This is a revision from the radsecproxy 2.0 devel branch. radsecproxy is a generic RADIUS proxy that can support various RADIUS clients over UDP or TLS (RadSec). It should build on most Linux and BSD platforms by simply typing "make". You may also try to use autoconf. It is possible to specify which RADIUS transport the build should support. With just doing "make" one will support only UDP and TLS. See the Makefile for how to change this. With autoconf (configure) there will normally be support for all transport. You can use the configure options --enable-udp, --enable-tcp, --enable-tls and --enable-dtls where each of them may be set to yes or no to enable or disable them. To use it you need to create a config file which normally is called "/etc/radsecproxy.conf". You can also specify the location with the "-c" command line option (see below). For further instructions, please see the enclosed example file and the documentation at http://software.uninett.no/radsecproxy/?page=documentation There are five options that may be specified on the command line. "-c configfile" to specify a non-default config file path; "-d loglevel" to set a loglevel of 1, 2, 3 or 4 where 4 is the most detailed; and "-f" to run the proxy in the foreground with logging to stderr. Without "-f" the default is to detach as a daemon and log to syslog. "-v" just prints version information and exits, while "-p" (pretend) makes the proxy go through the configuration files as normal, but stops before creating any sockets or doing any serious work. This is useful for validating config files. Thanks to Stefan Winter and Andreas Solberg for talking me into doing this, and the funding from GEANT2. Stefan as well as Kolbjørn Barmen, Ralf Paffrath and Maja Wolniewicz have helped with early testing of the code. Thanks for contributing code goes to Arne Schwabe, Maja Wolniewicz, and Simon Leinen. All of the above plus Milan Sova have provided good feedback on several implementation choices. Finally thanks to Hans Zandbelt for providing the autoconf stuff. I may have forgotten someone, let me know if you feel left out. For more information, feedback etc. please see the information at http://software.uninett.no/radsecproxy/ Stig Venaas -- 2009.07.22