I have tried to research this a bit myself and seem to have come to the conclusion that packet fence is best suited for a hotel wifi system and that there is really no control over iptables. I was hoping for a solution that incorporated a bit of internal access control, host and user inventory.
On Thu, Dec 15, 2011 at 11:15, exim <[email protected]> wrote: > I am a very new user and tying to get inline enforcement working on a > test network. The only feature I need is to be able to control > traffic from my internal wireless network (10.1.11.0) to my internal > production network (10.1.10.0). Basically I need to have any user > able to connect to the wireless and surf the web but I need to control > who has access to the 10.1.10.0 network. Is packet fence able to > handle this? Am I missing something simple? > > [interface eth0] > ip=10.1.11.172 > mask=255.255.255.0 > gateway=10.1.11.1 > type=internal > enforcement=inline > > > [interface eth1] > ip=10.1.11.173 > mask=255.255.255.0 > gateway=10.1.11.1 > type=management > enforcement=inline > > At present I have the packet fence server acting as a gateway but I > cannot find a way to re ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Learn Windows Azure Live! Tuesday, Dec 13, 2011 Microsoft is holding a special Learn Windows Azure training event for developers. It will provide a great way to learn Windows Azure and what it provides. You can attend the event by watching it streamed LIVE online. Learn more at http://p.sf.net/sfu/ms-windowsazure _______________________________________________ Packetfence-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/packetfence-users
