diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'raddb/mods-config/files')
-rw-r--r-- | raddb/mods-config/files/accounting | 27 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | raddb/mods-config/files/authorize | 206 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | raddb/mods-config/files/dhcp | 153 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | raddb/mods-config/files/pre-proxy | 31 |
4 files changed, 417 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/raddb/mods-config/files/accounting b/raddb/mods-config/files/accounting new file mode 100644 index 0000000..eaf952a --- /dev/null +++ b/raddb/mods-config/files/accounting @@ -0,0 +1,27 @@ +# +# $Id$ +# +# This is like the 'users' file, but it is processed only for +# accounting packets. +# + +# Select between different accounting methods based for example on the +# Realm, the Huntgroup-Name or any combinaison of the attribute/value +# pairs contained in an accounting packet. +# +# You will need to add an "Acct-Type foo {...}" subsection to the +# main "accounting" section in order for these sample configurations +# to work. +# +#DEFAULT Realm == "foo.net", Acct-Type := foo +# +#DEFAULT Huntgroup-Name == "wifi", Acct-Type := wifi +# +#DEFAULT Client-IP-Address == 10.0.0.1, Acct-Type := other +# +#DEFAULT Acct-Status-Type == Start, Acct-Type := start + +# Replace the User-Name with the Stripped-User-Name, if it exists. +# +#DEFAULT +# User-Name := "%{%{Stripped-User-Name}:-%{User-Name}}" diff --git a/raddb/mods-config/files/authorize b/raddb/mods-config/files/authorize new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ddf805f --- /dev/null +++ b/raddb/mods-config/files/authorize @@ -0,0 +1,206 @@ +# +# Configuration file for the rlm_files module. +# Please see rlm_files(5) manpage for more information. +# +# This file contains authentication security and configuration +# information for each user. Accounting requests are NOT processed +# through this file. Instead, see 'accounting', in this directory. +# +# The first field is the user's name and can be up to +# 253 characters in length. This is followed (on the same line) with +# the list of authentication requirements for that user. This can +# include password, comm server name, comm server port number, protocol +# type (perhaps set by the "hints" file), and huntgroup name (set by +# the "huntgroups" file). +# +# If you are not sure why a particular reply is being sent by the +# server, then run the server in debugging mode (radiusd -X), and +# you will see which entries in this file are matched. +# +# When an authentication request is received from the comm server, +# these values are tested. Only the first match is used unless the +# "Fall-Through" variable is set to "Yes". +# +# A special user named "DEFAULT" matches on all usernames. +# You can have several DEFAULT entries. All entries are processed +# in the order they appear in this file. The first entry that +# matches the login-request will stop processing unless you use +# the Fall-Through variable. +# +# Indented (with the tab character) lines following the first +# line indicate the configuration values to be passed back to +# the comm server to allow the initiation of a user session. +# This can include things like the PPP configuration values +# or the host to log the user onto. +# +# You can include another `users' file with `$INCLUDE users.other' + +# +# For a list of RADIUS attributes, and links to their definitions, +# see: http://www.freeradius.org/rfc/attributes.html +# +# Entries below this point are examples included in the server for +# educational purposes. They may be deleted from the deployed +# configuration without impacting the operation of the server. +# + +# +# Deny access for a specific user. Note that this entry MUST +# be before any other 'Auth-Type' attribute which results in the user +# being authenticated. +# +# Note that there is NO 'Fall-Through' attribute, so the user will not +# be given any additional resources. +# +#lameuser Auth-Type := Reject +# Reply-Message = "Your account has been disabled." + +# +# Deny access for a group of users. +# +# Note that there is NO 'Fall-Through' attribute, so the user will not +# be given any additional resources. +# +#DEFAULT Group == "disabled", Auth-Type := Reject +# Reply-Message = "Your account has been disabled." +# + +# +# This is a complete entry for "steve". Note that there is no Fall-Through +# entry so that no DEFAULT entry will be used, and the user will NOT +# get any attributes in addition to the ones listed here. +# +#steve Cleartext-Password := "testing" +# Service-Type = Framed-User, +# Framed-Protocol = PPP, +# Framed-IP-Address = 172.16.3.33, +# Framed-IP-Netmask = 255.255.255.0, +# Framed-Routing = Broadcast-Listen, +# Framed-Filter-Id = "std.ppp", +# Framed-MTU = 1500, +# Framed-Compression = Van-Jacobsen-TCP-IP + +# +# The canonical testing user which is in most of the +# examples. +# +#bob Cleartext-Password := "hello" +# Reply-Message := "Hello, %{User-Name}" +# + +# +# This is an entry for