radsecproxy.conf - Radsec proxy configuration file
When the proxy server starts, it will first check the command line
arguments, and then read the configuration file. Normally radsecproxy will
read the configuration file /etc/radsecproxy.conf. The command line
-c option can be used to instead read an alternate file (see
radsecproxy(8) for details).
If the configuration file can not be found, the proxy will exit
with an error message. Note that there is also an include facility so that
any configuration file may include other configuration files. The proxy will
also exit on configuration errors.
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 #. The configuration is
generally case insensitive, but in some cases the option values (see below)
are not.
There are two types of configuration structures than can be used.
The first and simplest are lines on the format option value. 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.
The other type of structure is a block. A block spans at least two
lines, and has the format:
blocktype name {
option value
option value
...
}
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 option value 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:
blocktype name {
# option value
option "value with space"
...
}
Option value characters can also be written in hex for options
requiring a string type value. A % character followed by two hexadecimal
digits will be replaced by its byte value. Longer hex strings can be escaped
with %%. In this case all following hexadecimal digit pairs will be replace
by byte values until the first non-hex character. If a % is used without two
following hexadecimal digits, the % and the following characters are used as
written. If you want to write a % and not use this decoding, you may of
course write % in hex; i.e., %25. As %00 would terminate a string, this
value is not converted in most cases, except when used with rewrite
statements or secrets.
Some options allow or require the use of regular expressions,
denoted as regex. The POSIX extended RE system is used, see
re_format(7).
There is one special option that can be used both as a basic
option and inside all blocks. That is the option Include where the
value specifies files to be included. The value can be a single file, or it
can use normal shell globbing to specify multiple files, e.g.:
include /etc/radsecproxy.conf.d/*.conf
The files are sorted alphabetically. Included files are read in
the order they are specified, when reaching the end of a file, the next file
is read. When reaching the end of the last included file, the proxy returns
to read the next line following the Include option. Included files
may again include other files.
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 occurrences is undefined.
PidFile file
The PidFile option specifies the name of a file to
which the process id (PID) will be written. This is overridden by the
-i command line option. There is no default value for the PidFile
option.
LogLevel 1-5
This option specifies the debug level. It must be set to
1, 2, 3, 4 or 5, where 1 logs only serious errors, and 5 logs everything. The
default is 2 which logs errors, warnings and a few informational messages.
Note that the command line option -d overrides this.
LogDestination
(file|syslog)
This specifies where the log messages should go. By
default the messages go to syslog with facility LOG_DAEMON. 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 file URL like file:///path/to/your/logfile.log or a syslog URL
using the syntax: x-syslog:///FACILITY where FACILITY must be
one of LOG_DAEMON, LOG_MAIL, LOG_USER, LOG_LOCAL0,
LOG_LOCAL1, LOG_LOCAL2, LOG_LOCAL3, LOG_LOCAL4,
LOG_LOCAL5, LOG_LOCAL6or LOG_LOCAL7. 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 -f is specified on the command line.
LogThreadId (on|off)
This can be set to on to include the thread-id in the log
messages (useful for debugging).
LogFullUsername (on|off)
This can be set to off to only log the realm in
Access-Accept/Reject log messages (for privacy).
LogMAC opt
The LogMAC option can be used to control if and how
Calling-Station-Id (the users Ethernet MAC address) is being logged. It can be
set to one of
Static,
Original,
VendorHashed,
VendorKeyHashed,
FullyHashed or
FullyKeyHashed. The
default value for LogMAC is
Original.
See radsecproxy.conf-example for details.
LogKey key
The LogKey option is used to specify the key to
use when producing HMAC's as an effect of specifying VendorKeyHashed or
FullyKeyHashed for the LogMAC option.
FTicksReporting fticks
The FTicksReporting option is used to enable F-Ticks
logging and can be set to
None,
Basic or
Full. Its
default value is
None. If FTicksReporting is set to anything other than
None, note that the default value for
FTicksMAC needs
FTicksKey to be set.
See radsecproxy.conf-example for details.
FTicksMAC opt
The FTicksMAC option has the same function as LogMAC for
FTicks. The default for FTicksMAC is
VendorKeyHashed which needs
FTicksKey to be set.
Before choosing any of Original, FullyHashed or
VendorHashed, consider the implications for user privacy when MAC
addresses are collected. How will the logs be stored, transferred and
accessed?
