I'm not sure what that "cli" value is. Have you checked the radius attributes page to see if it is standard? If you have any way to pull that information to the radius server external of freeradius, I suppose you could use the exec module. I doubt it would be efficient at all, though. Looks like your best bet is to pour through your radius debugging logs, and see if you can find a radius attribute that has what you need in it. If you do happen to find one, my previous suggestion would be easy enough to modify to accommodate. On Thu, 15 Mar 2007 13:09:06 -0500 "Capelle, Mark (PCMC-GB)" <Mark.Capelle@pcmc.com> wrote:
Actually, I don't think this will help since the wireless controller IP that freeradius "sees" is *not* in the 192.168.100.* range. This controller uses LWAPP, so the IP ranges that the wireless networks use are totally contained within the wireless infrastructure, which means that the NAS IP is actually the LAN IP address of the controller.
Again, it appears the only way for my to determine that the client request is coming from the wrong subnet is via the "cli" value. If Cisco would just fix the guest wireless implementation to only look at the internal database or give you an option to specify this, all would be well. But... since they don't, I have to figure out how to break RADIUS for one subnet and yet allow it to function for the rest.
-----Original Message----- From: Sam Schultz [mailto:segfault90@hushmail.com] Sent: Thursday, March 15, 2007 12:46 PM To: freeradius-users@lists.freeradius.org; Capelle, Mark (PCMC-GB) Subject: Re: Reject authentication attempts based on "cli" value?
An entry like this in your 'users' file should work:
DEFAULT NASIPAddress =~ "192.168.100.*" Auth-Type := Reject
I'm not sure '*' is the appropriate regular expression character for freeradius, but you should be able to verify that pretty quickly from the documentation. Operator information itself can be found on:
http://wiki.freeradius.org/Operators
On Thu, 15 Mar 2007 11:23:23 -0500 markcapelle@pcmc.com wrote:
It is a Cisco WLAN 4402. For reference, here is a log entry from
a user connecting from the Guest network:
Thu Mar 15 07:10:52 2007 : Auth: Login OK: [guestuser] (from client PCMCWLANCTRLR1 port 0 cli 192.168.100.101)
And here is a log entry from someone connecting via 802.1x on another network:
Thu Mar 15 07:26:36 2007 : Auth: Login OK: [DOMAIN\\guestuser]
(from client PCMCWLANCTRLR1 port 1 cli 00-12-F0-19-6E-B3)
As you can see the only way I have to differentiate these two auth attempts is via the "cli" value. 192.168.100.x is the subnet range of my Guest network. I want all auth attempts from 192.168.100.x to be rejected.
Hope someone can help me out with this.
Thanks.
Date: Thu, 15 Mar 2007 10:55:55 -0400 From: "King, Michael" <MKing@bridgew.edu> Subject: RE: To: "FreeRadius users mailing list" <freeradius-users@lists.freeradius.org> Message-ID:
<6641F169E241EA40B29DE7BFAD24674DA7A43B@EXCH2.campus.bridgew.edu>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
What manufacturer makes the NAS (the wireless controller?)
I would look to the Called-Station field. Usually (Based on Cisco AP's) this is the MAC of the AP, followed by the SSID they connected to.
-----Original Message----- From: freeradius-users-bounces+mking=bridgew.edu@lists.freeradius.or g [mailto:freeradius-users-bounces+mking=bridgew.edu@lists.freer adius.org] On Behalf Of markcapelle@pcmc.com Sent: Thursday, March 15, 2007 10:48 AM To: freeradius-users@lists.freeradius.org Subject:
I have a situation where I have a wireless controller that services multiple wireless networks (vlans).? When the controller contacts the RADIUS server with an authentication request, it does so with the IP address of the controller as the client address.? The problem is I have a guest network that has lower security than my other wireless networks.? The guest network has it's own user/password database stored in the controller, but the way authentication occurs is
that it
checks RADIUS for the user first and assumes it will fail, then will use the internal database.? The issue with this is that if one
of my
users jumps on the guest network, they are authenticated which
is not
what I want to happen.? Looking at the logs, I noticed that all the guest network users have the IP address of the client in the "cli" field.? My guest network is a totally different VLAN and IP subnet.
Is there a way to key off of the "cli" field and then make it so that all requests from clients with a specific subnet in this field
are not
authenticated?? This would stop my internal users from connecting, but allow the correct users (those in the internal DB) to still get connected.
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