Alan, Thanks for the pointers. All examples discuss unix groups and I need to avoid using those. Can I create a file with several definitions like : Finance = userA,userB,userC Engineering = diffuserA,diffuserB,diffuserC and somewhere else have another definition like: Finance: Reply-Message = "Hello Finance user %u" Engineering: Reply-Message = "Hello Engineering user %u" and in users file, have userA Auth-Type := Local, User-Password == "A123", Group == "Finance" userB Auth-Type := Local, User-Password == "B123", Group == "Finance" userC Auth-Type := Local, User-Password == "C123", Group == "Finance" diffuserA Auth-Type := Local, User-Password == "A456", Group == "Engineering" diffuserA Auth-Type := Local, User-Password == "B456", Group == "Engineering" diffuserA Auth-Type := Local, User-Password == "C456", Group == "Engineering" I'd appericiate some help with achieving this. Thanks, Ami On 8/23/06, Alan DeKok <aland@deployingradius.com> wrote:
"Ami Schieber" <ami.schieber@gmail.com> wrote:
I've seen several Q&A about local groups of users but they all refer to system groups (i.e. - /etc/group configuration). I'd like to have a Group definition that will include attributes that are common to all users that belong in this group.
See the FAQ, and "man rlm_passwd", which describes exactly this.
Alan DeKok. -- http://deployingradius.com - The web site of the book http://deployingradius.com/blog/ - The blog - List info/subscribe/unsubscribe? See http://www.freeradius.org/list/users.html