Hello Robert -
Probably the simplest and easiest thing to do in your situation is to proxy the radius requests to a copy of Radiator running on the MSSQL host, and then just use the native ODBC support there. regards Hugh On Saturday 20 October 2001 01:33, Robert Blayzor wrote: > We are currently implementing a couple of Radiator servers in our NOC > and we will be using MSSQL stored proceedures to do both authentication > lookups and the storing of accounting information. > > According to the Radiator FAQ, FreeTDS is not the recommended choice for > obveious reasons. I'm curious as to how many people may be using MSSQL > for their backend but using Unix (in my case FreeBSD 4.4) as the RADIUS > server platform. > > Right now my choices seem to be limited to DBI proxy or FreeTDS. I have > FreeTDS working for web applications via PERL, etc. Just wondering how > stable FreeTDS would perform in a very active RADIUS server environment. > > The one quirk I've always noticed is that if the connection breaks > between FreeTDS and your MSSQL server, FreeTDS mod seems to bomb out the > whole PERL script running. Any work arounds or suggestions? > > -- > Robert Blayzor, BOFH > INOC, LLC > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > "It only makes sense that every facet of our daily lives should depend > upon the position of celestial bodies hundreds of millions of miles > away." > - Calvin and Hobbes > > > === > Archive at http://www.open.com.au/archives/radiator/ > Announcements on [EMAIL PROTECTED] > To unsubscribe, email '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' with > 'unsubscribe radiator' in the body of the message. -- Radiator: the most portable, flexible and configurable RADIUS server anywhere. Available on *NIX, *BSD, Windows 95/98/2000, NT, MacOS X. - Nets: internetwork inventory and management - graphical, extensible, flexible with hardware, software, platform and database independence. === Archive at http://www.open.com.au/archives/radiator/ Announcements on [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe, email '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' with 'unsubscribe radiator' in the body of the message.
