Hi guys thanks for the info.

 

The restrictions are licensing with a windows server.

 

I didn't realize you could setup Samba to be a domain controller.

 

thanks for the help.  I think I will try the Samba route.

 

thanks again.






 



Date: Mon, 18 Jan 2010 11:39:00 -0800
Subject: Re: Major noob question about freeradius
From: swan...@technologypartnerds.com
To: freeradius-users@lists.freeradius.org

On Mon, Jan 18, 2010 at 11:29 AM, <freerad...@corwyn.net> wrote:


At 02:01 PM 1/18/2010, Eric Swanson wrote:


On Mon, Jan 18, 2010 at 10:51 AM, Bryan Boone 
<<mailto:bryan-bo...@msn.com>bryan-bo...@msn.com> wrote:
For me the simplest solution to solve this would be a windows 2003 server 
domain controller.  Unfortunately due to some corporate restrictions I cannot 
install a windows server.



If you can't set up a Windows server to do this job, the best way to meet this 
need is to run Samba on a Linux machine.  If you run it in domain control mode, 
it'll act very much like a Windows server for the purposes you're talking about.


If there's a corporate restriction on installing a windows server, setting up a 
linux server to behave just like a windows server might also be a problem.  and 
indeed if it's one the same network, you'll really need to get things right so 
that it doesn't screw anything up (such as becoming the master browser).


Indeed.  Just for the sake of clarity let me break it down one more notch:
  - If the policy that prevents you from installing a Windows server is 
something like a company-wide prohibition on using closed-source software, or 
on spending licensing money with Microsoft, and if your network stands on its 
own -- then Samba is probably a great approach.  Good luck.
  - If, as Rick suggests, the policy comes from something like a central IT 
department that requires you to stay out of their realm of authority, then 
you've got a whole mess of constraints to navigate.  Good luck.

Speaking for myself, I'd say the pGina approach noted above by Josip makes 
sense only if you've already got RADIUS infrastructure.  If you're building 
something from scratch, Samba is a much better fit, but if pGina lets you use 
existing RADIUS-centric stuff you just might be well-advised to go that way.
 
Just be sure first :-)


Indeed.  Also, note that this is off-topic for the list.

E.
-- 
Eric Swanson, swan...@technologypartnerds.com
Director of Marketing & Sales / Senior Technical Staff
Technology Partnerds
888-NERDS-55
                                          
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