Alan DeKok <aland@deployingradius.com> wrote:
I want to implement a RADIUS load-balancing and failover scenario using FreeRadius and Cisco ACS. The idea I have in mind is to have these two servers answering to RADIUS requests in a round-robin fashion and should one of them for some reason go down, the other one would take care of answering to the RADIUS requests.
You will need a load balancer in front of the two servers.
Round robin can be problematic as EAP sessions cannot be round-robined without some due care and attention spent in the load-balancer. The load-balancer also ironically provides a single point of failure :)
Have any of you implemented such an scenario, using FreeRadius together with another RADIUS server from a different vendor? If so, what are the main problems you found doing this (incompatibility, high-maintenance costs, effort, etc)?
I'd be very glad to hear from you as to why such an scenario make/doesn't make sense.
I don't see why you would put two different servers into one load-balance pool. And even worse, pairing a horrible server with a great one!
Probably because you have to edit the FreeRADIUS sourcecode and recompile it to say 'Cisco' on it to appease manglement :) Resilience we provision onsite here by anycast'ing our two FreeRADIUS boxes (http://www.open-rd.org/ [1]): http://www.digriz.org.uk/ha-ospf-anycast Cheers [1] ARM based box running Debian[2], for $150 that uses 7W of power, suitable for our needs, a university with 4000 students and 600 staff (mac-auth for all the workstations, LDAP backed and 802.1X for the students) [2] http://www.digriz.org.uk/kirkwood -- Alexander Clouter .sigmonster says: Stamp out organized crime!! Abolish the IRS.