FTicksKey key
The FTicksKey option has the same function as LogKey for
Fticks.
FTicksSyslogFacility syslog
The FTicksSyslogFacility option is used to specify a
dedicated syslog facility for F-Ticks messages. This allows for easier
filtering of F-Ticks messages. If no FTicksSyslogFacility option is given,
F-Ticks messages are written to what the
LogDestination option
specifies.
F-Ticks messages are always logged using the log level
LOG_DEBUG. Note that specifying a file in FTicksSyslogFacility (using
the file:/// prefix) is not supported.
FTicksPrefix prefix
The FTicksPrefix option is used to set the
prefix
printed in F-Ticks messages. This allows for use of F-Ticks messages in
non-eduroam environments. If no FTicksPrefix option is given, it defaults to
the prefix used for eduroam (
F-TICKS/eduroam/1.0).
ListenUDP
(address|*)[:port]
ListenTCP (address|*)[:port]
ListenTLS (address|*)[:port]
ListenDTLS
(address|*)[:port]
Listen for the address and port for the respective
protocol. Normally the proxy will listen to the standard ports if configured
to handle clients with the respective protocol. The default ports are 1812 for
UDP and TCP and 2083 for TLS and DTLS. 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 on the form *:port where
port is any valid port number. If you also want to specify a specific
address you can do e.g. 192.168.1.1:1812 or [2001:db8::1]:1812. The
port may be omitted if you want the default one. Note that you must use
brackets around the IPv6 address. These options may be specified multiple
times to listen to multiple addresses and/or ports for each protocol.
SourceUDP
(address|*)[:port]
SourceTCP (address|*)[:port]
SourceTLS (address|*)[:port]
SourceDTLS
(address|*)[:port]
This can be used to specify source address and/or source
port that the proxy will use for connecting to clients to send messages (e.g.
Access Request). The same syntax as for Listen... applies.
TTLAttribute
(attr|vendor:attr)
This can be used to change the default TTL attribute.
Only change this if you know what you are doing. The syntax is either a
numerical value denoting the TTL attribute, or two numerical values separated
by column specifying a vendor attribute.
AddTTL 1-255
If a TTL attribute is present, the proxy will decrement
the value and discard the message if zero. Normally the proxy does nothing if
no TTL attribute is present. If you use the AddTTL option with a value 1-255,
the proxy will, when forwarding a message with no TTL attribute, add one with
the specified value. Note that this option can also be specified for a
client/server which will override this setting when forwarding a message to
that client/server.
LoopPrevention (on|off)
When this is enabled (on), a request will never be sent
to a server named the same as the client it was received from. I.e., the names
of the client block and the server block are compared. Note that this only
gives limited protection against loops. It can be used as a basic option and
inside server blocks where it overrides the basic setting.
IPv4Only (on|off)
IPv6Only (on|off)
Enabling IPv4Only or IPv6Only (on) makes radsecproxy
resolve DNS names to the corresponding address family only, and not the other.
This is done for both clients and servers. At most one of IPv4Only and
IPv6Only can be enabled. Note that this can be overridden in client and server
blocks, see below.
SNI (on|off)
Server Name Indication (SNI) is an extension to the TLS
protocol. It allows a client to indicate which hostname it is trying to
connect to at the start of the TLS handshake. Enabling this will use the
extension for all TLS and DTLS servers which specify a hostname (not IP
address). This can be overridden in server blocks, see below.
VerifyEAP (on|off)
A radius proxy is mostly agnostic to the contents of the
attributes within a radius message and forwards them as-is. However wrong EAP
attributes can lead to bad user experience. Thus radsecproxy checks the
content length of the contained EAP message and denies the access-request if
it doesn't match the attribute length. In case malformatted EAP attributes are
inentional, this behaviour can be disabled (default on).
Include file
This is not a normal configuration option; it can be
specified multiple times. It can both be used as a basic option and inside
blocks. For the full description, see the configuration syntax section
above.
There are five types of blocks, they are client,
server, realm, tls and rewrite. At least one
instance of each of client and realm is required for the proxy
to do anything useful, and it will exit if none are configured. The
tls block is required if at least one TLS/DTLS 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
occurrences 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.
client (name|fqdn|(address[/length])) {
...
}
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 name of the client block must (with one exception, see below) be either
the IP address (IPv4 or IPv6) of the client, an IP prefix (IPv4 or
IPv6) on the form IpAddress/PrefixLength, or a domain name (FQDN).
