Hello Everyone; I find myself have to install and configure a radius server for about 55 users. I, of course, have never done so. Any suggestions on a radus server ( I noticed one, which came w/ 8.) and a must requirement is documentation for the "handicap" Thanks for your advise -- Bob Barish B.M.T Solutions http://www.bmtsolutions.com 12:25pm up 22:46, 4 users, load average: 0.30, 0.10, 0.02
icradius http://icradius.innercite.com uses a database backend so its really easy to maintain and setup. or, if you dont have a database, cistron-radius which ships with suse is good. documentation on it is very sparse though but its not that hard to setup. basically setup your /etc/raddb/clients file and /etc/raddb/naslist file that lists your remote access servers and their secret keys and then just use the /etc/passwd file for radius authentication. On Wednesday 24 July 2002 02:28 pm, you wrote:
Hello Everyone;
I find myself have to install and configure a radius server for about 55 users. I, of course, have never done so. Any suggestions on a radus server ( I noticed one, which came w/ 8.) and a must requirement is documentation for the "handicap"
Thanks for your advise
-- Chad Whitten Network/Systems Administrator neXband Communications cwhitten@nexband.com
On Wednesday 24 July 2002 13:23, Chad Whitten wrote:
icradius http://icradius.innercite.com uses a database backend so its really easy to maintain and setup.
or, if you dont have a database, cistron-radius which ships with suse is good. documentation on it is very sparse though but its not that hard to setup. basically setup your /etc/raddb/clients file and /etc/raddb/naslist file that lists your remote access servers and their secret keys and then just use the /etc/passwd file for radius authentication.
Thanks, I will give the cistron-radius a try. Thanks for the guidance -- Bob Barish B.M.T Solutions http://www.bmtsolutions.com 1:35pm up 23:56, 5 users, load average: 0.49, 0.20, 0.06
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bob barish
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Chad Whitten