So I went back to a clean install of Fedora 11, followed the instructions
on installing freeradius via yum.
Then I issued the command:
chkconfig --list radiusd (and got the following)
radiusd 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:off 4:off 5:off 6:off
so i entered sudo chkconfig radiusd on
and then I got
I think that editing /etc/rc.local will start freeradius as a service. u v
just to add sbin/rc.radiusd start .
Best
2009/9/30 paul.blal...@gmail.com
So I went back to a clean install of Fedora 11, followed the instructions
on installing freeradius via yum.
Then I issued the command:
On 09/30/2009 12:52 PM, paul.blal...@gmail.com wrote:
So I went back to a clean install of Fedora 11, followed the
instructions on installing freeradius via yum.
Then I issued the command:
chkconfig --list radiusd (and got the following)
radiusd 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:off 4:off 5:off 6:off
so i
Have you checked the appropriate logs?
Any info in /var/log/radius/radius.log? Please post the contents.
How do you start it and as what user?
-
List info/subscribe/unsubscribe? See http://www.freeradius.org/list/users.html
On 09/30/2009 01:19 PM, José Johnny RANDRIAMAMPIONONA wrote:
I think that editing /etc/rc.local will start freeradius as a service.
u v just to add sbin/rc.radiusd start .
No, don't do this. Please use the standard System V init mechanisms only.
/sbin/chkconfig
/sbin/service
--
John Dennis
On 09/30/2009 01:57 PM, Danner, Mearl wrote:
Have you checked the appropriate logs?
Any info in /var/log/radius/radius.log? Please post the contents.
good suggestion
How do you start it and as what user?
Since this is Fedora and uses System V initscript it will start as root
and then
It occurred to me there is one there is one issue you might need to be
aware of, bootstrapping. The server with the default configuration will
not successfully start without certificates. radiusd will automatically
create temporary certificates the first time it is run for you if you
don't
I appreciate your insight, and I might have to go with a pre-built package
after all. But I did go ahead and issue the commands, and when I run
chkconfig --list radiusd This is what I get.
radiusd 0:off 1:off 2:on 3:on 4:on 5:on 6:off
According to the links that you sent me, this is what it is
According to the links that you sent me, this is what it is supposed to
say, but the radiusd service still does not start at boot time, it still
requires me to log on to the gnome desktop as root before the service will
start.
Radiusd doesn't require you to do anything. That's how *you*
On 09/29/2009 10:42 AM, paul.blal...@gmail.com wrote:
I appreciate your insight, and I might have to go with a pre-built
package after all. But I did go ahead and issue the commands, and when I
run
chkconfig --list radiusd This is what I get.
radiusd 0:off 1:off 2:on 3:on 4:on 5:on 6:off
I am trying to get freeradius to start at boot time so that I don't have to
log in for it to start up. I saw a previous post that said to
“Manually add the links in /etc/rc[0-6].d.”
I am not sure what links this is referring to though, so I am at a
standstill as to how to do this.
Thanks
Hi,
I am trying to get freeradius to start at boot time so that I don't have
to log in for it to start up. I saw a previous post that said to
“Manually add the links in /etc/rc[0-6].d.”
I am not sure what links this is referring to though, so I am at a
standstill as to how to do
Hi,
I am trying to get freeradius to start at boot time so that I don't have
to log in for it to start up. I saw a previous post that said to
“Manually add the links in /etc/rc[0-6].d.”
I am not sure what links this is referring to though, so I am at a
standstill as to how to do
Hi,
Guess I did forget to include that. I am using Fedora 11, installed from
CD, and when I
do a 'chkconfig radiusd on', it says no such file or directory.
did you install FreeRADIUS via yum and a repository
or from source? if from the repsository you should have
a selectable service with
did you install FreeRADIUS via yum and a repository
or from source?
Downloaded freeradius-server-2.1.7.tar.gz, extracted to home directory,
and then ./configure, make, make install.
if from the repsository you should have
a selectable service with eg the standard Fedora system startup tools
-
hi,
note sure why you are reversing the email conversation tags,
however
you installed from source
so, in the source directory (where you ran ./configure) there is a
redhat directory. in that directory is an rc. file - that needs to be copied
into the /etc/init.d
eg cp rc.whatever
The quoting in this thread is so confused I'm not going to try and
unravel it.
The Sytem - Preferences - Startup Applications menu item is only for
desktop applications running in a session. That is quite a bit different
than system services, sometimes called daemons. Typically the radius
which linux-distribution do you use?
Marc
Am Montag, 29. März 2004 13:51 schrieb Sander Groenhaut:
Hello,
I would like FreeRadius to boot automatically when the system starts,
but I don't get it. Does anybody know
how to make it?
Sander
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