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# -*- text -*-
######################################################################
#
# This is a virtual server that handles DHCP.
#
# $Id: 170e2b191af7184b519d3594fa99476c857dfda5 $
#
######################################################################
#
# The DHCP functionality goes into a virtual server.
#
server dhcp {
# Define a DHCP socket.
#
# The default port below is 6700, so you don't break your network.
# If you want it to do real DHCP, change this to 67, and good luck!
#
# You can also bind the DHCP socket to an interface.
# See below, and raddb/radiusd.conf for examples.
#
# This lets you run *one* DHCP server instance and have it listen on
# multiple interfaces, each with a separate policy.
#
# If you have multiple interfaces, it is a good idea to bind the
# listen section to an interface. You will also need one listen
# section per interface.
#
# FreeBSD does *not* support binding sockets to interfaces. Therefore,
# if you have multiple interfaces, broadcasts may go out of the wrong
# one, or even all interfaces. The solution is to use the "setfib" command.
# If you have a network "10.10.0/24" on LAN1, you will need to do:
#
# Pick any IP on the 10.10.0/24 network
# $ setfib 1 route add default 10.10.0.1
#
# Edit /etc/rc.local, and add a line:
# setfib 1 /path/to/radiusd
#
# The kern must be built with the following options:
# options ROUTETABLES=2
# or any value larger than 2.
#
# The other only solution is to update FreeRADIUS to use BPF sockets.
#
listen {
# This is a dhcp socket.
type = dhcp
# IP address to listen on. Will usually be the IP of the
# interface, or 0.0.0.0
ipaddr = 127.0.0.1
# source IP address for unicast packets sent by the
# DHCP server.
#
# The source IP for unicast packets is chosen from the first
# one of the following items which returns a valid IP
# address:
#
# src_ipaddr
# ipaddr
# reply:DHCP-Server-IP-Address
# reply:DHCP-DHCP-Server-Identifier
#
src_ipaddr = 127.0.0.1
# The port should be 67 for a production network. Don't set
# it to 67 on a production network unless you really know
# what you're doing. Even if nothing is configured below, the
# server may still NAK legitimate responses from clients.
port = 6700
# Interface name we are listening on. See comments above.
# interface = lo0
# The DHCP server defaults to allowing broadcast packets.
# Set this to "no" only when the server receives *all* packets
# from a relay agent. i.e. when *no* clients are on the same
# LAN as the DHCP server.
#
# It's set to "no" here for testing. It will usually want to
# be "yes" in production, unless you are only dealing with
# relayed packets.
broadcast = no
# On Linux if you're running the server as non-root, you
# will need to do:
#
# sudo setcap cap_net_admin=ei /path/to/radiusd
#
# This will allow the server to set ARP table entries
# for newly allocated IPs
}
# Packets received on the socket will be processed through one
# of the following sections, named after the DHCP packet type.
# See dictionary.dhcp for the packet types.
# Return packets will be sent to, in preference order:
# DHCP-Gateway-IP-Address
# DHCP-Client-IP-Address
# DHCP-Your-IP-Address
# At least one of these attributes should be set at the end of each
# section for a response to be sent.
dhcp DHCP-Discover {
# Set the type of packet to send in reply.
#
# The server will look at the DHCP-Message-Type attribute to
# determine which type of packet to send in reply. Common
# values would be DHCP-Offer, DHCP-Ack or DHCP-NAK. See
# dictionary.dhcp for all the possible values.
#
# DHCP-Do-Not-Respond can be used to tell the server to not
# respond.
#
# In the event that DHCP-Message-Type is not set then the
# server will fall back to determining the type of reply
# based on the rcode of this section.
update reply {
DHCP-Message-Type = DHCP-Offer
}
# The contents here are invented. Change them!
update reply {
DHCP-Domain-Name-Server = 127.0.0.1
DHCP-Domain-Name-Server = 127.0.0.2
DHCP-Subnet-Mask = 255.255.255.0
DHCP-Router-Address = 192.0.2.1
DHCP-IP-Address-Lease-Time = 86400
DHCP-DHCP-Server-Identifier = 192.0.2.1
}
# Do a simple mapping of MAC to assigned IP.
#
# See below for the definition of the "mac2ip"
# module.
#
#mac2ip
# If the MAC wasn't found in that list, do something else.
# You could call a Perl, Python, or Java script here.
#if (notfound) {
# ...
#}
# Or, allocate IPs from the DHCP pool in SQL. You may need to
# set the pool name here if you haven't set it elsewhere.
# update control {
# Pool-Name := "local"
# }
# dhcp_sqlippool
# If DHCP-Message-Type is not set, returning "ok" or
# "updated" from this section will respond with a DHCP-Offer
# message.
#
# Other rcodes will tell the server to not return any response.
ok
}
dhcp DHCP-Request {
# Response packet type. See DHCP-Discover section above.
update reply {
DHCP-Message-Type = DHCP-Ack
}
# The contents here are invented. Change them!
update reply {
DHCP-Domain-Name-Server = 127.0.0.1
DHCP-Domain-Name-Server = 127.0.0.2
DHCP-Subnet-Mask = 255.255.255.0
DHCP-Router-Address = 192.0.2.1
DHCP-IP-Address-Lease-Time = 86400
DHCP-DHCP-Server-Identifier = 192.0.2.1
}
# Do a simple mapping of MAC to assigned IP.
#
# See below for the definition of the "mac2ip"
# module.
#
#mac2ip
# If the MAC wasn't found in that list, do something else.
# You could call a Perl, Python, or Java script here.
#if (notfound) {
# ...
#}
# Or, allocate IPs from the DHCP pool in SQL. You may need to
# set the pool name here if you haven't set it elsewhere.
# update control {
# Pool-Name := "local"
# }
# dhcp_sqlippool
# If DHCP-Message-Type is not set, returning "ok" or
# "updated" from this section will respond with a DHCP-Ack
# packet.
#
# "handled" will not return a packet, all other rcodes will
# send back a DHCP-NAK.
ok
}
#
# Other DHCP packet types
#
# There should be a separate section for each DHCP message type.
# By default this configuration will ignore them all. Any packet type
# not defined here will be responded to with a DHCP-NAK.
dhcp DHCP-Decline {
update reply {
DHCP-Message-Type = DHCP-Do-Not-Respond
}
reject
}
dhcp DHCP-Inform {
update reply {
DHCP-Message-Type = DHCP-Do-Not-Respond
}
reject
}
dhcp DHCP-Release {
update reply {
DHCP-Message-Type = DHCP-Do-Not-Respond
}
reject
}
}
######################################################################
#
# This next section is a sample configuration for the "passwd"
# module, that reads flat-text files. It should go into
# radiusd.conf, in the "modules" section.
#
# The file is in the format <mac>,<ip>
#
# 00:01:02:03:04:05,192.0.2.100
# 01:01:02:03:04:05,192.0.2.101
# 02:01:02:03:04:05,192.0.2.102
#
# This lets you perform simple static IP assignment.
#
# There is a preconfigured "mac2ip" module setup in
# mods-available/mac2ip. To use it do:
#
# # cd raddb/
# # ln -s ../mods-available/mac2ip mods-enabled/mac2ip
# # mkdir mods-config/passwd
#
# Then create the file mods-config/passwd/mac2ip with the above
# format.
#
######################################################################
# This is an example only - see mods-available/mac2ip instead; do
# not uncomment these lines here.
#
#passwd mac2ip {
# filename = ${confdir}/mac2ip
# format = "*DHCP-Client-Hardware-Address:=DHCP-Your-IP-Address"
# delimiter = ","
#}