> Jon Lewis wrote:
> > Another option is Cistron Radius
> http://www.radius.cistron.nl/ which
> > is probably going to be pretty similar to Freeradius, since
> the latter
> > is apparently a fork of the former.
> >
> > Radiator is perl, so you get the 'source code', but it's not open
> > sourc
Jon Lewis wrote:
> Another option is Cistron Radius http://www.radius.cistron.nl/ which
> is probably going to be pretty similar to Freeradius, since the latter
> is apparently a fork of the former.
>
> Radiator is perl, so you get the 'source code', but it's not open
> source and you do need to bu
Once upon a time, Jon Lewis said:
> Another option is Cistron Radius http://www.radius.cistron.nl/ which is
> probably going to be pretty similar to Freeradius, since the latter is
> apparently a fork of the former.
Cistron RADIUS (which was based on the original Livingston RADIUS
server) devel
Yes. isn't bad
It depends on the budget
You can spend hundred thousand dollars to buy 10G router
or buy $1,500 a (4 cores) computer running quagga to have $6,000 a 10G card
on it.
On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 7:02 PM, David Hughes wrote:
>
> On 09/03/2009, at 1:29 PM, Chris Hills wrote:
>
> D
On Mon, 9 Mar 2009, luismi wrote:
Hi all,
As I can see there is just two options over the table: Freeradius and
Radiator.
Another option is Cistron Radius http://www.radius.cistron.nl/ which is
probably going to be pretty similar to Freeradius, since the latter is
apparently a fork of the f
On 09/03/2009, at 1:29 PM, Chris Hills wrote:
David Hughes wrote:
+1 for Radiator. It's not opensource as the original poster
requested,
but it's certainly a solid and flexible radius server.
Radiator /is/ open-source, but it is not free.
Nope. Commercial licensed product. Which isn't
a.l.m.bu...@lboro.ac.uk wrote:
Hi,
+1 for Radiator. It's not opensource as the original poster requested,
but it's certainly a solid and flexible radius server.
it is Open Source, its just not free. you, as a user are free to
look at the source code...
please dont confuse 'open source' w
Hi,
> Post this in freeradius newsgroup http://freeradius.org/list/index.html
> "Anyone to use freeradius in VPN Concentrator"
alternatively use google. do most sites now ban access to google? :-)
"freeradius cisco vpn concentrator"
eg
http://1000milesnetwork.blogspot.com/2005/12/freeradius-i
To me, I haven't used freeradius for VPN Concentrator. and haven't used
Radiator
But I think you can try it
Just use computer to install any distribution of linux (debian is better) +
freeradius.
(if you have installation quesiton, i try to help)
or
Post this in freeradius newsgroup http://free
Once upon a time, a.l.m.bu...@lboro.ac.uk said:
> it is Open Source, its just not free. you, as a user are free to
> look at the source code...
>
> please dont confuse 'open source' with 'free software', GPL , BSD, etc
"Open Source" is a trademarked term that has specific requirements.
Freedom
Hi all,
As I can see there is just two options over the table: Freeradius and
Radiator.
Is there anyone here with any of them working against VPN Concentrators?
I ask that because it would be the primary goal of the radius.
El lun, 09-03-2009 a las 09:09 +, a.l.m.bu...@lboro.ac.uk escribió:
Hi,
> +1 for Radiator. It's not opensource as the original poster requested,
> but it's certainly a solid and flexible radius server.
it is Open Source, its just not free. you, as a user are free to
look at the source code...
please dont confuse 'open source' with 'free software', GPL , BSD,
Chris Hills writes:
> Radiator /is/ open-source, but it is not free.
The fact that you get the source code doesn't by itself make the
software open-source.
The license may be this one: http://www.open.com.au/license.html but
it says that any click-through license overrides what is written there
David Hughes wrote:
> +1 for Radiator. It's not opensource as the original poster requested,
> but it's certainly a solid and flexible radius server.
Radiator /is/ open-source, but it is not free.
___
cisco-nsp mailing list cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net
h
Another +1 for radiator
On 9/03/09 8:07 AM, "David Hughes" wrote:
On 08/03/2009, at 1:09 PM, Ge Moua wrote:
> We use Radiator over here to manage over 6,000 cisco devices; works
> pretty good on server class hardware.
+1 for Radiator. It's not opensource as the original poster
requested,
On 08/03/2009, at 1:09 PM, Ge Moua wrote:
We use Radiator over here to manage over 6,000 cisco devices; works
pretty good on server class hardware.
+1 for Radiator. It's not opensource as the original poster
requested, but it's certainly a solid and flexible radius server.
David
...
_
freeradius is good. I used it in debian (woody and ethic) before. At that
time, it can support 12,000 DSL users
The database was around 2G. 2G memory and Pentium 4 CPU
On Sun, Mar 8, 2009 at 12:26 AM, Alex Balashov wrote:
> FreeRADIUS has not been a problem for us.
>
> --
> Sent from mobile de
FreeRADIUS has not been a problem for us.
--
Sent from mobile device
On Mar 7, 2009, at 10:09 PM, Ge Moua wrote:
We use Radiator over here to manage over 6,000 cisco devices; works
pretty good on server class hardware.
Regards,
Ge Moua | Email: moua0...@umn.edu
Network Design Engineer
Uni
We use Radiator over here to manage over 6,000 cisco devices; works
pretty good on server class hardware.
Regards,
Ge Moua | Email: moua0...@umn.edu
Network Design Engineer
University of Minnesota | Networking & Telecommunications Services
luismi wrote:
Hi all,
I am looking for an open sou
luismi writes:
> Radius service should be able to be managed using a web interface. I
> don't really mind if there is a proper web interface of if we need to
> install webadmin. It also must support accounting. And it would be
> great if it is possible to have the back-end into MySQL.
>
> I wa
Hi all,
I am looking for an open source solution to deploy some radius in our
network.
The primary goal is to connect to those radius to provide auth services:
- The VPN Concentrators and vpn accounts (we would move all the vpn
accounts info to the radius)
- Validate ip http auth-proxy users
Radi
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