(RADIATOR) Handler question (ORing attributes)
Hugh Irvine
hugh at open.com.au
Wed May 12 20:58:05 CDT 2004
Hello James -
Yes you can use Identifiers from the client definitions in the Client
clauses, and no the Identifiers do not need to be unique - that is why
using them this way can simplify the configuration file (as you have
discovered).
See section 6.6.2 in the Radiator 3.9 reference manual ("doc/ref.html")
for details.
regards
Hugh
On 13 May 2004, at 03:46, James Nelson wrote:
> Probably should have worded that better (and thought a bit more before
> hand). We currently use the ClientListSQL to get the client list from
> our mySQL database, but I see that I can add an Identifier there to
> handle this. Final question, does the Identifier value have to be
> unique? If not that could greatly simplify my config (I really need
> to go through and overhaul it now that I'm more familiar with how it
> works).
>
> Thanks for all the help,
> ::James Nelson
>
> Hugh Irvine wrote:
>
>>
>> Hello James -
>>
>> Yes Handlers are evaluated in the order they appear in the
>> configuration file and the first match is the only match.
>>
>> I am not quite sure what you mean about Client clause and
>> ClientListSQL?
>>
>> regards
>>
>> Hugh
>>
>>
>> On 12 May 2004, at 10:23, James Nelson wrote:
>>
>>> Thanks for the info, it didn't occur to me to use Perl expressions.
>>> About the Client clauses, when mixed with Handler clauses, are they
>>> just evaluated top to bottom and handled by the first match? And
>>> the Client clause is independent of the ClientListSQL, correct?
>>>
>>> ::James Nelson
>>>
>>> Hugh Irvine wrote:
>>>
>
> --
> Archive at http://www.open.com.au/archives/radiator/
> Announcements on radiator-announce at open.com.au
> To unsubscribe, email 'majordomo at open.com.au' with
> 'unsubscribe radiator' in the body of the message.
>
>
NB: have you included a copy of your configuration file (no secrets),
together with a trace 4 debug showing what is happening?
--
Radiator: the most portable, flexible and configurable RADIUS server
anywhere. Available on *NIX, *BSD, Windows, MacOS X.
-
Nets: internetwork inventory and management - graphical, extensible,
flexible with hardware, software, platform and database independence.
-
CATool: Private Certificate Authority for Unix and Unix-like systems.
--
Archive at http://www.open.com.au/archives/radiator/
Announcements on radiator-announce at open.com.au
To unsubscribe, email 'majordomo at open.com.au' with
'unsubscribe radiator' in the body of the message.
More information about the radiator
mailing list