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diff --git a/radsecproxy.conf.5 b/radsecproxy.conf.5 new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7145830 --- /dev/null +++ b/radsecproxy.conf.5 @@ -0,0 +1,273 @@ +.TH radsecproxy.conf 5 "7 June 2007" + +.SH "NAME" +radsecproxy.conf - Radsec proxy configuration file + +.SH "DESCRIPTION" + +When the proxy server starts, it will first check the command line arguments, +and then read the configuration file. If specified by the command line -c option +(read \fIradsecproxy(1)\fR for details), the specified file is tried first and +if that fails the file of the same name in current directory is tried. +.sp +If -c option isn't used the proxy will read the file +\fB/etc/radsecproxy.conf\fR. If that fails server will look for +\fBradsecproxy.conf\fR in the \fBcurrent directory\fR. +.sp +If the configuration file can not be found, the proxy will exit with an error +message. + +.SH "CONFIGURATION SYNTAX" +When the configuration file is processed, whitespace (spaces and tabs) are +generally ignored. For each line, leading and trailing whitespace are ignored. +A line is ignored if it is empty, only consists of whitespace, or if the first +non-whitespace character is a \fB#\fR. The configuration is generally case +insensitive, but in some cases the option values (see below) are not. +.sp +There are two types of configuration structures than can be used. The first +and simplest are lines of the format \fIoption value\fR. That is, an option name, +see below for a list of valid options, followed by whitespace (at least one +space or tab character), followed by a value. Note that if the value contains +whitespace, then it must be quoted using "" or ''. Any whitespace in front of +the option or after the value will be ignored. +.sp +The other type of structure is a block. A block spans at least two lines, and +has the format: +.sp +.IP +.nf +blocktype name { + option value + option value + ... +} +.fi +.LP +That is, some blocktype, see below for a list of the different block types, and +then enclosed in braces you have zero or more lines that each have the previously +described \fIoption value\fR format. Different block types have different rules for +which options can be specified, they are listed below. The rules regarding white +space, comments and quotes are as above. Hence you may do things like: +.sp +.IP +.nf +blocktype name { +# option value + option "value with space" + ... +} +.fi +.LP + +.SH "BASIC OPTIONS" +The following basic options may be specified in the configuration file. Note that +blocktypes and options inside blocks are discussed later. Note that none of these +options are required, and indeed in many cases they are not needed. Note that you +should specify each at most once. The behaviour with multiple occurences is +undefined. +.sp +.TP +\fBLogLevel\fR +This option specifies the debug level. It must be set to 1, 2, 3 or 4, where 1 +logs only serious errors, and 4 logs \fIeverything\fR. The default is 3 which logs +errors, warnings and some informational messages. Note that the command line option +\fB-d\fR overrides this if present. +.sp +.TP +\fBLogDestination\fR +This specifies where the log messages should go. By default the messages go to +syslog with facility \fBLOG_DAEMON\fR. Using this option you can specify another +syslog facility, or you may specify that logging should be to a particular file, +not using syslog. The value must be either a \fIfile\fR or \fIsyslog\fR URL. The +file URL is the standard one, specifying a local file that should be used. For +syslog, you must do use the following URL syntax: \fBx-syslog://FACILITY\fR where +\fBFACILITY\fR must be one of \fBLOG_DAEMON\fR, \fBLOG_MAIL\fR, \fBLOG_USER\fR, +\fBLOG_LOCAL0\fR, \fBLOG_LOCAL1\fR, \fBLOG_LOCAL2\fR, \fBLOG_LOCAL3\fR, +\fBLOG_LOCAL4\fR, \fBLOG_LOCAL5\fR, \fBLOG_LOCAL6\fR or \fBLOG_LOCAL7\fR. You may +omit the facility from the URL to specify logging to the default facility, but +this is not very useful since this is the default log destination. Note that this +option is ignored if \fB-f\fR is specified on the command line. +.sp +.TP +\fBListenUDP\fR +Normally the proxy will listen to the standard RADIUS UDP port \fB1812\fR if +configured to handle UDP clients. On most systems it will do this for all of the +system's IP addresses (both IPv4 and IPv6). On some systems however, it may respond +to only IPv4 or only IPv6. To specify an alternate port you may use a value of +the form \fB*:port\fR where port is any valid port number. If you also want to +specify a specific address you can do e.g. \fB192.168.1.1:1812\fR or +\fB[2001:db8::1]:1812\fR. The port may be omitted if you want the default one +(like in these examples). These examples are equivalent to \fB192.168.1.1\fR and +\fB2001:db8::1\fR. Note that you must use brackets around the IPv6 address if +you specify port number. +.sp +.TP +\fBListenTCP\fR +This is similar to the \fBListenUDP\fR option, except that it used for receiving +connections from TCP clients. The default port number is \fB2083\fR. +.sp + +.SH "BLOCKS" +There are four types of blocks, they are \fBClient\fR, \fBServer\fR, \fBRealm\fR +and \fBTLS\fR. At least one instance of each of \fBClient\fR, \fBServer\fR and +\fBRealm\fR is required. This is necessary for the proxy to do anything useful, +and it will exit if not. The \fBTLS\fR block is required if at least one TLS +client or server is configured. Note that there can be multiple blocks for each +type. For each type, the block names should be unique. The behaviour with multiple +occurences of the same name for the same block type is undefined. Also note that +some block option values may reference a block by name, in which case the block +name must be previously defined. Hence the order of the blocks may be significant. +.sp + +.SH "CLIENT BLOCK" +The client block is used to configure a client. That is, tell the proxy about a +client, and what parameters should be used for that client. The \fBname\fR of the +client block must be either the IP address (IPv4 or IPv6) of the client, or a +domain name (FQDN). If a domain name is specified, then this will be resolved +immediately to all the addresses associated with the name, and the proxy will not +care about any possible DNS changes that might occur later. Hence there is no +dependency on DNS after startup. When some client later sends a request to the +proxy, the proxy will look at the IP address the request comes from, and then go +through all the addresses of each of the configured clients, to determine which +(if any) of the clients this is. In the case of TLS, the name of the client must +match the FQDN or IP address in the client certificate. Note that at the time of +writing it must match the certificate CN. This will be extended to check +subjectAltName if present. +.sp +The allowed options in a client block are \fBtype\fR, \fBsecret\fR and \fBtls\fR. +The value of \fBtype\fR must be either \fBudp\fR or \fBtls\fR. The value of +\fBsecret\fR is the shared RADIUS key used with this client. If the secret +contains whitespace, the value must be quoted. This option is optional for TLS. +For a TLS client you may also specify the \fBtls\fR option. The option value must +be the name of a previously defined TLS block. If this option is not specified, +the TLS block with the name \fBdefaultclient\fR will be used if defined. If not +defined, it will try to use the TLS block named \fBdefault\fR. If the specified +TLS block name does not exist, or the option is not specified and none of the +defaults exist, the proxy will exit with an error. +.sp + +.SH "SERVER BLOCK" +The server block is used to configure a server. That is, tell the proxy about +a server, and what parameters should be used when communicating with that server. +The \fBname\fR of the server block must be either the IP address (IPv4 or IPv6) +of the server, or a domain name (FQDN). If a domain name is specified, then this +will be resolved immediately to all the addresses associated with the name, and +the proxy will not care about any possible DNS changes that might occur later. +Hence there is no dependency on DNS after startup. If the domain name resolves +to multiple addresses, then for UDP the first address is used. For TLS, the proxy +will loop through the addresses until it can connect to one of them. In the case +of TLS, the name of the server must match the FQDN or IP address in the server +certificate. Note that at the time of writing it must match the certificate CN. +This will be extended to check subjectAltName if present. +.sp +The allowed options in a server block are \fBtype\fR, \fBsecret\fR, \fBtls\fR, +\fBport\fR and \fBstatusServer\fR. The values of \fBtype\fR, \fBsecret\fR and +\fBtls\fR are just as specified for the \fIclient block\fR above, except that +\fBdefaultserve\fRr (and not \fBdefaultclient\fR) is used as a fallback if the +\fBtls\fR option is not used. +.sp +The \fBport\fR option allows you to specify which port number the server uses. +\fBstatusServer\fR can be specified to enable the use of statusServer messages +for this server. The value must be either \fBon\fR or \fBoff\fR. The default +when not specified, is \fBoff\fR. If statusServer is enabled, the proxy will +during idle periods send regular statusServer messages to the server to verify +that it is alive. This should only be enabled if the server supports it. + +.SH "REALM BLOCK" +When the proxy receives an \fBAccess Request\fR it needs to figure out to which +server it should be forwarded. This is done by looking at the Username attribute +in the request, and matching that against the names of the defined realm blocks. +The proxy will match against the blocks in the order they are specified, using +the first match if any. If no realm matches, the proxy will simply ignore the +request. Each realm block specifies what the server should do when a match is +found. A realm block may contain at most one \fBserver\fR option, and at most +one \fBreplyMessage\fR option. We will discuss these later. +.sp + +.TP +\fBRealm block names and matching\fR +.sp +In the general case the