So I deleted everything like you suggested. I then went back into the /etc/raddb/radiusd.conf andmade the following change: server radius01 { listen { ipaddr = 127.0.0.1 type = auth } # listen { # ipaddr = 10.150.10.40 # type = auth # } # listen { ipaddr = 127.0.0.1 type = acct } # listen { # ipaddr = 10.150.10.40 # type = acct # } } debug_level=2 I then ran a raidusd -X and tested in another window. Here is my output: radtest -4 -x bob hello localhost 2 testing123 Sent Access-Request Id 88 from 0.0.0.0:53632 to 127.0.0.1:1812 length 73 User-Name = "bob" User-Password = "hello" NAS-IP-Address = 10.150.10.40 NAS-Port = 2 Message-Authenticator = 0x00 Cleartext-Password = "hello" Received Access-Reject Id 88 from 127.0.0.1:1812 to 0.0.0.0:0 length 20 (0) -: Expected Access-Accept got Access-Reject On Wednesday, October 25, 2017 5:28 PM, Alan DeKok <aland@deployingradius.com> wrote: On Oct 25, 2017, at 5:29 PM, Andrew Meyer via Freeradius-Users <freeradius-users@lists.freeradius.org> wrote:
I installed from CentOS repos. Might have been EPEL.
Then someone destroyed the configuration after it was installed. This shouldn't be difficult. By breaking the configuration, you've made work for yourself, and wasted days trying to debug problems which should never have existed. Don't try to "fix" a broken configuration. Delete *everything*, and re-install from scratch. Doing anything else is wasting your time, and ours. Alan DeKok.