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-rw-r--r-- | raddb/vmpsd.conf.in | 405 |
1 files changed, 405 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/raddb/vmpsd.conf.in b/raddb/vmpsd.conf.in new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d68ef01 --- /dev/null +++ b/raddb/vmpsd.conf.in @@ -0,0 +1,405 @@ +## +## vmpsd.conf -- FreeRADIUS VMPS server configuration file. +## +## http://www.freeradius.org/ +## $Id$ +## + +# +# This configuration file is for a stand-alone VMPS server that +# does not do RADIUS. For an integrated radius + vmps server, +# edit "radiusd.conf", and add two sections to it: +# +# listen { +# type = vmps +# ... +# } +# +# vmps { +# ... +# } +# +# +# See the text below for additional documentation on those two +# sections. +# + +# The location of other config files and +# logfiles are declared in this file +# +# Also general configuration for modules can be done +# in this file, it is exported through the API to +# modules that ask for it. +# +# The configuration variables defined here are of the form ${foo} +# They are local to this file, and do not change from request to +# request. +# +# The per-request variables are of the form %{Attribute-Name}, and +# are taken from the values of the attribute in the incoming +# request. See 'doc/configuration/variables.rst' for more information. + +# +# Standard includes, etc. +# +# FIXME: to make this work: prefix, etc. See radiusd.conf... +# +prefix = @prefix@ +exec_prefix = @exec_prefix@ +sysconfdir = @sysconfdir@ +localstatedir = @localstatedir@ +sbindir = @sbindir@ +logdir = @logdir@ +raddbdir = @raddbdir@ +radacctdir = @radacctdir@ + +# +# The logging messages for the server are appended to the +# tail of this file. +# +log_file = ${logdir}/vmpsd.log + +# +# Destination for log messages. This can be one of: +# +# files - log to ${log_file}, as defined above. +# syslog - to syslog (see also the log{} section, below) +# stdout - standard output +# stderr - standard error. +# +# The command-line option "-X" over-rides this option, and forces +# logging to go to stdout. +# +log_destination = files + +# +# libdir: Where to find the rlm_* modules. +# +# This should be automatically set at configuration time. +# +# If the server builds and installs, but fails at execution time +# with an 'undefined symbol' error, then you can use the libdir +# directive to work around the problem. +# +# The cause is usually that a library has been installed on your +# system in a place where the dynamic linker CANNOT find it. When +# executing as root (or another user), your personal environment MAY +# be set up to allow the dynamic linker to find the library. When +# executing as a daemon, FreeRADIUS MAY NOT have the same +# personalized configuration. +# +# To work around the problem, find out which library contains that symbol, +# and add the directory containing that library to the end of 'libdir', +# with a colon separating the directory names. NO spaces are allowed. +# +# e.g. libdir = /usr/local/lib:/opt/package/lib +# +# You can also try setting the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable +# in a script which starts the server. +# +# If that does not work, then you can re-configure and re-build the +# server to NOT use shared libraries, via: +# +# ./configure --disable-shared +# make +# make install +# +libdir = @libdir@ + +# pidfile: Where to place the PID of the RADIUS server. +# +# The server may be signalled while it's running by using this +# file. +# +# This file is written when ONLY running in daemon mode. +# +# e.g.: kill -HUP `cat /var/run/radiusd/radiusd.pid` +# +pidfile = ${run_dir}/vmpsd.pid + + +# user/group: The name (or #number) of the user/group to run vmpsd as. +# +# If these are commented out, the server will run as the user/group +# that started it. In order to change to a different user/group, you +# MUST be root ( or have root privileges ) to start the server. +# +# We STRONGLY recommend that you run the server with as few permissions +# as possible. That is, if you're not using shadow passwords, the +# user and group items below should be set to 'nobody'. +# +# On SCO (ODT 3) use "user = nouser" and "group = nogroup". +# +# NOTE that some kernels refuse to setgid(group) when the value of +# (unsigned)group is above 60000; don't use group nobody on these systems! +# +# On systems with shadow passwords, you might have to set 'group = shadow' +# for the server to be able to read the shadow password file. If you can +# authenticate users while in debug mode, but not in