a user with a space in their name. +# Note the double quotes surrounding the name. If you have +# users with spaces in their names, you must also change +# the "filter_username" policy to allow spaces. +# +# See raddb/policy.d/filter, filter_username {} section. +# +#"John Doe" Cleartext-Password := "hello" +# Reply-Message = "Hello, %{User-Name}" + +# +# Dial user back and telnet to the default host for that port +# +#Deg Cleartext-Password := "ge55ged" +# Service-Type = Callback-Login-User, +# Login-IP-Host = 0.0.0.0, +# Callback-Number = "9,5551212", +# Login-Service = Telnet, +# Login-TCP-Port = Telnet + +# +# Another complete entry. After the user "dialbk" has logged in, the +# connection will be broken and the user will be dialed back after which +# he will get a connection to the host "timeshare1". +# +#dialbk Cleartext-Password := "callme" +# Service-Type = Callback-Login-User, +# Login-IP-Host = timeshare1, +# Login-Service = PortMaster, +# Callback-Number = "9,1-800-555-1212" + +# +# user "swilson" will only get a static IP number if he logs in with +# a framed protocol on a terminal server in Alphen (see the huntgroups file). +# +# Note that by setting "Fall-Through", other attributes will be added from +# the following DEFAULT entries +# +#swilson Service-Type == Framed-User, Huntgroup-Name == "alphen" +# Framed-IP-Address = 192.0.2.65, +# Fall-Through = Yes + +# +# If the user logs in as 'username.shell', then authenticate them +# using the default method, give them shell access, and stop processing +# the rest of the file. +# +#DEFAULT Suffix == ".shell" +# Service-Type = Login-User, +# Login-Service = Telnet, +# Login-IP-Host = your.shell.machine + + +# +# The rest of this file contains the several DEFAULT entries. +# DEFAULT entries match with all login names. +# Note that DEFAULT entries can also Fall-Through (see first entry). +# A name-value pair from a DEFAULT entry will _NEVER_ override +# an already existing name-value pair. +# + +# Sample defaults for all framed connections. +# +#DEFAULT Service-Type == Framed-User +# Framed-IP-Address = 255.255.255.254, +# Framed-MTU = 576, +# Service-Type = Framed-User, +# Fall-Through = Yes + +# +# Default for PPP: dynamic IP address, PPP mode, VJ-compression. +# NOTE: we do not use Hint = "PPP", since PPP might also be auto-detected +# by the terminal server in which case there may not be a "P" suffix. +# The terminal server sends "Framed-Protocol = PPP" for auto PPP. +# +DEFAULT Framed-Protocol == PPP + Framed-Protocol = PPP, + Framed-Compression = Van-Jacobson-TCP-IP + +# +# Default for CSLIP: dynamic IP address, SLIP mode, VJ-compression. +# +DEFAULT Hint == "CSLIP" + Framed-Protocol = SLIP, + Framed-Compression = Van-Jacobson-TCP-IP + +# +# Default for SLIP: dynamic IP address, SLIP mode. +# +DEFAULT Hint == "SLIP" + Framed-Protocol = SLIP + +# +# Last default: rlogin to our main server. +# +#DEFAULT +# Service-Type = Login-User, +# Login-Service = Rlogin, +# Login-IP-Host = shellbox.ispdomain.com + +# # +# # Last default: shell on the local terminal server. +# # +# DEFAULT +# Service-Type = Administrative-User + + +# On no match, the user is denied access. + + +######################################################### +# You should add test accounts to the TOP of this file! # +# See the example user "bob" above. # +######################################################### + diff --git a/raddb/mods-config/files/dhcp b/raddb/mods-config/files/dhcp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..04f37b5 --- /dev/null +++ b/raddb/mods-config/files/dhcp @@ -0,0 +1,153 @@ +# +# This configuration file that may be used by multiple instances of rlm_files +# to set reply and control options for defining DHCP replies. +# +# The content of this file is all made up and needs to be set appropriate to +# the network being served. +# + +############################################ +# Global and network-specific parameters # +############################################ + +# +# Note: This section is matched by calling the dhcp_network instance of the +# files module. +# + + +# +# Default options that can be overridden by subsequent matches. +# +network + DHCP-Domain-Name-Server := 192.0.1.100, + DHCP-Domain-Name-Server += 192.0.1.101, + DHCP-Time-Server := 192.0.1.200, + DHCP-Domain-Name := "example.org", + DHCP-IP-Address-Lease-Time := 7200, + Fall-Through := yes + + +# +# The following examples set options specific to the Layer 2 network, matched +# on whether the internal attribute DHCP-Network-Subnet (that acts as a +# network identifier) is within the indicated range. This is equivalent to a +# "shared-network" or "multinet" configuration (i.e. one that is possibly +# composed of multiple subnets) as defined by some other DHCP servers. +# + +# +# Here is an example for a network containing a single IP subnet. We can set +# the network-specific options *and* we directly set the DHCP-Subnet-Mask, +# DHCP-Router-Address and DHCP-Broadcast-Address since it is a common reply +# parameter for all DHCP requests originating