ZyXEL Communications ZyWALL5UTM 4.0 Network Router User Manual


 
ZyWALL 5/35/70 Series User’s Guide
127 Chapter 7 WAN Screens
You can select through which WAN port you want to send out traffic from UPnP-enabled
applications (see
Chapter 28 on page 452).
The ZyWALL's DDNS lets you select which WAN interface you want to use for each
individual domain name. The DDNS high availability feature lets you have the ZyWALL use
the other WAN interface for a domain name if the configured WAN interface's connection
goes down. See
Section 26.10.2 on page 424 for details.
When configuring a VPN rule, you have the option of selecting one of the ZyWALL's domain
names in the My Address field.
7.3 Load Balancing Introduction
On the ZyWALL, load balancing is the process of dividing traffic loads between the two WAN
interfaces (or ports). This allows you to improve quality of services and maximize bandwidth
utilization.
See also policy routing to provide quality of service by dedicating a route for a specific traffic
type and bandwidth management to specify a set amount of bandwidth for a specific traffic
type on an interface.
7.4 Load Balancing Algorithms
The ZyWALL uses three load balancing methods (Least Load First, Weighted Round Robin
and Spillover) to decide which WAN port the traffic for a session
1
(from the LAN) should
use.
The following sections describe each load balancing method. The available bandwidth you
configure on the ZyWALL refers to the actual bandwidth provided by the ISP and the
measured bandwidth refers to as the bandwidth an interface is currently using.
7.4.1 Least Load First
The least load first algorithm uses the current (or recent) outbound and/or inbound bandwidth
utilization of each WAN interface as the load balancing index(es) when making decisions
about to which WAN interface a new LAN-originated session is to be distributed. The
outbound bandwidth utilization is defined as the measured outbound throughput over the
available outbound bandwidth and the inbound bandwidth utilization is defined as the
measured inbound throughput over the available inbound bandwidth.
1. In the load balancing section, a session may refer to normal connection-oriented, UDP and
SNMP2 traffic.