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    Help! I give up…. I need to setup Load Balancing *locally* and it only works a

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved pfSense Packages
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    • R
      rkelleyrtp
      last edited by

      Sorry, dumb question.  Are you specifying port 3390 as per the conf file when connecting to the remote machines via RDP?

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      • W
        WolphFang
        last edited by

        @rkelleyrtp:

        Sorry, dumb question.  Are you specifying port 3390 as per the conf file when connecting to the remote machines via RDP?

        Using 192.168.0.2:3390 and/or 192.168.0.2:3391
        When I http to 192.168.0.2:3392, that works just fine.

        Just noticed something though in the states:

        
        tcp	192.168.0.6:3389 <- 192.168.0.2:3391 <- 192.168.0.5:32700	CLOSED:SYN_SENT
        tcp	192.168.0.5:32700 -> 192.168.0.6:3389	SYN_SENT:CLOSED
        
        

        Why is the second line missing the load balancer in the middle?

        Addendum: Downloading and installing wireshark to look for *.0.2 traffic on one the TS's.

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        • R
          rkelleyrtp
          last edited by

          Sorry, don't have the answer to your question.  But, I am going to try this on my own pfSense firewall right now.  I will let you know what I find.

          BTW - I am sure you have seen this, eh?  http://doc.pfsense.org/index.php/Setup_Incoming_Load_Balancing

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          • W
            WolphFang
            last edited by

            Addendum: Downloading and installing wireshark to look for *.0.2 traffic on one the TS's.

            Beyond the ICMP checks, I am not receiving any traffic from pfSense when connecting to the VIP:PORT combination.

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            • W
              WolphFang
              last edited by

              Running a packet capture on the LAN interface for target host of 192.168.0.6 when connecting from 192.168.0.5 to 192.168.0.2:3391 reveals:

              ICMPs…

              
              08:06:38.846401 arp who-has 192.168.0.6 tell 192.168.0.1
              08:06:38.846453 IP 192.168.0.1 > 192.168.0.6: ICMP echo request, id 17533, seq 0, length 64
              08:06:38.846914 arp reply 192.168.0.6 is-at 00:0c:29:50:8d:aa
              08:06:38.847029 IP 192.168.0.6 > 192.168.0.1: ICMP echo reply, id 17533, seq 0, length 64
              
              

              Malformed attempt at connection?

              
              08:06:43.727167 IP 192.168.0.5.32976 > 192.168.0.6.3389: tcp 0
              
              

              ICMPs…

              
              08:06:43.866523 IP 192.168.0.1 > 192.168.0.6: ICMP echo request, id 20093, seq 0, length 64
              08:06:43.866850 IP 192.168.0.6 > 192.168.0.1: ICMP echo reply, id 20093, seq 0, length 64
              
              

              Malformed attempt at connection?

              
              08:06:46.764640 IP 192.168.0.5.32976 > 192.168.0.6.3389: tcp 0
              
              

              ICMPs…

              
              08:06:48.886760 IP 192.168.0.1 > 192.168.0.6: ICMP echo request, id 22653, seq 0, length 64
              08:06:48.887107 IP 192.168.0.6 > 192.168.0.1: ICMP echo reply, id 22653, seq 0, length 64
              
              

              Malformed attempt at connection?

              
              08:06:52.800578 IP 192.168.0.5.32976 > 192.168.0.6.3389: tcp 0
              
              

