Brian, With eduroam the relation is strictly between the client and its home institution. As long as you use a tunneled EAP method (PEAP, EAP-TTLS, EAP-TLS, EAP-FAST, ....) you will be able to join eduroam. The main national and international eduroam servers only help pass the TLS tunnel between a user and its home institution without interruption (and using the outer tunnel information for "routing"), which makes the whole process EAP agnostic (as long as it can negotiate a TLS tunnel)
In summary: Pick any tunneled EAP method that your institution feels comfortable using. Best, Philippe Philippe Hanset Univ. of TN, Knoxville www.eduroamus.org<http://www.eduroamus.org> On Apr 12, 2012, at 1:33 PM, Brian David wrote: Greeting all, We are looking into Eduroam again…I know other schools have done this.. One of the questions that came up is…Does every school use the same EAP type on the eduroam SSID? Brian J David Network Systems Engineer Boston College ********** Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE Constituent Group discussion list can be found athttp://www.educause.edu/groups/. ********** Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE Constituent Group discussion list can be found at http://www.educause.edu/groups/.
