Adding an extra separate network on a Cisco ASA 5510
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I'm not sure you can do that. That would require having two default gateways setup inside the ASA.
If you have Cisco SmartNet on this device, you can open a ticket with them and they will build the config for you.
Unless you need these networks to be bridged together somehow, you'd be better off with a second ASA or an EdgeRouter Lite.
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I'm pretty sure this is easily doable with some custom nat rules and routing (policy based routing).
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Basically I have it on a separate subnet and the the interfaces (4 of them) . Enabled DHCP server on the inside interface and provided a pool of addresses. Created access rules for connecting.
Now when testing I receive perfectly an IP and all settings in ipconfig /all are shown correctly on the new subnet, but still I have no internet on this new network!
Any ideas?
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@chrislaz8592 said:
Basically I have it on a separate subnet and the the interfaces (4 of them) . Enabled DHCP server on the inside interface and provided a pool of addresses. Created access rules for connecting.
Now when testing I receive perfectly an IP and all settings in ipconfig /all are shown correctly on the new subnet, but still I have no internet on this new network!
Any ideas?
What is your router config? You'll need to create the policy for routing on that subnet.
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@Dashrender said:
I'm not sure you can do that. That would require having two default gateways setup inside the ASA.
This is simple to do and a basic job of any router. Why would you even think no it is not possible?
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@chrislaz8592 I am too far removed from the little Cisco I knew to help sorry.
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@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
I'm not sure you can do that. That would require having two default gateways setup inside the ASA.
This is simple to do and a basic job of any router. Why would you even think no it is not possible?
I'll all ears, as they say.
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@Dashrender I can do it on an ERL, but not in a position to explain in depth while driving.
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A router does not hav a gateway. A router IS a gateway. A router routes on a routing table and that table can always have more than one route to a destination. That is the point of routing.
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@chrislaz8592 did you get this working or do you need additional assistance?