> EOL product, but this is capable of doing what you want, if you can
> find the docs to configure it.
The magic can be done with PM3? Sounds great, it's the model for most of my
RAS.
I'll search about it, so. Do you know how this function (redirect according
filter) is called?
> Something that
At 03:15 PM 12/12/2002 -0300, Fernando Teodoro wrote:
Hello Chris,
I'm not sure if I post the details to the mailing-list, but I'm using the
following RAS:
- Lucent PortMaster 3 (22 units)
EOL product, but this is capable of doing what you want, if you can
find the docs to configure it.
- Luc
Hello Chris,
I'm not sure if I post the details to the
mailing-list, but I'm using the following RAS:
- Lucent PortMaster 3 (22 units)
- Lucent/Ascend Max6000 (4 units)
- MaxTNT (1 unit)
I was guessing if Cisco would do the trick - it
does a lot of tricks. But I have only Cisco routers in
On Wed, 11 Dec 2002, Chris Parker wrote:
> At 04:59 PM 12/11/2002 -0300, Fernando Teodoro wrote:
> >Yet, my problem remains: not all my customers should fall in this system -
> >they will (or will not) fit in this rule according some criteria - and the
> >Radius is my first choice, since everybody'
At 04:59 PM 12/11/2002 -0300, Fernando Teodoro wrote:
Hi Matt, and thanks for the tip. "Walled Garden" sounds fine.
I followed the link you send me; as far I understood, a captive portal is a
kind of gateway with transparent proxy that redirects the client browser;
so, when the customer tries any
Hi Matt, and thanks for the tip. "Walled Garden" sounds fine.
I followed the link you send me; as far I understood, a captive portal is a
kind of gateway with transparent proxy that redirects the client browser;
so, when the customer tries any address, it's source is verified from an
auth system (