from this network. +# +# The use of the ^= "prepend" operator for setting DHCP-Domain-Name-Server +# results in this new value being inserted at the start of the list, meaning +# this will become the first DNS server presented in the reply. +# +# Note: If the architecture has only a single subnet for each Layer 2 network +# then by placing all subnet-related options here we can avoid calling the +# dhcp_subnet policy after IP allocation. +# +network DHCP-Network-Subnet < 10.20.0.0/16, Pool-Name := "smalldept" + DHCP-IP-Address-Lease-Time := 3600, + DHCP-Domain-Name := "smalldept.example.org", + DHCP-Subnet-Mask := 255.255.0.0, + DHCP-Router-Address := 10.20.0.1, + DHCP-Domain-Name-Server ^= 10.20.0.2, + DHCP-Broadcast-Address := 10.20.255.255 + +# +# Here is an example for a network that consists of multiple IP subnets, each +# of which is valid for a DHCP request originating from the network. We set +# the Pool-Name parameter to identify a single pool that contains the IP +# address within each subnet, any of which is suitable. +# +# We set the options that are common to the network but we defer the setting +# of DHCP-Subnet-Mask, DHCP-Router-Address and DHCP-Broadcast-Address until an +# address has been allocated. Only then do we know which subnet parameters are +# required. See the next section. +# +network DHCP-Network-Subnet < 10.30.0.0/16, Pool-Name := "bigdept" + DHCP-Domain-Name := "bigdept.example.org" + + +# +# Here is an example for a network that has a dedicated pool for admin staff +# and a seperate pool for everything else. +# +network DHCP-Network-Subnet < 192.0.2.0/24, DHCP-Group-Name == "admin", Pool-Name := "admin-only" +network DHCP-Network-Subnet < 192.0.2.0/24, Pool-Name := "general" + + +################################ +# Subnet-specific parameters # +################################ + +# +# Note: This section is matched by calling the dhcp_subnet policy which sets +# DHCP-Network-Subnet to the allocated IP address of the device and then +# calls the dhcp_subnet instance of the files module. +# +# Layer 2 networks many contain multiple subnets, each with their own gateway. +# We call this section *after* the allocation of an IP address (e.g. from a +# single pool containing addresses within multiple equally-valid subnets for +# the network) so that we then know which subnet-specific parameters to +# return. +# + +# +# Subnet-specific options, matched on whether the allocated IP address is +# within the indicated range. +# +subnet DHCP-Network-Subnet < 10.30.10.0/24 + DHCP-Subnet-Mask := 255.255.255.0, + DHCP-Router-Address := 10.30.10.1, + DHCP-Broadcast-Address := 10.30.10.255 + +subnet DHCP-Network-Subnet < 10.30.20.0/24 + DHCP-Subnet-Mask := 255.255.255.0, + DHCP-Router-Address := 10.30.20.1, + DHCP-Broadcast-Address := 10.30.20.255 + + +############################### +# Group-specific parameters # +############################### + +# +# Note: This section is matched by calling the dhcp_group_options policy. +# +# It should be called *after* defining the device's group memberships in +# DHCP-Group-Name request attributes. In the default dhcp virtual server this +# is demonstrated with the help of the dhcp_group_membership instance of the +# passwd module. +# + +# +# Group-specific options, keyed by DHCP-Group-Name +# +group1 + DHCP-Server-Host-Name := "terminal-booter.example.org", + DHCP-Boot-Filename := "bootfile.pxe" + + +############################## +# Host-specific parameters # +############################## + +# +# Note: This section is matched by calling the dhcp_hosts instance of the +# files module. +# + +# +# Host-specific options, keyed by DHCP-Client-Hardware-Address +# +host-00:10:20:30:40:50 + DHCP-Boot-Filename := "customboot.pxe" + +host-10:90:80:70:aa:bb + DHCP-X-Window-Font-Server := 10.20.1.10, + DHCP-Impress-Server := 10.20.1.20 diff --git a/raddb/mods-config/files/pre-proxy b/raddb/mods-config/files/pre-proxy new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7292e23 --- /dev/null +++ b/raddb/mods-config/files/pre-proxy @@ -0,0 +1,31 @@ +# +# Configuration file for the rlm_files module. +# Please see rlm_files(5) manpage for more information. +# +# $Id$ +# +# This file is similar to the "users" file. The check items +# are compared against the request, but the "reply" items are +# used to update the proxied packet, not the reply to the NAS. +# +# You can use this file to re-write requests which are about to +# be sent to a home server. +# + +# +# Requests destinated to realm "extisp" are sent to a RADIUS +# home server hosted by an other company which doesn't know about +# the IP addresses of our NASes. Therefore we replace the value of +# the NAS-IP-Address attribute by a unique value we communicated +# to them. +# +#DEFAULT Realm == "extisp" +# NAS-IP-Address := 10.1.2.3 + +# +# For all proxied packets, set the User-Name in the proxied packet +# to the Stripped-User-Name, if it exists. If not, set it to the +# User-Name from the original request. +# +#DEFAULT +# User-Name := `%{%{Stripped-User-Name}:-%{User-Name}}` |