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Clients Conf

The document outlines the configuration directives for RADIUS clients, detailing how to define clients, set IP addresses, and configure security settings such as shared secrets. It emphasizes the importance of using IP addresses over hostnames for reliability and provides guidance on connection limits and message authentication requirements. Additionally, it includes examples of client configurations for both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, as well as a section for home server configuration.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views6 pages

Clients Conf

The document outlines the configuration directives for RADIUS clients, detailing how to define clients, set IP addresses, and configure security settings such as shared secrets. It emphasizes the importance of using IP addresses over hostnames for reliability and provides guidance on connection limits and message authentication requirements. Additionally, it includes examples of client configurations for both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, as well as a section for home server configuration.

Uploaded by

kashif.jutt
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as TXT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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# -*- text -*-

##
## clients.conf -- client configuration directives
##
## $Id: 60f9f4bf8a32804182e4516ac69ac510d25215d1 $

#######################################################################
#
# Define RADIUS clients (usually a NAS, Access Point, etc.).

#
# Defines a RADIUS client.
#
# '127.0.0.1' is another name for 'localhost'. It is enabled by default,
# to allow testing of the server after an initial installation. If you
# are not going to be permitting RADIUS queries from localhost, we suggest
# that you delete, or comment out, this entry.
#
#

#
# Each client has a "short name" that is used to distinguish it from
# other clients.
#
# In version 1.x, the string after the word "client" was the IP
# address of the client. In 2.0, the IP address is configured via
# the "ipaddr" or "ipv6addr" fields. For compatibility, the 1.x
# format is still accepted.
#
client localhost {
# Only *one* of ipaddr, ipv4addr, ipv6addr may be specified for
# a client.
#
# ipaddr will accept IPv4 or IPv6 addresses with optional CIDR
# notation '/<mask>' to specify ranges.
#
# ipaddr will accept domain names e.g. example.org resolving
# them via DNS.
#
# If both A and AAAA records are found, A records will be
# used in preference to AAAA.
ipaddr = 127.0.0.1

# Same as ipaddr but allows v4 addresses only. Requires A


# record for domain names.
# ipv4addr = * # any. 127.0.0.1 == localhost

# Same as ipaddr but allows v6 addresses only. Requires AAAA


# record for domain names.
# ipv6addr = :: # any. ::1 == localhost

#
# A note on DNS: We STRONGLY recommend using IP addresses
# rather than host names. Using host names means that the
# server will do DNS lookups when it starts, making it
# dependent on DNS. i.e. If anything goes wrong with DNS,
# the server won't start!
#
# The server also looks up the IP address from DNS once, and
# only once, when it starts. If the DNS record is later
# updated, the server WILL NOT see that update.
#

#
# The transport protocol.
#
# If unspecified, defaults to "udp", which is the traditional
# RADIUS transport. It may also be "tcp", in which case the
# server will accept connections from this client ONLY over TCP.
#
proto = *

#
# The shared secret use to "encrypt" and "sign" packets between
# the NAS and FreeRADIUS. You MUST change this secret from the
# default, otherwise it's not a secret any more!
#
# The secret can be any string, up to 8k characters in length.
#
# Control codes can be entered vi octal encoding,
# e.g. "\101\102" == "AB"
# Quotation marks can be entered by escaping them,
# e.g. "foo\"bar"
#
# A note on security: The security of the RADIUS protocol
# depends COMPLETELY on this secret! We recommend using a
# shared secret that is composed of:
#
# upper case letters
# lower case letters
# numbers
#
# And is at LEAST 8 characters long, preferably 16 characters in
# length. The secret MUST be random, and should not be words,
# phrase, or anything else that is recognisable.
#
# The default secret below is only for testing, and should
# not be used in any real environment.
#
secret = testing123

#
# Old-style clients do not send a Message-Authenticator
# in an Access-Request. RFC 5080 suggests that all clients
# SHOULD include it in an Access-Request. The configuration
# item below allows the server to require it. If a client
# is required to include a Message-Authenticator and it does
# not, then the packet will be silently discarded.
#
# allowed values: yes, no
require_message_authenticator = no

#
# The short name is used as an alias for the fully qualified
# domain name, or the IP address.
#
# It is accepted for compatibility with 1.x, but it is no
# longer necessary in >= 2.0
#
#shortname = localhost

