That is the way we do it as well. However your original post did say:

 

I am not talking about routing a subnet. “

 

I’m not sure why you would want to assign customers multiple IP’s without giving them a small subnet. However, one option is to put a static route into your routers and allow them to statically assign the IP’s. This would of course have an impact on your router when there connection is down as it would be receiving ‘No route to host’ or ‘Host Down’ messages.

 

 

 

Regards,
 
Suneel Jhangiani
Inter-Computer Technology Ltd.
 

Modus3 Bug Buster Co-MVP


Willpower: The ability to eat only one salted peanut.

 

 

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 08 October 2004 23:04
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [VOPRadius] Question

 

I got this figured out.  Not really that tough.  Just never did it before.....

 

Lets Say I am giving the customer the subnet 10.10.10.0/29

 

This is what I did....

 

Set Framed Address to 10.10.10.1

Set Framed Netmask to 255.255.255.248

 

Then I did two things to test. 

On one account I set

 

Framed Route 10.10.10.0 255.255.255.248 10.10.10.1 1

 

For what ever reason this works for one account but does not work on another account.  I can't figure this one out as I am using the same hardware equipment to test.  Its just a different account.  Well none the less we have had to in the past use the Cisco AVPair attributes to do this and it works so this is what I used.

 

Cisco-AVPair "ip:route=10.10.10.0 255.255.255.248 10.10.10.1"

 

So, this lets the customer have a subnet at his WAN connection using PPPoE.

 

Tony D. Koehn
Director of Networks
Pixius Communications, LLC
316-219-8569
Amateur:  N0LVY

 

 

----- Original Message -----

Sent: Friday, October 08, 2004 1:46 PM

Subject: [VOPRadius] Question

 

We tried this and Randy is right it did not work. Our work around was to reserve a hand full of IP that we assigned to the user. By reserve I mean we never assign these IP's to anyone. We would then hard code these IPs to the SonicWall's WAN interface.The Sonicwall would then pickup any broadcasts to those ip address. Of course this will only work if the device (ie: wireless, DSL) that makes the connection to the radius server is in bridge mode so the IP's go to the Sonicwall and not the device connected to the WAN port. Auth will still happen as normal only no framed address is handed off.

 

Good Luck

 

Charles

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, October 07, 2004 11:47 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [VOPRadius] Question

Hello,

 

Has anyone using Radius delegated multiple IP's to PPPoE user?

 

I am not talking about routing a subnet. 

 

I need multiple IP's available to the customers WAN (Ethernet) interface specifically a sonic wall router.

 

Will Multiple Framed-Address attributes work on this? 

 

Thanks for any suggestions.

 

 

 

Tony D. Koehn
Director of Networks
Pixius Communications, LLC
316-219-8569
Amateur:  N0LVY

 

 

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