#Master config file, must be in /etc/radsecproxy or proxy's current directory # All possible config options are listed below # # You must specify at least one of TLSCACertificateFile or TLSCACertificatePath # for TLS to work. We always verify peer certificate (both client and server) #TLSCACertificateFile /etc/cacerts/CA.pem TLSCACertificatePath /etc/cacerts # You must specify the below for TLS, we will always present our certificate TLSCertificateFile /etc/hostcertkey/host.example.com.pem TLSCertificateKeyFile /etc/hostcertkey/host.example.com.key.pem # Optionally specify password if key is encrypted (not very secure) TLSCertificateKeyPassword follow the white rabbit # You can optionally specify addresses and ports to listen on # Max one of each, below are just multiple examples #ListenUDP *:1814 #listenUDP localhost #listenTCP 10.10.10.10:2084 #ListenTCP [2001:700:1:7:215:f2ff:fe35:307d]:2084 # Optional log level. 3 is default, 1 is less, 4 is more #LogLevel 3 #Optional LogDestinatinon, else stderr used for logging # Logging to file #LogDestination file:///tmp/rp.log # Or logging with Syslog. LOG_DAEMON used if facility not specified # The supported facilities are LOG_DAEMON, LOG_MAIL, LOG_USER and # LOG_LOCAL0, ..., LOG_LOCAL7 #LogDestination x-syslog:// #LogDestination x-syslog://log_local2 #Now we configure clients, servers and realms. Note that these and #also the lines above may be in any order, except that a realm #can only be configured to use a server that is previously configured. #A realm can be a literal domain name, * which matches all, or a #regexp. A regexp is specified by the character prefix / #For regexp we do case insensitive matching of the entire username string. #The matching of realms is done in the order they are specified, using the #first match found. Some examples are #"@example\.com$", "\.com$", ".*" and "^[a-z].*@example\.com$". #To treat local users separately you might try first specifying "@" #and after that "*". client 2001:db8::1 { type tls secret verysecret } client 127.0.0.1 { type udp secret secret } client radius.example.com { type TLS # secret is optional for TLS } server 127.0.0.1 { type UDP secret secret } realm eduroam.cc { server 127.0.0.1 } server 2001:db8::1 { type TLS port 2283 # secret is optional for TLS } server radius.example.com { type tls secret verysecret StatusServer on # statusserver is optional, can be on or off. Off is default } # Equivalent to example.com realm /@example\.com$ { server 2001:db8::1 } # One can define a realm without servers, the proxy will then reject # and requests matching this. Optionally one can specify ReplyMessage # attribute to be included in the reject message. # realm /\.com$ { } realm /^anonymous$ { replymessage "No Access" } # The realm below is equivalent to /.* realm * { server radius.example.com }