daemon mode, it may be +# that the debugging mode server is running as a user that can read the +# shadow info, and the user listed below can not. +# +#user = nobody +#group = nobody + +# max_request_time: The maximum time (in seconds) to handle a request. +# +# Requests which take more time than this to process may be killed, and +# a REJECT message is returned. +# +# WARNING: If you notice that requests take a long time to be handled, +# then this MAY INDICATE a bug in the server, in one of the modules +# used to handle a request, OR in your local configuration. +# +# This problem is most often seen when using an SQL database. If it takes +# more than a second or two to receive an answer from the SQL database, +# then it probably means that you haven't indexed the database. See your +# SQL server documentation for more information. +# +# Useful range of values: 5 to 120 +# +max_request_time = 30 + +# cleanup_delay: The time to wait (in seconds) before cleaning up +# a reply which was sent to the NAS. +# +# The VMPS request is normally cached internally for a short period +# of time, after the reply is sent to the NAS. The reply packet may be +# lost in the network, and the NAS will not see it. The NAS will then +# re-send the request, and the server will respond quickly with the +# cached reply. +# +# If this value is set too low, then duplicate requests from the NAS +# MAY NOT be detected, and will instead be handled as separate requests. +# +# If this value is set too high, then the server will cache too many +# requests, and some new requests may get blocked. (See 'max_requests'.) +# +# Useful range of values: 2 to 10 +# +cleanup_delay = 5 + +# listen: Make the server listen on a particular IP address, and send +# replies out from that address. This directive is most useful for +# hosts with multiple IP addresses on one interface. +# +# If you want the server to listen on additional addresses, or on +# additional ports, you can use multiple "listen" sections. +# +# Each section make the server listen for only one type of packet, +# therefore authentication and accounting have to be configured in +# different sections. +# +# The server ignore all "listen" section if you are using '-i' and '-p' +# on the command line. +# +listen { + # IP address on which to listen. + # Allowed values are: + # dotted quad (1.2.3.4) + # hostname (radius.example.com) + # wildcard (*) + ipaddr = * + + # OR, you can use an IPv6 address, but not both + # at the same time. +# ipv6addr = :: # any. ::1 == localhost + + # Port on which to listen. + # Allowed values are: + # integer port number + # 1589 is the default VMPS port. + port = 1589 + + # Type of packets to listen for. Use "vmps" for VMPSd. + # + type = vmps + + # Some systems support binding to an interface, in addition + # to the IP address. This feature isn't strictly necessary, + # but for sites with many IP addresses on one interface, + # it's useful to say "listen on all addresses for eth0". + # + # If your system does not support this feature, you will + # get an error if you try to use it. + # +# interface = eth0 + + # Per-socket lists of clients. This is a very useful feature. + # + # The name here is a reference to a section elsewhere in + # radiusd.conf, or clients.conf. Having the name as + # a reference allows multiple sockets to use the same + # set of clients. + # + # If this configuration is used, then the global list of clients + # is IGNORED for this "listen" section. Take care configuring + # this feature, to ensure you don't accidentally disable a + # client you need. + # + # See clients.conf for the configuration of "per_socket_clients". + # +# clients = per_socket_clients +} + +# hostname_lookups: Log the names of clients or just their IP addresses +# e.g., www.freeradius.org (on) or 206.47.27.232 (off). +# +# The default is 'off' because it would be overall better for the net +# if people had to knowingly turn this feature on, since enabling it +# means that each client request will result in AT LEAST one lookup +# request to the nameserver. Enabling hostname_lookups will also +# mean that your server may stop randomly for 30 seconds from time +# to time, if the DNS requests take too long. +# +# Turning hostname lookups off also means that the server won't block +# for 30 seconds, if it sees an IP address which has no name associated +# with it. +# +# allowed values: {no, yes} +# +hostname_lookups = no + +# Core dumps are a bad thing. This should only be set to 'yes' +# if you're debugging a problem with the server. +# +# allowed