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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-28 09:49:46 +0000
committerDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-28 09:49:46 +0000
commit50b37d4a27d3295a29afca2286f1a5a086142cec (patch)
tree9212f763934ee090ef72d823f559f52ce387f268 /raddb/sites-available/dynamic-clients
parentInitial commit. (diff)
downloadfreeradius-50b37d4a27d3295a29afca2286f1a5a086142cec.tar.xz
freeradius-50b37d4a27d3295a29afca2286f1a5a086142cec.zip
Adding upstream version 3.2.1+dfsg.upstream/3.2.1+dfsgupstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
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+# -*- text -*-
+######################################################################
+#
+# Sample configuration file for dynamically updating the list
+# of RADIUS clients at run time.
+#
+# Everything is keyed off of a client "network". (e.g. 192.0.2/24)
+# This configuration lets the server know that clients within
+# that network are defined dynamically.
+#
+# When the server receives a packet from an unknown IP address
+# within that network, it tries to find a dynamic definition
+# for that client. If the definition is found, the IP address
+# (and other configuration) is added to the server's internal
+# cache of "known clients", with a configurable lifetime.
+#
+# Further packets from that IP address result in the client
+# definition being found in the cache. Once the lifetime is
+# reached, the client definition is deleted, and any new requests
+# from that client are looked up as above.
+#
+# If the dynamic definition is not found, then the request is
+# treated as if it came from an unknown client. i.e. It is
+# silently discarded.
+#
+# As part of protection from Denial of Service (DoS) attacks,
+# the server will add only one new client per second. This CANNOT
+# be changed, and is NOT configurable.
+#
+# $Id$
+#
+######################################################################
+
+#
+# Define a network where clients may be dynamically defined.
+client dynamic {
+ #
+ # You MUST specify a netmask!
+ # IPv4 /32 or IPv6 /128 are NOT allowed!
+ ipaddr = 192.0.2.0/24
+
+ #
+ # Any other configuration normally found in a "client"
+ # entry can be used here.
+
+ #
+ # A shared secret does NOT have to be defined. It can
+ # be left out.
+
+ #
+ # Define the virtual server used to discover dynamic clients.
+ dynamic_clients = dynamic_clients
+
+ #
+ # The directory where client definitions are stored. This
+ # needs to be used ONLY if the client definitions are stored
+ # in flat-text files. Each file in that directory should be
+ # ONE and only one client definition. The name of the file
+ # should be the IP address of the client.
+ #
+ # If you are storing clients in SQL, this entry should not
+ # be used.
+# directory = ${confdir}/dynamic-clients/
+
+ #
+ # Define the lifetime (in seconds) for dynamic clients.
+ # They will be cached for this lifetime, and deleted afterwards.
+ #
+ # If the lifetime is "0", then the dynamic client is never
+ # deleted. The only way to delete the client is to re-start
+ # the server.
+ lifetime = 3600
+}
+
+#
+# This is the virtual server referenced above by "dynamic_clients".
+server dynamic_clients {
+
+ #
+ # The only contents of the virtual server is the "authorize" section.
+ authorize {
+
+ #
+ # Put any modules you want here. SQL, LDAP, "exec",
+ # Perl, etc. The only requirements is that the
+ # attributes MUST go into the control item list.
+ #
+ # The request that is processed through this section
+ # is EMPTY. There are NO attributes. The request is fake,
+ # and is NOT the packet that triggered the lookup of
+ # the dynamic client.
+ #
+ # The ONLY piece of useful information is either
+ #
+ # Packet-Src-IP-Address (IPv4 clients)
+ # Packet-Src-IPv6-Address (IPv6 clients)
+ #
+ # The attributes used to define a dynamic client mirror
+ # the configuration items in the "client" structure.
+ #
+
+ #
+ # Example 1: Hard-code a client IP. This example is
+ # useless, but it documents the attributes
+ # you need.
+ #
+ update control {
+
+ #
+ # Echo the IP address of the client.
