>The O'Reilly book is good if you know absolutely nothing about RADIUS.
> But 1/3 is from the RFC's (paraphrased), and another 1/3 is from the
>FreeRADIUS documentation.

True. Book is not so good.

>The Wiley book has about 30 pages on RADIUS, the rest is about
>technologies that you don't use.  And the RADIUS stuff is not that useful.

Also true. If you want to read about theory, go for it. In any other case,
don't waste your money.


On Tue, Jun 17, 2008 at 3:19 AM, Do Nguyen Ha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> hi
>
> when is this book launch, i am looking for it
> and think many people are looking for it
>
> Ha`
>
>  2008/6/14 Alan DeKok <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>>
>>> Rogelio wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi all, just started delving into RADIUS and have begun to take the
>>>> plunge with FreeRADIUS.
>>>>
>>>> Any suggested books on the subject?  I see quite a few on the subject:
>>>>
>>>
>>>  The O'Reilly book is good if you know absolutely nothing about RADIUS.
>>>  But 1/3 is from the RFC's (paraphrased), and another 1/3 is from the
>>> FreeRADIUS documentation.
>>>
>>>  The Wiley book has about 30 pages on RADIUS, the rest is about
>>> technologies that you don't use.  And the RADIUS stuff is not that
>>> useful.
>>>
>>>  Then, there's my book.  It's at about 200 pages, and has been at that
>>> level for over a year.  I'm trying to find time to either finish it, or
>>> to clean it up, and put it on the web.
>>>
>>>  Alan DeKok.
>>> -
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>>
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