Alex, Please try to be less arrogant when you answer me. I have not touched linux or Solaris for 9 years. And I'm not a developer, and an RF engineer. I know many of you are software developers. We should not delve into the Silicon Valley notion of RTFM--instead should adhere to <http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1855.html> RFC1855. The reason I'm having very basic questions is because the wiki is counter intuitive and way cryptic to me; it's written with idea in mind that users used the product and familiar with it. I have used steel belted radius for a long time, never had a problem with it, because it's written for *not* developers. I'm at loss with this product, even though I have about 28 years of networking, RF and wireless experience in testing and installation, and close to CCIE certified. I'd like to continue use the product, with all the help I can get from you guys, but with dignity. If this won't work with this group, may be I should just bite the bullet and buy steel belted and get over with.
Now let's go to answer your questions. Please see in-inline <tim> Blah, blah blah ... 22 years ago I worked for Al Gore and we spent two days driving around Iowa talking about Gigabit Fiber Optic networks and the Internet. So, I guess you could say that I helped Al Gore invent the Internet. Then I went to work for Cisco in 1996. # 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 1.2.3.100/24 { secret = cisco shortname = cisco } <tim> You need to put users in the users file. Tim
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