proxy will look for a @ in the username attribute, and +try to do an exact case insensitive match between what comes after the @ and +the name of the realm block. So if you get a request with the attribute value +\fBanonymous@example.com\fR, the proxy will go through the realm names in the +order they are specified, looking for a realm block named \fBexample.com\fR. +.sp +There are two exceptions to this, one is the realm name \fB*\fT which means +match everything. Hence if you have a realm block named \fB*\fR, then it will +always match. This should then be the last realm block defined, since any +blocks after this would never be checked. This is useful for having a default. +.sp +The other exception is regular expression matching. If the realm name starts +with a \fB/\fR, the name is treated as an regular expression. A case insensitive +regexp match will then be done using this regexp on the value of the entire +Username attribute. Optionally you may also have a trailing \fB/\fR after the +regexp. So as an example, if you want to use regexp matching the domain +\fBexample.com\fR you could have a realm block named \fB/@example\\.com$\fR. +Optinally this can also be written \fB/@example\\.com$/\fR. If you want to +match all domains under the \fB.com\fR top domain, you could do +\fB/@.*\\.com$\fR. Note that since the matching is done on the entire +attribute value, you can also use rules like \fB/^[a-k].*@example\\.com$/\fR +to get some of the users in this domain to use one server, while other users +could be matched by another realm block and use another server. +.sp + +.TP +\fBRealm block options\fR +.sp +A realm block may contain at most one \fBserver\fR option. If defined, the +value of the \fBserver\fR option must be the name of a previously defined +server block, and this will be the server that the request is forwarded to. +.sp +If there is no \fBserver\fR option, the proxy will reply back to the client +with an Access Reject message. Note that this is different from having no +match since then the request is simply ignored. You may wonder why this is +useful. One example is if you handle say all domains under say \fB.bv\fR. +Then you may have several realm blocks matching the domains that exists, +while for other domains under \fB.bv\fR you want to send a reject. At the +same time you might want to send all other requests to some default server. +After the realms for the subdomains, you would then have two realm +definitions. One with the name \fB/@.*\\.bv$\fR with no servers, followed +by one with the name \fB*\fR with the default server defined. This may also +be useful for blocking particular usernames. +.sp +When sending reject messages, the proxy will check if the option +\fBreplyMessage\fR is set for the realm. If it is, it will add a replyMessage +attribute to the reject message with this value. Note that you need to quote +the message if it contains white space. +.sp + +.SH "TLS BLOCK" +The TLS block specifies TLS configuration options and you need at least one +of these if you have clients or servers using TLS. As discussed in the client +and server block descriptions, a client or server block may reference a +particular TLS block by name. There are also however the special TLS block +names \fBdefault\fR, \fBdefaultclient\fR and \fBdefaultserver\fR which are +used as defaults if the client or server block does not reference a TLS block. +Also note that a TLS block must be defined before the client or server block +that would use it. If you want the same TLS configuration for all TLS clients +and servers, you need just a single TLS block named \fBdefault\fR, and the client +and servers need not refer to it. If you want all TLS clients to use one +config, and all TLS servers to use another, then you would be fine only +defining two TLS blocks named \fBdefaultclient\fR and \fBdefaultserver\fR. +If you want different clients (or different servers) to have different TLS +parameters, then you may need to create other TLS blocks with other names, +and reference those from the client or server definitions. Note that you could +also have say a client block refer to a default, even \fBdefaultserver\fR +if you really want to. +.sp +The available TLS block options are \fBCACertificateFile\fR, +\fBCACertificatePath\fR, \fBCertificateFile\fR, \fBCertificateKeyFile\fR +and \fBCertificateKeyPassword\fR. When doing RADIUS over TLS, both the +client and the server present certificates, and they are both verified +by the peer. Hence you must always specify \fBCertificateFile\fR and +\fBCertificateKeyFile\fR options, as well as \fBCertificateKeyPassword\fR +if a password is needed to decrypt the private key. Note that +\fBCACertificateFile\fR may be a certificate chain. In order to verify +certificates, or send a chain of certificates to a peer, you also always +need to specify \fBCACertificateFile\fR or \fBCACertificatePath\fR. Note +that you may specify both, in which case the certificates in +\fBCACertificateFile\fR are checked first. + +.SH "SEE ALSO" +radsecproxy(1), RadSec draft paper. |