(RADIATOR) win 2000 installation of radiator
Hugh Irvine
hugh at open.com.au
Thu Apr 14 17:16:55 CDT 2005
Hello -
You should download the Radiator source tarball to the Windows machine,
then unpack it with WinZip or similar.
For example you could create a directory called
C:\Radiator
then unpack the Radiator source tarball in that directory.
You can then open a DOS window and do this:
cd C:\Radiator\Radiator-3.12
perl radiusd -foreground -log_stdout -config_file radius.cfg
this will show you if Perl and Radiator are available and working.
Then you can do
perl Makefile.PL install
then you can set up your own configuration file and test it as above
perl radiusd -foreground -log_stdout -config_file finjurdata.cfg
then you can set up radiusd as a service as shown in section 7 of the
reference manual "doc/ref.html".
I recommend you read the Radius RFC's and the Radiator reference manual
at least once so you have some background (included in the "doc"
directory of the Radiator 3.12 distribution.
regards
Hugh
On 15 Apr 2005, at 07:32, finjurdata wrote:
> Hi
>
> When installing on my red har dell powerdge it was a breeze to install
> and it starts automatically whenever the server goes on.
>
> On my win 2000 server on an identical poweredge I have downloaded the
> 3.12 as stated in my email and looked at section 4 of the
> installation guide I have active perl that is working but I cannot get
> it in dos.?? WHich file within radiator do I need to unpack. Please
> advise. Am I missing something
>
> desperately seeking radiator
>
>
>
NB:
Have you read the reference manual ("doc/ref.html")?
Have you searched the mailing list archive
(www.open.com.au/archives/radiator)?
Have you had a quick look on Google (www.google.com)?
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.
--
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