Hello Jai -
A Wireless AP looks to Radiator the same as any other NAS, therefore you will need to configure a <Client ...> clause for each one. You may also need to configure additional Handlers or Realms, depending on what else you are doing in your configuration file.
When a user moves from one access point to another, there will be a new authentication, just like if the user had hung up a modem call and dialled again.
You should configure the AP's for radius authentication and then watch a trace 4 debug from Radiator to see what is contained in the authentication and acounting requests, then configure Radiator accordingly.
You should probably read the AP vendors' documentation first of all to see what radius support is implemented in the AP software.
There has also been quite a lot of discussion on this topic on the mailing list, so you should check teh archive site too.
www.open.com.au/archives/radiator
regards
Hugh
On Thursday, Jan 16, 2003, at 22:56 Australia/Melbourne, jai wrote:
Hi,
�
I have two APs one from cisco and other one D-link,�APs Configuration�has Radius Server Authentication
option, As i am new to Wireless,�i am having following questions
�
1. How can use�Radiator or radius server to authenticate like the normal Dialup ??
�
2. If the User�moves from one Access Point i.e from cisco to another one i.e D-Link�..is it needed to authenticate again. if not
�� what are the changes need in radiator server or wireless.
�
I think�these questions might be�irrelevant in this mailing list !!... but could someone guide me links which might help....
�
Thanks.
�
Rgds
Jai
�
�
�
-- 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.
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