The way an FQDN is resolved into an IP address may be influenced by the use
of the IPv4Only and IPv6Only options. Note that literal IPv6
addresses must be enclosed in brackets.
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. However, if the name can not be
resolved, startup will fail.
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 (in the order they are
defined), to determine which (if any) of the clients this is. When using the
IpAddress/PrefixLength form, this might mask clients defined later, which
then will never be matched.
In the case of TLS/DTLS, the name of the client must match the
FQDN or IP address in the client certificate (CN or SubectAltName:DNS or
SubjectAltName:IP respectively) and any MatchCertificateAttribute to
be positively identified. Note that no FQDN/IP is checked when using an IP
prefix. If overlapping clients are defined (see section above), they will be
searched for positive identification, but only among clients referencing the
same tls block (selected by the first matching IP address or prefix).
The allowed options in a client block are:
Host
(fqdn|(address[/length]))
Alternatively of specifying the FQDN or address in the
block name, the host option may be used. In that case, the value of the
host option is used as described above, while the name of the block is
only used as a descriptive name for the administrator. The host option may be
used multiple times, and can be a mix of addresses, FQDNs and prefixes.
IPv4Only (on|off)
IPv6Only (on|off)
Enabling IPv4Only or IPv6Only (on) makes radsecproxy
resolve DNS names to the corresponding address family only, and not the other.
At most one of IPv4Only and IPv6Only can be enabled. Note that this will
override the global option for this client.
Type type
Specify the type (protocol) of the client.
Available options are UDP, TCP, TLS and DTLS.
While TLS and DTLS are secure, enctrypted transports, UDP and TCP are not.
Radius uses the shared secret only to encrypt certain critical attributes, but
most of the Radius data is sent in clear. Protection against manipulation is
only provided if the client uses the Message-Authenticator attribute.
Therefore UDP and TCP should only be used in secured networks or when an
underying secure transport such as IPSEC or MACSEC is used. UDP and TCP SHOULD
NOT be used across the internet.
Secret secret
Use secret as the shared RADIUS key with this
client. If the secret contains whitespace, the value must be quoted. This
option is optional for TLS/DTLS and if omitted will default to
"radsec". (Note that using a secret other than "radsec"
for TLS is a violation of the standard (RFC 6614) and that the proposed
standard for DTLS stipulates that the secret must be
"radius/dtls".)
TLS tls
For a TLS/DTLS client you may also specify the tls
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
defaultClient or default will be used if defined (in that
order). 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.
ServerName servername
Use servername for the certificate name check
instead of host or the client block name (e.g. if host uses
static IP address).
CertificateNameCheck (on|off)
For a TLS/DTLS client, disable the default behaviour of
matching CN or SubjectAltName against the specified hostname or IP
address.
MatchCertificateAttribute CN:/regexp/
MatchCertificateAttribute SubjectAltName:DNS:/regexp/
MatchCertificateAttribute SubjectAltName:URI:/regexp/
MatchCertificateAttribute SubjectAltName:IP:address
MatchCertificateAttribute SubjectAltName:rID:oid
MatchCertificateAttribute
SubjectAltName:otherName:oid:/regexp/
Perform additional validation of certificate attributes.
Currently matching of CN and SubjectAltName types URI, DNS, IP, rID, and
otherName is supported. If specified multiple times, all terms must match for
the certificate to be considered valid.
PSKkey key
For TLS, use TLS-PSK (pre shared key) instead of
certificate based authentication. If specified,
PSKidentity must also
be provided. The
key must be at least 16 bytes long. To provide the
key in hex, use the %% escaping (see CONFIGURATION SYNTAX).
In addition to the psk, peers must also agree on the key
derivation hash function. For this, the server simply uses the hash function
of the negotiated cipher as this negotiation must yield a compatible cipher
anyway. To ensure unambiguous cipher and hash selection, only use ciphers
with the same hash function in the CipherSuites of the tls
block. If no tls block is specified, a default config with SHA256 is
used.
Note: only TLS1.3 PSK is supported and only for TLS, not DTLS
(pending OpenSSL DTLS1.3 support).
PSKidentity identity
The TLS-PSK identity to identify the client. When
omitted, the client name is used as the identity. When using
TLS-PSK, all clients are identified by their PSK identity, however it is
highly recommended to limit the allowed source address(es) using the Host
address option.
