- Dec 18, 2010
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Is it possible to route traffic through a series of VPN tunnels? And without expensive routing equipment.
I am setting up a series site-to-site VPNs with 5 remote offices and 1 central office.
I thought about setting up a tunnel between the remote sites; so if a tunnel goes down, traffic could be routed to another remote office, then to the main office.
Lets say the VPN between office A and the main office goes down, then the traffic would be sent to office B, then to the main office.
A tunnel is established between 2 of the remote offices, but the firewalls are not routing traffic if one VPN goes down.
The main firewall is a Cisco SRP547W-A-K9, 2 of the remote firewalls are Zyxel VFG6005N, 2 are watchgaurd X5, and one Linksys RV042.
I am setting up a series site-to-site VPNs with 5 remote offices and 1 central office.
I thought about setting up a tunnel between the remote sites; so if a tunnel goes down, traffic could be routed to another remote office, then to the main office.
Lets say the VPN between office A and the main office goes down, then the traffic would be sent to office B, then to the main office.
A tunnel is established between 2 of the remote offices, but the firewalls are not routing traffic if one VPN goes down.
The main firewall is a Cisco SRP547W-A-K9, 2 of the remote firewalls are Zyxel VFG6005N, 2 are watchgaurd X5, and one Linksys RV042.