
LCTN0011: WAN Fail-Over & Traffic Redirect
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Example 1: WAN Fail-Over
You can assign a relative routing priority to each of the LAN-Cell’s WAN interfaces (wired Ethernet, Cellular,
Traffic Redirect and Dial-Backup). The LAN-Cell uses these values to determine the interface to which packets
are routed. When configured to WAN Fail-Over mode, the LAN-Cell will attempt to use the next lowest priority
interface as higher priority interfaces become unavailable.
In this example, the LAN-Cell 2 is being used to provide redundant Internet connectivity to a remote office LAN.
The primary WAN connection is a DSL modem, backed up by a 3G Cellular modem and finally by a 56Kbps
telephone modem.
Figure 1 shows the LAN-Cell 2 with a DSL modem connected to the wired Ethernet WAN port, a 3G cellular
modem card inserted, and a dial-up analog telephone modem connected to the AUX (serial) port. All three of
these WAN interfaces will be available to the LAN-Cell on a relative priority basis. The LAN-Cell will fail-over
among these interfaces automatically with little or no impact on the LAN PC’s connected to the LAN-Cell. When a
higher priority interface becomes available again, the LAN-Cell will “fall-back” to use that interface.
Figure 1: Example WAN Fail-Over Network Topology
Usage Notes
•By default, the LAN-Cell is configured for automatic fail-over / fall-back between the wired Ethernet WAN
(highest priority) and the Cellular 3G modem (second highest priority). The Dial-Backup WAN (serial) port
is not enabled by default and has the lowest routing priority.
•The Dial-Backup WAN port must have a lower priority (higher metric value) than either the WAN or
Cellular interfaces.
•The same basic configuration can be used with cable modems, T1 lines, satellite modems, etc.
Configure each WAN interface as necessary for a connection.
•The wired WAN port can also be connected to a LAN port on another router rather than directly to a
modem (a cross-over cable may be required). The LAN address of the secondary router must be in a
different subnet than the LAN-Cell’s LAN IP address/subnet.
•There is additional information on LAN-Cell WAN, Cellular, and Fail-Over configuration parameters in the
LAN-Cell User’s Guide.