DuplicateInterval seconds
Specify for how many seconds duplicate checking
should be done. If a proxy receives a new request within a few seconds of a
previous one, it may be treated the same if from the same client, with the
same authenticator etc. The proxy will then ignore the new request (if it is
still processing the previous one), or returned a copy of the previous
reply.
AddTTL 1-255
The AddTTL option has the same meaning as the option used
in the basic config. See the BASIC OPTIONS section for details. Any
value configured here overrides the basic one when sending messages to this
client.
TCPKeepalive (on|off)
Enable TCP keepalive (default is off). If keepalives are
not answered within 30s the connection is considered lost.
FticksVISCOUNTRY cc
Sets this client to be eligible to F-Ticks logging as
defined by the FTicksReporting basic option, and specifies the country
to be reported. The country should be specified by the two-letter country
code.
FticksVISINST institution
Set the institution to report in F-Ticks logging. If this
option is omitted, the name of the client block is used.
Rewrite rewrite
This option is deprecated. Use rewriteIn
instead.
RewriteIn rewrite
RewriteOut rewrite
Apply the operations in the specified rewrite
block on incoming (request) or outgoing (response) messages from this client.
Rewriting incoming messages is done before, outgoing after other processing.
If the RewriteIn is not configured, the rewrite blocks
defaultClient or default will be applied if defined. No default
blocks are applied for RewriteOut.
RewriteAttribute
User-Name:/regex/replace/
Rewrite the User-Name attribute in a client request for
the request forwarded by the proxy. The User-Name attribute is written back to
the original value if a matching response is later sent back to the client.
Example usage:
RewriteAttribute User-Name:/^(.*)@local$/\1@example.com/
RequireMessageAuthenticator (on|off)
Require all Access-Requests be signed with a
Message-Authenticator.
This should be enabled if the client is a proxy, or a NAS known to use
Message-Authenticator (e.g. all EAP based NAS like Wifi).
This setting is ignored when using TLS/DTLS transport.
RequireMessageAuthenticatorProxy (on|off)
Require all Access-Requests containing a Proxy-State
attribute to be signed with a Message-Authenticaor.
This should always be enabled if the client is a NAS.
This setting is ignored when using TLS/DLTS transport or when
RequireMessageAuthenticator is enabled.
server (name|((fqdn|address)[:port])) {
...
}
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 name of the server block must (with one exception, see
below) 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/DTLS the first address is used. For
TCP/TLS, the proxy will loop through the addresses until it can connect to
one of them. The way an FQDN is resolved into an IP address may be
influenced by the use of the IPv4Only and IPv6Only
options.
In the case of TLS/DTLS, the name of the server must match the
FQDN or IP address in the server certificate.
Note that the fqdn or address may include a
port number (separated with a column). This port number will then
override the default port or a port option in the server block. Also note
that literal IPv6 addresses must be enclosed in brackets.
The allowed options in a server block are:
Host
(fqdn|address)[:port]
Alternatively of specifying the FQDN or address in the
block name the host option may be used. In that case, the value of the
host option is used as described above, while the name of the block is
only used as a descriptive name for the administrator. Note that multiple host
options may be used. This will then be treated as multiple names/addresses for
the same server. When initiating a TCP/TLS connection, all addresses of all
names may be attempted, but there is no failover between the different host
values. For failover use separate server blocks.
Port port
Specify the port (UDP/TCP) to connect to. If
omitted, UDP and TCP will default to 1812 while TLS and DTLS will default to
2083.
Source
(address|*)[:port]
Specify the source address and/or port to use for this
server. See Source... options above.
DynamicLookupCommand command
Execute the
command to dynamically configure a
server for a realm given by the username field in an Access-Request. The
command can take two special forms, naptr:
service or srv:
prefix,
or point to a script or executable.
The naptr: and srv: forms execute the corresponding
DNS queries, either searching for service in NAPTR records (followed
by SRV query), or querying for prefix.realm SRV records.
Finally a server block will be constructed for the dynamic realm taking this
server block as a template and overriding the host entries with the
content of the SRV records.
Otherwise, the command should be an executable file or
script, given with full path, that will be invoked with the name of the
realm as its first and only argument. It should either print a valid
server {...} block containing at least one host statement on
stdout and exit with a code of 0, or print nothing and exit with a non-zero
exit code. If the command exited with 0 and provided a valid server config,
it will be combined with the statements in this server block, with the
values returned by the command taking preference.
