>When I restart radius it recognizes the new passwords. I am also using
>shadow passwords. I still dont know why it does it????????? Could Linux
>shadow passwords have anything to do with it?
I have tried to avoid restarting at intervals, but I am looking into using a
wrapper on passwd written in C or Perl to restart Radius if someone changes
thier password. This would cut down on the unecessary restarts and potential
problems...
>>On Fri, 28 Jun 1996, Alex wrote:
>>> cron file that looked like this.
>>>
>>> 0,20,40 * * * * killall radiusd.esva;/etc/raddb/radiusd.esva -s -p .ppp
>>> This kills radius and restarts it every 20 minutes incase I am not there
to restart it. Now this is what
Again this might not be such a good idea....
>>> a ps -uax shows
>>>
>>> root 19619 0.0 1.9 824 612 p1 S 14:25 0:00
/etc/raddb/radiusd.esva -s -p .pp
>>>
>>> Notice that it says .pp instead of ppp so it doesn't pass the .ppp for
pap. I have tried several things.
Normal output from the ps command is terminated at 80 chars in most flavors
of UNIX, but in some you might have the ability to use an xterm and increase
the width of the screen.
Has anyone else out there experienced this too? If so, have you used the
wrapper idea or have you built a better mouse trap?
Nylis G. Renschler II | http://www.silynnet.de/~ngr
Director of Internet Operations | ngr@silyn.net
Silyn-Tek Communications | http://www.silyn.net
Bitburger Str. 94 | "Internet for the Eifel and
54634 Bitburg, Germany | beyond..."