Dennis, can you expand on your last sentence?

-----Original Message----- From: Dennis Burgess
Sent: Thursday, January 07, 2016 7:05 AM
To: af@afmug.com
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] RADIUS

Typically the pppoe server is at the tower, so it has a local pool to hand out, if the customer needs a static, that would be assigned via PPPOE as well as a framed route if they need a specific block. For MT there are a number of radius attributes, but the simplest is address-group, If all pppoe servers are configured the same, giving a address group lobs them into anything such as filters, firewall, redirection etc. the last though is ip pool, so that you can give them a redirected pool and not use a public IP if they are not auth. Big thing, they should always auth, just get redirected if not valid. :)


Dennis Burgess, CTO, Link Technologies, Inc.
den...@linktechs.net – 314-735-0270 x103 – www.linktechs.net

-----Original Message-----
From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of Simon Westlake
Sent: Wednesday, January 6, 2016 8:50 PM
To: af@afmug.com
Subject: [AFMUG] RADIUS

For those of you using RADIUS to manage your customers (whether via PPPoE, or something else), how are you doing it? Are you using pools, static addresses or a mixture? Are you using groups to control access/redirect to delinquency pages etc or other methods? What kind of attributes are you using? What is/are your NAS? I'm guessing mostly Mikrotik in this group!

I'm working on a bunch of RADIUS stuff right now, and trying to build it to be as flexible as possible.. any input any of you can give on how you use RADIUS on your network would be very much appreciated!

--
Simon Westlake
Skype: Simon_Sonar
Email: simon@sonar.software
Phone: (702) 447-1247
---------------------------
Sonar Software Inc
The next generation of ISP billing and OSS https://sonar.software


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