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I want to mount a FreeRADIUS server for create an Enterprise WiFi and I have problems with the official tutorial. I tried WPA 2 Enterprise from scratch using a Raspberry Pi and FreeRadius Server installation and configuration on Linux system without success. I have trouble when I try to perform the test radtest -x testing password localhost 0 testing123. The server response is:

Sent Access-Request Id 86 from 0.0.0.0:35959 to 127.0.0.1:1812 length 77
    User-Name = "testing"
    User-Password = "password"
    NAS-IP-Address = 172.18.0.2
    NAS-Port = 0
    Message-Authenticator = 0x00
    Cleartext-Password = "password"
Received Access-Reject Id 86 from 127.0.0.1:1812 to 127.0.0.1:35959 length 20
(0) -: Expected Access-Accept got Access-Reject

I'm mounting the server inside a Docker Container, which Dockerfile is:

FROM base/archlinux

RUN pacman -Syyu; pacman -S freeradius make inetutils --noconfirm

EXPOSE 1812
EXPOSE 1813

# Archlinux is not installig freeradius on /etc/raddb but when I launch
# the server, the main proccess looks at that directorie
RUN cp -r /etc/raddb.default /etc/raddb

RUN sed -i '1 i\testing Cleartext-Password := password' /etc/raddb/users

ENTRYPOINT [ "radiusd", "-X" ]

To run the docker container:

docker build -t freeradius .

docker run freeradius

And launch the test:

docker exec container_id radtest -x testing password localhost 0 testing123

Could anyone help me please? Regards

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  • I believe the default user is bob Jun 21, 2018 at 15:31
  • @ArranCudbard-Bell I tested 'bob' as username without success. Can you explain it with more details, please? I followed the freeradius official tutorial. Jun 21, 2018 at 15:54

3 Answers 3

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Finally, I achive that using a freeradius docker image based on Ubuntu (https://github.com/tpdock/freeradius) instead of ArchLinux. And using MySQL for user authentification instead of users file (/etc/raddb/users)

There's the docker-compose file:

version: '3'

services:
  db:
    restart: always
    image: mysql:5.7 
    volumes:
      - ./db/docker-entrypoint-initdb.d:/docker-entrypoint-initdb.d
      - ./db/volume:/var/lib/mysql
    environment:
      MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: root
      MYSQL_USER: freeradius
      MYSQL_PASSWORD: freeradius
      MYSQL_DATABASE: freeradius
    ports:
      - "3306:3306"
  freeradius-server-docker:
    restart: always
    image: tpdock/freeradius
    ports:
      - 1812:1812/udp
      - 1813:1813/udp
    environment:
      RADIUS_LISTEN_IP: '*'
      RADIUS_CLIENTS: [email protected]
      RADIUS_SQL: 'true'
      RADIUS_DB_HOST: db
      RADIUS_DB_NAME: freeradius
      RADIUS_DB_USERNAME: freeradius
      RADIUS_DB_PASSWORD: freeradius
    links:
      - db

And the MySQL script on ./db/docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/script.sql to insert an user:

insert into radcheck (username, attribute, op, value) values ('test', 'Cleartext-Password', ':=', 'test');

I also had to insert the schema in ./db/docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/schema.sql

Schema getted from: schema.sql

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You should read up on how the FreeRADIUS users file works (/etc/raddb/users). As that's what your tutorial appears to be using to store test credentials. The users file is also how most people get started with FreeRADIUS as it encapsulates a lot of functionality in a relatively simple format.

I wrote quite a detailed answer to another question about the users file format here. I would read through that to get an overview of how the users file works and create your own entry.

At a minimum an entry to authenticate a user will contain their username and a reference credential of some kind.

bob Cleartext-Password == 'password'

Would allow the user 'bob' to authenticate with the password 'password'.

Note: You will need to restart or kill -HUP the RADIUS daemon to get it to re-read changes to the users file.

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To whom it may concern!!!

Users "shold be" listed in /usr/local/etc/raddb/users, NOT the one one in /usr/local/etc/raddb/mods-conf/authorized as indicated by some tutorial.

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  • I checked this. Looks like mine automatically has a symlink: /etc/raddb/users -> ./mods-config/files/authorize
    – Addison
    Oct 6, 2021 at 0:11

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