[RADIATOR] Hi
Hugh Irvine
hugh at open.com.au
Thu Apr 22 15:52:14 CDT 2010
Hello Subash -
You will need to install the Perl IPv6 module Socket6.
The best way to see what is happening in testing is to run radiusd from the command line like this:
cd /your/Radiator/source/distribution
perl radiusd -foreground -log_stdout -trace 4 -config_file /your/Radiator/configuration/file
.....
You would of course use your local pathnames in the above.
regards
Hugh
On 23 Apr 2010, at 03:14, Subash Comerica (subashtc) wrote:
> Hi All,
> I am trying to start radiator for IPv6.
> I see the following logs and I don't see the radiusd running after that. I am not sure what the failure is.
> Is there any other debugs/logs that I can turn on?
>
> Thanks & Regards,
> . . . . Subash
> Changing the Way We Live, Work, Play and Learn
>
> <logs>
> I start radiator by invoking /etc/init.d/radiator start
> I have followed the reference guide to configure radiusd.conf to add the IPv6 bind address and port, which seems to be picked up fine from logs below.
>
>
> Thu Apr 22 18:09:53 2010: DEBUG: Finished reading configuration file '/etc/radiator/radius.cfg'
> Thu Apr 22 18:09:53 2010: DEBUG: Reading dictionary file '/etc/radiator/dictionary'
> Thu Apr 22 18:09:53 2010: DEBUG: Creating authentication port ipv6:2001:0db8:0000:0000:0000:002e:0370:2334:1812
> _______________________________________________
> radiator mailing list
> radiator at open.com.au
> http://www.open.com.au/mailman/listinfo/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.
Includes support for reliable RADIUS transport (RadSec),
and DIAMETER translation agent.
-
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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