In the "users" file is where you specify the reply attributes in my example. So using your example: DEFAULT Huntgroup-Name == CiscoVPN, Ldap-Group == "cn=CiscoVPN,ou=Roles,ou=Radius,DC=ACME,DC=COM" Service-Type = "NAS-Prompt-User", Idle-Timeout = 600, Cisco-AVPair = "webvpn:user-vpn-group=whatevervpngroupyouwanttoaddtheuserto" Then you can either use the huntgroup file and set the IP addresses of the Routers (NAS's) you're using: http://wiki.freeradius.org/Huntgroups Or you can have the Huntgroups in ldap as per my e-mail, and that would be if you have a more dynamic environment or want to move the NAS between different huntgroups easily. On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 2:03 AM, Sander van Loosbroek < sander@vanloosbroek.com> wrote:
Hello Peter and Alan,
Thank you for your reply. I've given the documentation of Peter a look but I'm not that familiar with LDAP or how its underpinnings work in OS X Server.
When the Cisco router now authenticates against the FreeRADIUS server all works fine except for the fact that the group name is not returned with the webvpn:vpn-user-group attribute. What is unclear to me is how I instruct FreeRADIUS to include that attribute when it returns the authorization message. I have made the following addition to my clients file:
client 192.168.13.1/32 { secret = xxx shortname = vpn nastype = cisco }
I have added a policy to the Cisco router to pick up the attribute but it doesn't seem to get through. Can you suggest what to try next?
Thanks, Sander - List info/subscribe/unsubscribe? See http://www.freeradius.org/list/users.html