Unfortunately with the two ECMP default gateways rules I get invalid and unreachable. I'm not sure if they should use the main route of one of the two PCC ones.
Testing several variants of this config with PCC set to destination only, and with either A) both ISPs connected, or B) a single ISP interface set up with a working link that has IP transit blocked via a switch, shows incorrect behavior. For example with both ISPs connected, traffic marked for ISP1 will only go through ISP2. Blocking ISP2 so that it silently fails breaks all default-destined traffic, but traffic destined for the directly connected on-link subnet at ISP1 still works.
My thought is that something is wrong with the routing, and my next step is to see if adding a 3rd layer of nexthop routes would actually fix this. In this configuration there are only two layers: 0.0.0.0/0 default to fake gateway inside routing tables, and fake gateway via real gateway inside the main table. However not all resources on this topic mention the intermediate nexthop, and in v7 the target-scope must be adjusted to match (might be 12>11>10 or 13>12>11).
Any discussion would be appreciated as the Mikrotik documentation is always a bit terse, ambiguous, and not so thorough.
I encountered this bug: https://forum.mikrotik.com/viewtopic.php?t=185950
and in addition I was using a gateway which was not set up to forward to a default route - after using the proper gateway things are starting to improve.
I have posted a partial configuration which might help someone: https://gist.github.com/oakwhiz/55b4043e99320129323496ffd5087f05
I should mention though, there are some minor errors in there and various things set up for debugging/testing purposes, I wouldn't recommend copying it.
Can anyone please explain what this area is doing?
/ip dhcp-client add interface=ether1 add-default-route=no script=":if (\$bound=1) do={\r\
\n /ip/route/set [find where comment=\"ISP1\"] gateway=\$\"gateway-address\"\r\
\n}\r\
\n\r\
\n/ip/firewall/connection/remove [find connection-mark=\"ISP1_conn\"]\r\
\n/ip/firewall/connection/remove [find connection-mark=\"ISP2_conn\"]\r\
\n" use-peer-dns=no use-peer-ntp=no
I have one Static WAN where I need to setup but how do I add the script?
@dipan29 That is for resetting all connections whenever the DHCP client changes its IP. If your other uplink is a static IP, you only need one DHCP client.
@marfillaster thanks for the response,
Also, I tried doing the same and gracefully it works for the local network right out of the box. As in for all interface lists LAN. However, My requirement was a little different and could not manage to get it working post Router OS 7.
I would require something similar but for the following scenario
- Having one DHCP Client and one with Static IP or PPPoE Client (here the gateway caused an issue when I tried to replicate cause for ether1 when its PPPoE the gateway IP isn't defined)
- Ensuring that both the WAN IPs can be used for DST-NAT - for any local subnet
- I would be having generally two subnets - one for home lab and one for normal home users. For the home lab I won't really want to do load balancing but just ensure that the DST-NAT for that network works from both the WANs.
- For normal home users, I would be okay if it goes out through ether1 (PPPoE/Static) most of the times but have an address-list called DUAL say that can only get Load Balancing when tagged to it. In other words, only the addresses tagged as DUAL can have the load balancing.
I tried finding a lot of guides on the internet but could not have something from reddit or mikrotik forum that serves my purpose (some claim to, but they just don't get connected).
Also, I am new to this mikrotik, would be glad if you can guide me with some exact details or something from the internet that works.
I'm using this config but, when the ISP 1 has no internet, it uses the ISP 2, however, when the ISP 1's internet get's back, the recursive will still mark ISP 1 as no internet. It only uses ISP 2's internet the whole time, unless I'll restart the mikrotik.
@marfillaster thanks for the response,
Also, I tried doing the same and gracefully it works for the local network right out of the box. As in for all interface lists LAN. However, My requirement was a little different and could not manage to get it working post Router OS 7.
I would require something similar but for the following scenario
- Having one DHCP Client and one with Static IP or PPPoE Client (here the gateway caused an issue when I tried to replicate cause for ether1 when its PPPoE the gateway IP isn't defined)
- Ensuring that both the WAN IPs can be used for DST-NAT - for any local subnet
- I would be having generally two subnets - one for home lab and one for normal home users. For the home lab I won't really want to do load balancing but just ensure that the DST-NAT for that network works from both the WANs.
- For normal home users, I would be okay if it goes out through ether1 (PPPoE/Static) most of the times but have an address-list called DUAL say that can only get Load Balancing when tagged to it. In other words, only the addresses tagged as DUAL can have the load balancing.
I tried finding a lot of guides on the internet but could not have something from reddit or mikrotik forum that serves my purpose (some claim to, but they just don't get connected). Also, I am new to this mikrotik, would be glad if you can guide me with some exact details or something from the internet that works.
I can help you with all your requests
Has the variable $leaseBound change to $bound now?
Hi @nhan6310 how can we connect to get this configuration set?
I tested this on a MikroTik RB4011, and it worked perfectly. However, I'm encountering an issue that perhaps you could assist with: the load balancing is happening constantly (meaning a PC is continuously switching between the two WANs). Is there a way to configure WAN balancing based on the client's IP?
@quinont the easiest way to to change this is to change the pre routing mangle rule to included a src address list and then you can specify which IP get load balanced or not
Below is how mines looks
add action=mark-connection chain=prerouting
connection-mark=no-mark dst-address-type=
!local in-interface-list=LAN
new-connection-mark=ISP1_conn passthrough=yes
per-connection-classifier=
both-addresses-and-ports:2/0 src-address-list=
MultiWAN-Clients
add action=mark-connection chain=prerouting
connection-mark=no-mark dst-address-type=
!local in-interface-list=LAN
new-connection-mark=ISP2_conn passthrough=yes
per-connection-classifier=
both-addresses-and-ports:2/1 src-address-list=
MultiWAN-Clients
any one can give me recursive fail over gate way
im using NTH
my ip : gateway
my dns :8.8.8.8,8.8.4.4,1.1.1.1
wan1 192.168.1.1
wan2 192.168.254.254
wan3 192.168.0.1
Jovem, que configuração excelente. Testamos em laboratório de bancada, fizemos testes de estresse, usamos conexões diferentes (pppoe, client, etc), e tudo funcionou perfeitamente. Meus parabéns e muito obrigado pelo compartilhamento.
# WAN to LAN
add action=mark-connection chain=prerouting connection-mark=no-mark connection-state=established,related in-interface=ether1 new-connection-mark=ISP1_conn \
passthrough=yes
add action=mark-connection chain=prerouting connection-mark=no-mark connection-state=established,related in-interface=ether2 new-connection-mark=ISP2_conn \
passthrough=yes
These rules are not only from WAN to LAN connections, they also catch connections directed to the router itself (if you remove the connection-state=stablished,related), thats the reason why this two rules also exist:
add action=mark-routing chain=output connection-mark=ISP1_conn dst-address-list=!local new-routing-mark=to_ISP1 passthrough=yes
add action=mark-routing chain=output connection-mark=ISP2_conn dst-address-list=!local new-routing-mark=to_ISP2 passthrough=yes
The output rules are using already marked connections that were directed to the router itself, and now they serve the purpose to route the connections to output from the same interface that they did enter. This have nothing to do with the ECMP routes, the ECMP routes are used only for new originated connections from the router itself to the internet, so you can ping 8.8.8.8 from the router and it will choose one of the two routes, then ping 8.8.4.4 and it may choose the another.
Sorry for my english.
how to deal with bgp routes? Their routing mark beeing overriden
Yes, that seems to have worked for me, too. What is the difference between dst-address-list and dst-address-type. I see that both can be set to !local, but that you added an address list in the firewall.