radrelay.conf(5) | FreeRADIUS configuration file | radrelay.conf(5) |
NAME¶
radrelay.conf - configuration file for the FreeRADIUS server "radrelay" personality
DESCRIPTION¶
The radrelay.conf file resides in the radius database directory, by default /etc/raddb. It defines the global configuration for the FreeRADIUS server, when the server is operating as "radrelay".
FILE FORMAT¶
For a detailed description of the file format, see "man radiusd.conf". The configuration entries are much the same for radrelay.conf, with a few differences as noted here.
REPLICATION FOR BACKUPS¶
Many sites run multiple radius servers; at least one primary and one backup server. When the primary goes down, most NASes detect that and switch to the backup server.
That will cause your accounting packets to go to the backup server - and some NASes don't even switch back to the primary server when it comes back up.
The result is that accounting records are missed, and/or the administrator must jump through hoops in order to combine the different detail files from multiple servers. It also means that the session database ("radutmp", used for radwho and simultaneous use detection) gets out of sync.
radrelay solves this issue by "relaying" packets from one server to another, so they both have the same set of accounting data.
BUFFERING FOR HIGH-LOAD SERVERS¶
If the RADIUS server suddenly receives a many accounting packets, there may be insufficient CPU power to process them all in a timely manner. This problem is especially noticeable when the accounting packets are going to a back-end database.
Similarly, you may have one database that tracks "live" sessions, and another that tracks historical accounting data. In that case, accessing the first database is fast, as it is small. Accessing the second database many be slower, as it may contain multiple gigabytes of data. In addition, writing to the first database in a timely manner is important, while data may be written to the second database with a few minutes delay, without any harm being done.
RELAYING OF ACCOUNTING PACKETS¶
The radrelay.conf file controls the "radrelay" personality of the server, which can perform both of the functions above at the same time.
USAGE¶
First, you should configure the main radius server to log to an extra, single detail file. This may be done by adding an extra instance of the detail module to radiusd.conf:
For example:
detail radrelay-detail {
filename = ${radacctdir}/radrelay/detail
permissions = 0600
dir_permissions = 0755
locking = yes
}
...
accounting {
...
radrelay-detail
...
}
This configuration will cause accounting packets to be logged to the ${radacctdir}/radrelay/detail file. This file should not be rotated by standard log rotation scripts, as the radrelay program will read and rotate it.
RADRELAY.CONF EXAMPLE¶
See the radrelay.conf file for detailed instructions on configuration entries, what they mean, and how to use them.
To have the "radrelay" portion of the server read the above detail file, configure radrelay.conf with the following section:
listen {
type = detail
filename = ${radacctdir}/radrelay/detail
max_outstanding = 100
identity = radrelay
}
The server will read the accounting packets from the detail file, and process them just as if it had received them from the NAS. Therefore, you should configure the "accounting" section of radrelay.conf to write the accounting records to an "sql" module, or to proxy them to another RADIUS server.
Then, start the server via the following command:
$ radiusd -n radrelay
The server should start up, read the detail file, and process accounting packets from it.
NOTES¶
The radiusd.conf file is not read at all when the server is running as radrelay. Please edit radrelay.conf.
CREDITS¶
The original "radrelay" program was written by Miquel van Smoorenburg for the Cistron radius project, and ported to FreeRADIUS by Simon Ekstrand. The "radsqlrelay" was written by Kostas Kalavras. It was never released as part of an official FreeRADIUS release, but served as a basis for the design of this implementation.
FILES¶
/etc/raddb/radrelay.conf
SEE ALSO¶
AUTHOR¶
Alan DeKok <aland@ox.org>
27 May 2005 |