An example of a shell script resolving the DNS NAPTR records for
the realm and then the SRV records for each NAPTR matching
'x-eduroam:radius.tls' is provided in tools/naptr-eduroam.sh. This is
equivalent to configuring 'naptr:x-eduroam:radius.tls' directly.
ServerName servername
Use servername for the certificate name check
instead of host or the server block name (e.g. if host uses
static IP address). Additionally, this name is used for SNI (if enabled),
unless SNIservername is set.
SNI (on|off)
Override gobal SNI setting (see above). This is
implicitly enabled if SNIservername is set.
SNIservername sni
Explicitly set the sni to request from the server,
in case the server is specified by IP address or to override the hostname.
Implicitly enables SNI for this server.
PSKkey key
PSKidentity identity
The meaning of these options are very similar as for the
client block, with minor differences.
- The identity must always be provided and cannot be derived from the
server name.
- For the key derivation hash function, the hash function of the first cipher in
the CipherSuites of the referenced tls block is used.
StatusServer
(on|off|minimal|auto)
Enable the use of status-server messages for this server
(default
off). If statusserver is enabled (
on), the proxy will
send regular status-server messages to the server to verify that it is alive.
Status tracking of the server will solely depend on status-server message and
ignore lost requests. This should only be enabled if the server supports it.
With the option
minimal status-server messages are only sent when
regular requests have been lost and no other replies have been received.
The option auto tries to detect whether the other server
supports status-server. If so, status-server messages are enabled in
minimal mode.
RetryCount count
Set how many times the proxy should retry sending a
request to the server. Default is 2 retries for UDP and DTLS. For TCP and TLS
it is always 0.
Retries from radius clients are ignored and radsecproxy performs its own retry
handling since the requiremets differ when switching transport
protocols.
RetryInterfval interval
Set the interval between each retry. Default is 5s.
Rewrite rewrite
This option is deprecated. Use rewriteIn
instead.
RewriteOut rewrite
RewriteIn rewrite
Apply the operations in the specified rewrite
block on outgoing (request) or incoming (response) messages to/from this
server. Rewriting outgoing messages is done after, incoming before other
processing. If the RewriteIn is not configured, the rewrite blocks
defaultServer or default will be applied if defined. No default
blocks are applied for RewriteOut.
LoopPrevention (on|off)
This overrides the global LoopPrevention option
for this server. See section BASIC OPTIONS for details on this
option.
BlockingStartup (on|off)
Start the dynamic server in blocking mode (default off),
treating it as if it was already connected and enqueue requests to this
server. Queued requests will be sent out when the connection is established.
If however the dynamic lookup or the connection fails, the queued requests
will be lost. (This is only considered for dynamic lookup servers. Ie when
DynamicLookupCommand is specified) Warning: when the dynamic lookup and
connection process is slow, this wil block the respective realm for that
time.
DTLSForceMTU mtu
Some non-Linux platforms are unable to query the MTU of a
connection, causing DTLS to limit itself to 256 bytes and thus failing to
connect. Manually set mtu to a large enough value so the initial DTLS
client-hello fits without fragmentation.
RequireMessageAuthenticator (on|off)
Require all responses to Access-Requests be signed with a
Message-Authenticator.
This should always be be enabled unless the server is known to only support
legacy RADIUS/UDP behavior.
This setting is ignored when using TLS/DTLS transport.
The meaning and syntax of the following options are exactly the
same as for the client block. The details are not repeated here. Please
refer to the definitions in the CLIENT BLOCK section.
IPv4Only (on|off)
IPv6Only (on|off)
Type type
Secret secret
TLS tls
CertificateNameCheck (on|off)
MatchCertificateAttribute ...
AddTTL 1-255
TCPKeepalive (on|off)
realm (*|realm|/regex/) {
...
}
When the proxy receives an Access-Request 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.
The allowed options in a realm block are:
Server server
AccountingServer server
Specify the server to which requests for this
realm should be forwarded. server references a previously defined
server block (see the SERVER BLOCK section). Each server
and accountingServer can be specified multiple times, or omitted
completely. If no server is configured, the proxy will deny all
Access-Requests for this realm. If no accountingServer is configured,
the proxy will silently ignore all Accounting-Requests for this realm. See the
SERVER SELECTION section below for details.
