  No_Strings Premium,Mod join:2001-11-22 The OC
Host: Wireless Networking All Things Unix D-Link
edit: March 11th, @03:23PM
| reply to ackovski Re: FreeRadius
I wasn't clear, apparently.
I realize that TLS requires certs. I made my own and installed them. Can't blame you for not wanting to go down that road.
FreeRADIUS works. It works with TLS, TTLS and any number of other protocols. Since you already have the client side done, you only need to worry about the server side.
You said:
said by ackovski :I desperately need a radius server. I tried to install it on a Mandriva, but without sucess. I'm trying to clarify so I know best how to direct you. Is it Mandriva or FreeRADIUS you had trouble installing? Installing the FR server is not difficult, even if you don't use a distro that includes it. If you know nothing about Linux, if would be appropriate to ask some more questions.
Ubuntu is stupid easy. It's not geared toward a server environment, in my view, and I''d be reluctant to use it in a production business environment. RHEL and SuSE Enterprise would be more appropriate choices. There is a charge for support. CentOS, a free clone of RHEL would be a decent choice as well.
Will you need support? What's at stake? Is it a business? What is the risk - financial or otherwise - if data leakage occurs?
Not trying to be difficult. Honest. Just trying to get you the best possible answers. |
|
  justanotherguy
@dslextreme.com
| Installing FreeRADIUS on CentOS 5 was pretty easy. Something like:
yum install freeradius
or something along those lines, then just configure (in that ditro, it was all under /etc/raddb). Question - what supplicant are you using to run EAP-TTLS? Funk (Juniper) Odyssey? |
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 jbibe Premium,MVM join:2001-02-22 | If you are running Windows, try SecureW2 for TTLS. |
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