values: {no, yes} +# +allow_core_dumps = no + +# +# Logging section. The various "log_*" configuration items +# will eventually be moved here. +# +log { + # + # Which syslog facility to use, if ${log_destination} == "syslog" + # + # The exact values permitted here are OS-dependent. You probably + # don't want to change this. + # + syslog_facility = daemon +} + +# THREAD POOL CONFIGURATION +# +# The thread pool is a long-lived group of threads which +# take turns (round-robin) handling any incoming requests. +# +# You probably want to have a few spare threads around, +# so that high-load situations can be handled immediately. If you +# don't have any spare threads, then the request handling will +# be delayed while a new thread is created, and added to the pool. +# +# You probably don't want too many spare threads around, +# otherwise they'll be sitting there taking up resources, and +# not doing anything productive. +# +# The numbers given below should be adequate for most situations. +# +thread pool { + # Number of servers to start initially --- should be a reasonable + # ballpark figure. + start_servers = 5 + + # Limit on the total number of servers running. + # + # If this limit is ever reached, clients will be LOCKED OUT, so it + # should NOT BE SET TOO LOW. It is intended mainly as a brake to + # keep a runaway server from taking the system with it as it spirals + # down... + # + # You may find that the server is regularly reaching the + # 'max_servers' number of threads, and that increasing + # 'max_servers' doesn't seem to make much difference. + # + # If this is the case, then the problem is MOST LIKELY that + # your back-end databases are taking too long to respond, and + # are preventing the server from responding in a timely manner. + # + # The solution is NOT do keep increasing the 'max_servers' + # value, but instead to fix the underlying cause of the + # problem: slow database, or 'hostname_lookups=yes'. + # + # For more information, see 'max_request_time', above. + # + max_servers = 32 + + # Server-pool size regulation. Rather than making you guess + # how many servers you need, The server dynamically adapts to + # the load it sees, that is, it tries to maintain enough + # servers to handle the current load, plus a few spare + # servers to handle transient load spikes. + # + # It does this by periodically checking how many servers are + # waiting for a request. If there are fewer than + # min_spare_servers, it creates a new spare. If there are + # more than max_spare_servers, some of the spares die off. + # The default values are probably OK for most sites. + # + min_spare_servers = 3 + max_spare_servers = 10 + + # There may be memory leaks or resource allocation problems with + # the server. If so, set this value to 300 or so, so that the + # resources will be cleaned up periodically. + # + # This should only be necessary if there are serious bugs in the + # server which have not yet been fixed. + # + # '0' is a special value meaning 'infinity', or 'the servers never + # exit' + max_requests_per_server = 0 +} + +# MODULE CONFIGURATION +# +# The names and configuration of each module is located in this section. +# +# After the modules are defined here, they may be referred to by name, +# in other sections of this configuration file. +# +modules { + # + # Add modules here. See "radiusd.conf" for examples. + # +} + +# Instantiation +# +# This section orders the loading of the modules. Modules +# listed here will get loaded BEFORE the later sections like +# authorize, authenticate, etc. get examined. +# +# This section is not strictly needed. When a section like +# authorize refers to a module, it's automatically loaded and +# initialized. However, some modules may not be listed in any +# of the following sections, so they can be listed here. +# +# Also, listing modules here ensures that you have control over +# the order in which they are initialized. If one module needs +# something defined by another module, you can list them in order +# here, and ensure that the configuration will be OK. +# +instantiate { + # + # Add modules here. See "radiusd.conf" for examples. + # +} + +# +# And the REAL contents. This section is just like the "post-auth" +# section of radiusd.conf. In fact, it calls the "post-auth" component +# of the modules that are listed here. But it's called "vmps" for +# simplicity. +# +vmps { + # + # This is a hack for testing + # + update reply { + VMPS-Packet-Type = VMPS-Join-Response + VMPS-VLAN-Name = "foo" + VMPS-Cookie = "%{VMPS-Mac}" + } +} |