Here's the setup:
There is a cable modem talking to the outside world.
The cable modem is connected via ethernet to a switch.
There are TWO routers plugged into the switch with separate, statically configured WAN IP addresses (both are D-Link DGL-4300's, if that matters to you).
My machine has 2 NICS, each connected to one of these routers.
Let's say that, internally, one router is using 192.168.0.* and other is using 192.168.1.*.
I want all internet-bound traffic to go out on the 0 interface while retaining the LAN connection on the 1 interface (and PREVENTING any internet-bound traffic from using the router on this interface).
I'm using Windows XP.
Is there a better way of doing this than changing the metric settings for each interface under Advanced TCP/IP settings?
Thanks in advance
There is a cable modem talking to the outside world.
The cable modem is connected via ethernet to a switch.
There are TWO routers plugged into the switch with separate, statically configured WAN IP addresses (both are D-Link DGL-4300's, if that matters to you).
My machine has 2 NICS, each connected to one of these routers.
Let's say that, internally, one router is using 192.168.0.* and other is using 192.168.1.*.
I want all internet-bound traffic to go out on the 0 interface while retaining the LAN connection on the 1 interface (and PREVENTING any internet-bound traffic from using the router on this interface).
I'm using Windows XP.
Is there a better way of doing this than changing the metric settings for each interface under Advanced TCP/IP settings?
Thanks in advance
