[RADIATOR] WIMAX-BS-ID modification to 6octets

Hugh Irvine hugh at open.com.au
Tue Mar 2 17:33:25 CST 2010


Hello Jose -

It would be most helpful if you could include the trace 5 debug showing the packet dump as well as the snoop trace.

In any case, what is shown below is correct - it is 6 octets of binary data.

What exactly are you expecting to see?

regards

Hugh


On 3 Mar 2010, at 00:41, Avila Jose Antonio-QTB483 wrote:

> Hi Hugh,
> 
> A Wimax System controller is the device who sends those accountings and
> this is the 5 debug  trace, though I can see the right value of WIMAX-ID
> attribute by soop,  the logs from the server shows a different value as
> if it converts it once has received the Attribute.
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01 Attributes:
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    WiMAX-Beginning-Of-Session = 1
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    Acct-Status-Type = Start
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    Acct-Session-Id = "0200034A"
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    Acct-Multi-Session-Id = "10"
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    Framed-IP-Address = 192.168.62.15
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    User-Name = "001AAD3F30F1"
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    Calling-Station-Id = "001aad3f30f1"
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    NAS-Identifier = "31323334"
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    NAS-IP-Address = 172.16.0.4
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    NAS-Port-Type = Wireless-Other
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    WiMAX-BS-ID = "<0><4><210><0><0><1>"
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    WiMAX-HA-IP-MIP4 = 0.0.0.0
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    Event-Timestamp = 1267099473
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    WiMAX-GMT-Timezone-Offset = 0
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    WiMAX-IP-Technology = PMIP4
> 
> Feb 24 20:27:04 connectic01    WiMAX-NSP-ID = <0><4><210>
> 
> Thank you,
> Jose A.
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Hugh Irvine [mailto:hugh at open.com.au] 
> Sent: Thursday, February 25, 2010 6:52 PM
> To: Avila Jose Antonio-QTB483
> Cc: radiator at open.com.au
> Subject: Re: [RADIATOR] WIMAX-BS-ID modification to 6octets
> 
> 
> Hello Jose -
> 
> Could you please send me a trace 5 debug from Radiator showing this
> attribute?
> 
> And can you also please tell me what hardware is sending it?
> 
> thanks and regards
> 
> Hugh
> 
> 
> On 26 Feb 2010, at 03:04, Avila Jose Antonio-QTB483 wrote:
> 
>> Hello,
>> 
>> WIMAX-BS-ID attribute is configured with a binary  date type in the
> dictionary.cfg, the attribute that  I receive  is  6octets   in the
> Radiator and the value inserted into the field is a weird string.
>> 
>> I tried to modify the dictionary to  "VENDORATTR 24757 WIMAX-BS-ID  47
> tagged-integer" but it only shows 3 octets, I appreciate if anybody
> could give me a clue about how to allow 8 octets in the dictionary.
>> 
>> Best Regards and many thanks in advance,
>> Jose A.
>> _______________________________________________
>> 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.
> 
> 
> 



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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