Hi Fabien,
I will try to follow your method. Can you tell me how to get rid on the installation process that I have already done for freeradius?
So that I can re-install it using other ways.
I am a newbie so next question sound a little stupid but please still answer it.
when you say 'radius binary .deb package', does '.deb' belongs to debian? I have ubuntu (I know ubuntu is a spun off from debian!). The only other way I know for installing something on my ubuntu us using "synaptic package manager". Do you mean to say I can search for freeradius on synaptic manager and install it from there as it takes care of all the dpendencies?
Thank you so much for your help!
kartik dadwal wrote:Before to try to give answers, do you really need to compile your own radius from sources ? Now you know that with radius binary .deb package, radius config is in /etc/freeradius directory. Can you consider to forget sources you downloaded ? If you can't, i never used the way you are following. You'll have to consided depends. And i have not enough time to try your way on a box.
Hi,
I have ubuntu 9.10. Can you please tell me
1)Before running "radius -X" what all steps should be completed?
2)what should be the subdirectory structure for freeradius and where it should be formed in the directory structure?
3)which sub directory should I give the "radius -X" command.
On Wed, Aug 18, 2010 at 7:05 AM, Fabien COMBERNOUS <fcombernous@kezia.com <mailto:fcombernous@kezia.com>> wrote:
In general you can get the list of the files from a deb package
with the command line :
$> dpkg -L <name of the package>
Here we have :
$> dpkg -L freeradius | grep etc
/etc
/etc/pam.d
/etc/pam.d/radiusd
/etc/init.d
/etc/init.d/freeradius
/etc/freeradius
--
*Fabien COMBERNOUS*
/unix system engineer/
www.kezia.com <http://www.kezia.com/>
*Tel: +33 (0) 467 992 986*
Kezia Group
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