AccountingResponse (on|off)
Enable sending Accounting-Response instead of ignoring
Accounting-Requests when no accoutingServer are configured.
AccountingLog (on|off)
When responding to Accounting-Requests
(AccountingResponse on), log the accounting data.
ReplyMessage message
Specify a message to be sent back to the client if a
Access-Request is denied because no server are configured.
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 anonymous@example.com, the proxy will go
through the realm names in the order they are specified, looking for a realm
block named example.com.
There are two exceptions to this, one is the realm name *
which means match everything. Hence if you have a realm block named *, 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.
The other exception is regular expression matching. If the realm
name starts with a /, 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 / after the regexp. So as an example, if you want to use regexp
matching the domain example.com you could have a realm block named
/@example\.com$/. If you want to match all domains under the .com top
domain, you could do /@.*\.com$/. Note that since the matching is done on
the entire attribute value, you can also use rules like
/^[a-k].*@example\.com$/ 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.
Normally requests will be forwarded to the first server option
defined. If there are multiple server options, the proxy will do fail-over
and use the second server if the first is down. If the two first are down,
it will try the third etc. If the first server comes back up, it will go
back to using that one. Detection of servers being up or down is based on
the use of StatusServer (if enabled), and that TCP/TLS/DTLS connections are
up. Otherwise unanswered requests are used to detect unresponsive servers.
AccountingServers are treated the same, but independently of the other
servers.
If there is no Server option (or all dynamic lookups have
failed), the proxy will if ReplyMessage is specified, reply back to
the client with an Access Reject message. The message contains a
replyMessage attribute with the value as specified by the
ReplyMessage option. Note that this is different from having no match
since then the request is simply ignored. This can be used to catch all
undefined sub-domains or even all undefined realms by configuring either a
regex match like /@.*\.example\.com/ or the realm * with no server
option. Another use-case is to block a specific pattern in the username or
realm part using a regex.
If there is no AccountingServer option, the proxy will
normally do nothing, ignoring accounting requests. If instead
AccountingResponse is set to on, the proxy will log some of the
accounting information and send an Accounting-Response back. This stops
clients from retransmitting Accounting-Request messages when a realm has no
accountingServer configured.
tls name {
...
}
The TLS block specifies TLS configuration options and you need at
least one of these if you have clients or servers using TLS/DTLS. 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 default, defaultClient and
defaultServer 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/DTLS clients and servers, you need just a
single tls block named default, and the client and servers need not
refer to it. If you want all TLS/DTLS clients to use one config, and all
TLS/DTLS servers to use another, then you would be fine only defining two
TLS blocks named defaultClient and defaultServer. 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.
As both clients and servers need to present and verify a
certificate, both a certificate as well as a CA to verify the peers
certificate must be configured.
The allowed options in a tls block are:
CACertificateFile file
The CA certificate file used to verify the peers
certificate. The file can include multiple certificates as well as
CRLs.
CACertificatePath path
The path to search for CA or intermediate certificates
and CRLs. All files must have hashed symbolic links to be found. See
openssl-rehash(1).
CertificateFile file
The server certificate this proxy will use. The file may
also contain a certificate chain. Any missing certificates to complete the
chain will be searched for in the CACertificateFile and
CACertificatePath.
CertificateKeyFile file
The private-key file for the server certificate specified
in CACertificateFile.
CertificateKeyPassword password
The password to decrypt the private-key.
PolicyOID oid
Require the peers certificate to adhere to the policy
specified by oid. When specified multiple times at least one policy
must be valid in the peer certificate.
CRLCheck (on|off)
Enable checking peer certificate against the CRL (default
off). Note if enabled, all CAs in this context MUST provide a CRL, otherwise
they are considered untrusted.
Note that radsecproxy does not fetch the CRLs itself. This has to be done
separately, e.g. with fetch-crl(8)
CacheExpiry seconds
Specify how many seconds the CA and CRL
information should be cached. By default, the CA and CRL are loaded at startup
and cached indefinetely. After the configured time, the CA and CRL are
re-read. Alternatively, reloading the CA and CRL can be triggered by sending a
SIGHUP to the radsecproxy process. This option may be set to zero to disable
caching, but be warned: this might have a huge performance impact.
Any negative value will disable the cache expiry.
CipherList ciphers
Specify the list of accepted ciphers. See
openssl-ciphers(1).