#
# the following three fields are optional, but may be used by
# checkrad.pl for simultaneous use checks
#

#
# The nas_type tells 'checkrad.pl' which NAS-specific method to
# use to query the NAS for simultaneous use.
#
# Permitted NAS types are:
#
# cisco
# computone
# livingston
# juniper
# max40xx
# multitech
# netserver
# pathras
# patton
# portslave
# tc
# usrhiper
# other # for all other types

#
nas_type = other # localhost isn't usually a NAS...

#
# The following two configurations are for future use.
# The 'naspasswd' file is currently used to store the NAS
# login name and password, which is used by checkrad.pl
# when querying the NAS for simultaneous use.
#
# login = !root
# password = someadminpas

#
# As of 2.0, clients can also be tied to a virtual server.
# This is done by setting the "virtual_server" configuration
# item, as in the example below.
#
# virtual_server = home1

#
# A pointer to the "home_server_pool" OR a "home_server"
# section that contains the CoA configuration for this
# client. For an example of a coa home server or pool,
# see raddb/sites-available/originate-coa
# coa_server = coa

#
# Response window for proxied packets. If non-zero,
# then the lower of (home, client) response_window
# will be used.
#
# i.e. it can be used to lower the response_window
# packets from one client to a home server. It cannot
# be used to raise the response_window.
#
# response_window = 10.0

#
# Connection limiting for clients using "proto = tcp".
#
# This section is ignored for clients sending UDP traffic
#
limit {
#
# Limit the number of simultaneous TCP connections from a client
#
# The default is 16.
# Setting this to 0 means "no limit"
max_connections = 16

# The per-socket "max_requests" option does not exist.

#
# The lifetime, in seconds, of a TCP connection. After
# this lifetime, the connection will be closed.
#
# Setting this to 0 means "forever".
lifetime = 0

#
# The idle timeout, in seconds, of a TCP connection.
# If no packets have been received over the connection for
# this time, the connection will be closed.
#
# Setting this to 0 means "no timeout".
#
# We STRONGLY RECOMMEND that you set an idle timeout.
#
idle_timeout = 30
}
}

# IPv6 Client
client localhost_ipv6 {
ipv6addr = ::1
secret = testing123
}

# All IPv6 Site-local clients


#client sitelocal_ipv6 {
# ipv6addr = fe80::/16
# secret = testing123
#}

#client example.org {
# ipaddr = radius.example.org
# secret = testing123
#}

#
# You can now specify one secret for a network of clients.
# When a client request comes in, the BEST match is chosen.
# i.e. The entry from the smallest possible network.
#
#client private-network-1 {
# ipaddr = 192.0.2.0/24
# secret = testing123-1
#}

#client private-network-2 {
# ipaddr = 198.51.100.0/24
# secret = testing123-2
#}

#######################################################################
#
# Per-socket client lists. The configuration entries are exactly
# the same as above, but they are nested inside of a section.
#
# You can have as many per-socket client lists as you have "listen"
# sections, or you can re-use a list among multiple "listen" sections.
#
# Un-comment this section, and edit a "listen" section to add:
# "clients = per_socket_clients". That IP address/port combination
# will then accept ONLY the clients listed in this section.
#
# There are additional considerations when using clients from SQL.
#
# A client can be link to a virtual server via modules such as SQL.
# This link is done via the following process:
#
# If there is no listener in a virtual server, SQL clients are added
# to the global list for that virtual server.
#
# If there is a listener, and the first listener does not have a
# "clients=..." configuration item, SQL clients are added to the
# global list.
#
# If there is a listener, and the first one does have a "clients=..."
# configuration item, SQL clients are added to that list. The client
# { ...} ` configured in that list are also added for that listener.
#
# The only issue is if you have multiple listeners in a virtual
# server, each with a different client list, then the SQL clients are
# added only to the first listener.
#
#clients per_socket_clients {
# client socket_client {
# ipaddr = 192.0.2.4
# secret = testing123
# }
#}
##############################################

home_server radius-06082024 {

type = coa
ipaddr = 103.115.198.14
port = 3799
secret = 786786786

coa {
irt = 2
mrt = 16
mrc = 5
mrd = 30
}

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