              ICMPs

              
              08:06:53.906960 IP 192.168.0.1 > 192.168.0.6: ICMP echo request, id 42365, seq 0, length 64
              08:06:53.907377 IP 192.168.0.6 > 192.168.0.1: ICMP echo reply, id 42365, seq 0, length 64
              08:06:58.928464 IP 192.168.0.1 > 192.168.0.6: ICMP echo request, id 47229, seq 0, length 64
              08:06:58.928866 IP 192.168.0.6 > 192.168.0.1: ICMP echo reply, id 47229, seq 0, length 64
              08:07:03.946814 IP 192.168.0.1 > 192.168.0.6: ICMP echo request, id 49789, seq 0, length 64
              08:07:03.947293 IP 192.168.0.6 > 192.168.0.1: ICMP echo reply, id 49789, seq 0, length 64
              08:07:08.967876 IP 192.168.0.1 > 192.168.0.6: ICMP echo request, id 52349, seq 0, length 64
              08:07:08.968258 IP 192.168.0.6 > 192.168.0.1: ICMP echo reply, id 52349, seq 0, length 64
              
              

              Why is the load balancer using the connecting IP# as its source IP# for a generic TCP connection?

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              • R
                rkelleyrtp
                last edited by

                Unfortunately, no help here.  In fact, after configuring my LB pool, I get an "Offline" message under Status–>Load Balancer-->Virtual Servers.  In addition, I don't get any servers listed under the Status-->Load balancer -->Pools tab.  The only thing I have not done is reboot my firewall yet...

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                • W
                  WolphFang
                  last edited by

                  @rkelleyrtp:

                  Unfortunately, no help here.  In fact, after configuring my LB pool, I get an "Offline" message under Status–>Load Balancer-->Virtual Servers.  In addition, I don't get any servers listed under the Status-->Load balancer -->Pools tab.  The only thing I have not done is reboot my firewall yet...

                  I thought pools were only for load balancing outbound across ISPs?

                  My status under virtual servers shows:

                  
                  Name	Port	Servers	Status	Description
                  
                  pfSenseMGMT 	3392 192.168.0.1 Online 	Last change Feb 19 2010 08:21:37
                  
                  Server-0-6 	3391 192.168.0.6 Online 	Last change Feb 19 2010 08:21:37
                  
                  Server-0-5 	3390 192.168.0.5 Online 	Last change Feb 19 2010 08:21:37
                  
                  
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                  • W
                    WolphFang
                    last edited by

                    I found sufficient documentation to realize that this is not a TCP reconnecting daemon. It is a pf rules modifier for NAT reflection to produce the load balancing.

                    That is why I am getting those bad entries for the connection attempts.

                    The arrangement I am trying to setup is not possible with slbd.

                    The only reason it works for the MGMT port is because the pfSense machine is both IPs so that the response packets get processed before being sent back to the web-browser and get de-natted/re-natted the way they are needed.

                    When slbd redirects the connection attempts from the local machine to a local machine, it rewrites the request NATted, which causes the response to be transmitted directly to the originator, therefore it can't get re-munged into a proper format for the initiator to know it is a response, so I am sure it gets dropped and a TCP session is never even setup. The initial hand-shake fails.

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                    • W
                      WolphFang
                      last edited by

                      I figured out a way to get it to rewrite EVERYTHING going in/out.

                      Firewall -> NAT
                      Manual Mode
                      Edit WAN rule: make it WAN interface, NAT, any <-> any
                      Create LAN rule: make it LAN interface, NAT, any <-> any

                      Testing operations now both locally and remotely.

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                      • W
                        WolphFang
                        last edited by

                        @WolphFang:

                        I figured out a way to get it to rewrite EVERYTHING going in/out.

                        Firewall -> NAT
                        Manual Mode
                        Edit WAN rule: make it WAN interface, NAT, any <-> any
                        Create LAN rule: make it LAN interface, NAT, any <-> any

                        Testing operations now both locally and remotely.

                        ARGH! Someone went and OBEYED that stupid https management warning message on the Sonic Wall while I was finagling the rules!

                        All locked out now, everything, no more testing tonight. :(

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                        • R
                          rkelleyrtp
                          last edited by

                          If it were me, I would just use haproxy for this.  Check out this blog:
                          http://blog.loadbalancer.org/load-balancing-windows-terminal-server-–-haproxy-and-rdp-cookies/#more-296

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