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-IP-Address = "%{Packet-Src-IP-Address}"
+
+ # require_message_authenticator
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-Require-MA = no
+
+ # secret
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-Secret = "testing123"
+
+ # shortname
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-Shortname = "%{Packet-Src-IP-Address}"
+
+ # nas_type
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-NAS-Type = "other"
+
+ # virtual_server
+ #
+ # This can ONLY be used if the network client
+ # definition (e.g. "client dynamic" above) has
+ # NO virtual_server defined.
+ #
+ # If the network client definition does have a
+ # virtual_server defined, then that is used,
+ # and there is no need to define this attribute.
+ #
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-Virtual-Server = "something"
+
+ }
+
+ #
+ # Example 2: Read the clients from "clients" files
+ # in a directory.
+ #
+
+ # This requires you to uncomment the
+ # "directory" configuration in the
+ # "client dynamic" configuration above,
+ # and then put one file per IP address in
+ # that directory.
+ #
+ dynamic_clients
+
+ #
+ # Example 3: Look the clients up in SQL.
+ #
+ # This requires the SQL module to be configured, of course.
+ if ("%{sql: SELECT nasname FROM nas WHERE nasname = '%{Packet-Src-IP-Address}'}") {
+ update control {
+ #
+ # Echo the IP.
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-IP-Address = "%{Packet-Src-IP-Address}"
+
+ #
+ # Do multiple SELECT statements to grab
+ # the various definitions.
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-Shortname = "%{sql: SELECT shortname FROM nas WHERE nasname = '%{Packet-Src-IP-Address}'}"
+
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-Secret = "%{sql: SELECT secret FROM nas WHERE nasname = '%{Packet-Src-IP-Address}'}"
+
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-NAS-Type = "%{sql: SELECT type FROM nas WHERE nasname = '%{Packet-Src-IP-Address}'}"
+
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-Virtual-Server = "%{sql: SELECT server FROM nas WHERE nasname = '%{Packet-Src-IP-Address}'}"
+ }
+
+ }
+
+ # Do an LDAP lookup in the elements OU, check to see if
+ # the Packet-Src-IP-Address object has a "ou"
+ # attribute, if it does continue. Change "ACME.COM" to
+ # the real OU of your organization.
+ #
+ # Assuming the following schema:
+ #
+ # OU=Elements,OU=Radius,DC=ACME,DC=COM
+ #
+ # Elements will hold a record of every NAS in your
+ # Network. Create Group objects based on the IP
+ # Address of the NAS and set the "Location" or "l"
+ # attribute to the NAS Huntgroup the NAS belongs to
+ # allow them to be centrally managed in LDAP.
+ #
+ # e.g. CN=10.1.2.3,OU=Elements,OU=Radius,DC=ACME,DC=COM
+ #
+ # With a "l" value of "CiscoRTR" for a Cisco Router
+ # that has a NAS-IP-Address or Source-IP-Address of
+ # 10.1.2.3.
+ #
+ # And with a "ou" value of the shared secret password
+ # for the NAS element. ie "password"
+ if ("%{ldap:ldap:///OU=Elements,OU=Radius,DC=ACME,DC=COM?ou?sub?cn=%{Packet-Src-IP-Address}}") {
+ update control {
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-IP-Address = "%{Packet-Src-IP-Address}"
+
+ # Set the Client-Shortname to be the Location
+ # "l" just like in the Huntgroups, but this
+ # time to the shortname.
+
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-Shortname = "%{ldap:ldap:///OU=Elements,OU=Radius,DC=ACME,DC=COM?l?sub?cn=%{Packet-Src-IP-Address}}"
+
+ # Lookup and set the Shared Secret based on
+ # the "ou" attribute.
+ &FreeRADIUS-Client-Secret = "%{ldap:ldap:///OU=Elements,OU=Radius,DC=ACME,DC=COM?ou?sub?cn=%{Packet-Src-IP-Address}}"
+ }
+ }
+
+ #
+ # Tell the caller that the client was defined properly.
+ #
+ # If the authorize section does NOT return "ok", then
+ # the new client is ignored.
+ ok
+ }
+}