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How to route gaming traffic over different WAN to everything else
- lightwhisper
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20 Feb 2021 12:46 #98544
by lightwhisper
How to route gaming traffic over different WAN to everything else was created by lightwhisper
I have a Draytek Vigor 2860ac with two VDSL WAN connnections: one is Zen Internet with unlimited data, and the other A&A ISP with limited data, but lower ping times.
I want to use the A&A connection to serve gaming (and potentially anything else that needs low latency) and keep all the heavy traffic, streaming downloads etc on the Zen connection. Does anyone have any suggestions for a smart way to go about this?
The simple approach would be to assign the gaming devices a fixed IP on the LAN and route all traffic from them over A&A, whilst Zen is the default for all other IPs on the network. But of course gaming PCs do big downloads too, so how to make downloads or streaming from the gaming PCs run over the Zen connection?
Btw, I have configured A&A as failover for when Zen goes down and want to keep that of course.
Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
I want to use the A&A connection to serve gaming (and potentially anything else that needs low latency) and keep all the heavy traffic, streaming downloads etc on the Zen connection. Does anyone have any suggestions for a smart way to go about this?
The simple approach would be to assign the gaming devices a fixed IP on the LAN and route all traffic from them over A&A, whilst Zen is the default for all other IPs on the network. But of course gaming PCs do big downloads too, so how to make downloads or streaming from the gaming PCs run over the Zen connection?
Btw, I have configured A&A as failover for when Zen goes down and want to keep that of course.
Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
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- johngalt
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22 Feb 2021 09:12 #98562
by johngalt
Replied by johngalt on topic Re: How to route gaming traffic over different WAN to everything else
You may try the Load-Balance/Route Policy (in Routing menu). 1
1. set the "destination" as your gaming server domain/IP or specify the destination port, and choose interface as your A&A ISP
2. set the 2nd policy, from Any source to Any destination go via Zen, and this will make sure all other traffics go via Zen.
1. set the "destination" as your gaming server domain/IP or specify the destination port, and choose interface as your A&A ISP
2. set the 2nd policy, from Any source to Any destination go via Zen, and this will make sure all other traffics go via Zen.
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- piste basher
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22 Feb 2021 09:44 #98563
by piste basher
Replied by piste basher on topic Re: How to route gaming traffic over different WAN to everything else
What are the "big downloads" that the gaming PCs do? Are you talking about things like Windows updates?
You could set those to be manually applied, and manually change to the Zen connection as required. Otherwise, I don't see how you can distinguish non-gaming traffic from gaming traffic in order to decide which WAN they should connect through?
You could set those to be manually applied, and manually change to the Zen connection as required. Otherwise, I don't see how you can distinguish non-gaming traffic from gaming traffic in order to decide which WAN they should connect through?
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- lightwhisper
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22 Feb 2021 10:04 #98564
by lightwhisper
Initially I'd sort of dismissed this because it will need a rule for each game and possibly more than one per game (if there are many different servers, which I think is often the case), but when I think about it perhaps that won't be so bad as there are not so many games that are so latency sensitive. I'll look into this - thank you!
Replied by lightwhisper on topic Re: How to route gaming traffic over different WAN to everything else
JohnGalt wrote:
You may try the Load-Balance/Route Policy (in Routing menu). 1
1. set the "destination" as your gaming server domain/IP or specify the destination port, and choose interface as your A&A ISP
2. set the 2nd policy, from Any source to Any destination go via Zen, and this will make sure all other traffics go via Zen.
Initially I'd sort of dismissed this because it will need a rule for each game and possibly more than one per game (if there are many different servers, which I think is often the case), but when I think about it perhaps that won't be so bad as there are not so many games that are so latency sensitive. I'll look into this - thank you!
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- lightwhisper
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22 Feb 2021 10:11 #98565
by lightwhisper
I'm primarily thinking about game files. They are huge. 100 GB is not unheard of. What you are suggesting is kind of my basic approach which I was hoping to improve on.
If there was a way to "switch" WAN connections easily from the client PC this approach would be much more palatable. Maybe using a VPN (although that seems like a complicated sledgehammer to crack a nut)?
Replied by lightwhisper on topic Re: How to route gaming traffic over different WAN to everything else
Piste Basher wrote:
What are the "big downloads" that the gaming PCs do? Are you talking about things like Windows updates?
You could set those to be manually applied, and manually change to the Zen connection as required. Otherwise, I don't see how you can distinguish non-gaming traffic from gaming traffic in order to decide which WAN they should connect through?
I'm primarily thinking about game files. They are huge. 100 GB is not unheard of. What you are suggesting is kind of my basic approach which I was hoping to improve on.
If there was a way to "switch" WAN connections easily from the client PC this approach would be much more palatable. Maybe using a VPN (although that seems like a complicated sledgehammer to crack a nut)?
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- rolandrat
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22 Feb 2021 14:00 #98567
by rolandrat
Replied by rolandrat on topic Re: How to route gaming traffic over different WAN to everything else
The quickest way on client I can think of is have two network connections (network cards are cheap as chips), setup policy route for each ip to go over different wans then quickly disable the connection on the PC you dont want use when you game.
Not ideal but trying to policy route all the destination IP's etc will be endless task.
Not ideal but trying to policy route all the destination IP's etc will be endless task.
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