CipherSuites ciphersuites
Specify the ciphersuites to be used for TLS1.3.
See openssl-ciphers(1).
Note this requires OpenSSL 1.1.1
TlsVersion ( version |
minversion:maxversion )
DtlsVersion ( version | minversion:maxversion
)
Specify the TLS/DTLS protocol version to be used.
Specify the range of allowed protocol versions between minversion and
maxversion (inclusive). If either is left out, any version up to, or
starting from this version is allowed. E.g. "TLS1_2:" will allow
TLSv1.2 or later. If omitted, use the system defaults set in openssl.conf
Currently supported values are
SSL3,TLS1,TLS1_1,TLS1_2,TLS1_3 for TLS and
DTLS1,DTLS1_2 for DTLS.
DhFile file
DH parameter
file to use. See
openssl-dhparam(1)
Note: starting with OpenSSL 3.0, use of custom DH parameters is discouraged.
rewrite name {
...
}
The rewrite block specifies rules that may rewrite RADIUS
messages. It can be used to add, remove and modify specific attributes from
messages received from and sent to clients and servers. As discussed in the
client and server block descriptions, a client or server block may reference
a particular rewrite block by name. There are however also the special
rewrite block names default, defaultClient and
defaultServer which are used as defaults if the client or server
block does not reference a block. Also note that a rewrite block must be
defined before the client or server block that would use it. If you want the
same rewrite rules for input from all clients and servers, you need just a
single rewrite block named default, and the client and servers need
not refer to it. If you want all clients to use one config, and all servers
to use another, then you would be fine only defining two rewrite blocks
named defaultClient and defaultServer. Note that these
defaults are only used for rewrite on input. No rewriting is done on output
unless explicitly specified using the RewriteOut option.
The rewrite actions are performed in this sequence:
1. RemoveAttribute (or WhitelistAttribute)
2. ModifyAttribute
3. SupplementAttribute
4. AddAttribute
All options can be specified multiple times. The allowed options
in a rewrite block are:
AddAttribute attribute:value
Add an attribute to the radius message and set it
to value. The attribute must be specified using the numerical
attribute id. The value can either be numerical, a string, or a hex
value. If the value starts with a number, it is interpreted as a 32bit
unsigned integer. Use the ' character at the start of the value to force
string interpretation. When using hex value, it is recommended to also lead
with ' to avoid unintended numeric interpretation. See the CONFIGURATION
SYNTAX section for further details.
AddVendorAttribute
vendor:subattribute:value
Add a vendor attribute to the radius message, specified
by vendor and subattribute. Both vendor and
subattribute must be specified as numerical values. The format of
value is the same as for addAttribute above.
SupplementAttribute
attribute:value
Add an attribute to the radius message and set it
to value, only if the attribute is not yet present on the message. The
format of value is the same as for addAttribute above.
SupplementVendorAttribute
vendor:subattribute:value
Add a vendor attribute to the radius message only if the
subattribute of this vendor is not yet present on the message.
The format of is the same as for addVendorAttribute above.
ModifyAttribute
attribute:/regex/replace/
Modify the given
attribute using the
regex
replace pattern. As above,
attribute must be specified by a
numerical value. Example usage:
modifyAttribute 1:/^(.*)@local$/\1@example.com/
ModifyVendorAttribute
vendor:subattribute:/regex/replace/
Modify the given subattribute of given
vendor using the regex replace pattern. Other than the
added vendor, the same syntax as for ModifyAttribute applies.
RemoveAttribute attribute
Remove all attributes with the given id.
RemoveVendorAttribute
vendor[:subattribute]
Remove all vendor attributes that match the given
vendor and subattribute. If the subattribute is omitted,
all attributes with the given vendor id are removed.
WhitelistMode (on|off)
Enable whitelist mode. All attributes except those
configured with WhitelistAttribute or WhitelistVendorAttribute
will be removed. While whitelist mode is active, RemoveAttribute and
RemoveVendorAttribute statements are ignored.
WhitelistAttribute attribute
Do not remove attributes with the given id when
WhitelistMode is on. Ignored otherwise.
WhitelistVendorAttribute
vendor[:subattribute]
Do not remove vendor attributes that match the given
vendor and
subattribute when
WhitelistMode is on. Ignored
otherwise.
If the subattribute is omitted, the complete vendor
attribute is whitelisted. Otherwise only the specified subattribute is kept
but all other subattributes are removed.