Hello Balgaa -
All of the things you describe are possible with Radiator now. You can set Time limits as below and use Session-Timeout = "until Time". (see section 13.1.13 in the Radiator 3.0 reference manual). For the others, you will need an SQL user database from which you derive the Session-Timeout. regards Hugh On Fri, 19 Apr 2002 03:46, User BALGAA System Engineer wrote: > Hello, > > I see following attribute from IC-RADIUS. > Is it possible add following attributes in Radiator? > > Attribute > Type Description > > Login-Time > string > Defines the time span a user may login to the system. The format of a > time string is like the format used by UUCP. A time string may be a list > of simple time strings separated by "|" or ",". Each simple time string > must begin with a day definition. That can be just one day, multiple days, > or a range of days separated by a hyphen. A day is Mo, Tu, We, Th, Fr, Sa > or Su, or Wk for Mo-Fr. "Any" or "Al" means all days. After that a range > of hours follows in hhmm-hhmm format. For example, > "Wk2305-0855,Sa,Su2305-1655". RADIUSd calculates the number of seconds > left in the time span, and sets the Session-Timeout to that number of > seconds. So if someone.s Login-Time is "Al0800-1800" and she logs in at > 17:30, Session-Timeout is set to 1800 seconds so that she is kicked off at > 18:00. > > Monthly-Time-Limit > integer > Number of seconds a user may use within the current month. Resets on the > 1st of each month. adjust the Session-Timeout when the user approachs the > end of their time. > > Total-Time-Limit > integer > Total number of seconds a user may use. Never resets. Adjusts the > Session-Timeout when the user approachs the end of their time. > > Activation > date > Date account becomes active. The format of the Activation attribute is > the same as the expiration. Three letter month, two digit day and four > digit year. Ex: 'Apr 26 2000'. > > Expiration > date > Date account becomes inactive. > > > Thanks, > Balgaa > > === > 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.
