Hi Matthew, Thanks for the advice on this. Yes, I think the real problem here is the eduroam username format (uid@domain.com) not being compatible with the one that windows generates (WINSDOMAIN\uid). I figure that even though this isn't directly freeradius related, this forum is probably still the best place to ask PEAP related questions. I think part of our problem here is we're trying to use eduroam for something it wasn't designed for. If it doesn't fit, hopefully I can convince networks to set up something else suitable instead. One thing I have noted in the eduroam T's and C's - connections must be traceable, generally this is interpretted as user authentication, though machine authentication is also acceptable as long as we record logins. I'll let you know how I get on with all this. cheers Jim On Fri, 8 Feb 2019 at 16:47, Matthew Newton <mcn@freeradius.org> wrote:
On Fri, 2019-02-08 at 16:36 +0000, Jim Potter wrote:
What I would like to achieve is authentication to happen invisibly where possible - our laptops would perform machine authentication, users would log in and would re-authenticate to wireless invisibly (currently each user needs to set up the wireless connection on each device the use - this is really bad from a user experience point of view, especially for students using laptops from a bank). Has anyone else had any success doing anything like this?
So you probably need to set up EAP-TLS to authenticate using a certificate, rather than logging in with a username/password.
Convenient if they're domain-joined, as the certificate handling is all done for you.
Computer authentication comes in the form host/mypc.bathspa.ac.uk and users in the format DOMAIN\myusername, not myusername@bathspa.ac.uk as required by eduroam.
You need to push group policy onto the Windows laptops to force them to do this. It's certainly possible from what I remember, but you're right, there's nothing you can do on FreeRADIUS to force this, it's a Windows issue.
I've updated the policy files on FreeRadius to authenticate the above formats successfully, but if staff are to be able to use their devices on remote eduroam sites, they need either their username ( at least their anonymous ID/identity privacy name) to be sent in the format someone@bathspa.ac.uk
Exactly. Otherwise eduroam has nothing to go on when proxying the authentication.
Also remember eduroam rules being you need to know who everyone is. That generally means that you either use usernames and passwords (and not a username per machine), or you use certificates and assign the laptop for one person to use only. It pretty much rules out shared laptops (unless they are used only on your own network, in which case of course domain based login is fine as it will also stop them from roaming.)
-- Matthew
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