Subscriber Access Management - Juniper JUNOS OS 10.4 - RELEASE NOTES REV 6 Release Note

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JUNOS OS 10.4 Release Notes
28
have been allocated for all addresses in the last range, the allocation process wraps
around and allocates the next unused port for addresses in the first range.
The first connection is allocated NAT address 9.9.99.1:3333.
The second connection is allocated 9.9.99.2:3333.
The third connection is allocated 9.9.99.3:3333.
The fourth connection is allocated 9.9.99.4:3333.
The fifth connection is allocated address 9.9.99.5:3333.
The sixth connection is allocated address 9.9.99.6:3333.
The seventh connection is allocated address 9.9.99.7:3333.
The eighth connection is allocated address 9.9.99.8:3333.
The ninth connection is allocated address 9.9.99.9:3333.
The tenth connection is allocated address 9.9.99.10:3333.
The eleventh connection is allocated address 9.9.99.11:3333.
The twelfth connection is allocated address 9.9.99.12:3333.
Wraparound occurs and the thirteenth connection is allocated address 9.9.99.1:3334.
[Services Interfaces]

Subscriber Access Management

Enhancement to the
show services l2tp destination
command has been extended to display the lockout state of the destination
destination
from the LAC. A destination that is reachable is not locked. An unreachable destination
is locked out. L2TP makes no further attempts to connect to this destination until the
timeout period (300 seconds) expires, unless the unreachable destination is the only
destination in the tunnel configuration list. In that case, L2TP ignores the lockout and
continues trying to connect to the destination.
[Subscriber Access]
Redirecting HTTP redirect requests (MX Series routers)—Enables support for HTTP
traffic requests from subscribers to be aggregated from access networks onto a BRAS
router, where HTTP traffic can be intercepted and redirected to a captive portal. A
captive portal provides authentication and authorization services for redirected
subscribers before granting access to protected servers outside of a walled garden. A
walled garden defines a group of servers where access is provided to subscribers
without reauthorization through a captive portal. You can use a captive portal page as
the initial page a subscriber sees after logging in to a subscriber session and as a page
used to receive and manage HTTP requests to unauthorized Web resources. An HTTP
redirect remote server that resides in a walled garden behind Junos OS routers processes
HTTP requests redirected to it and responds with a redirect URL to a captive portal.
command—The
show services l2tp
Copyright © 2011, Juniper Networks, Inc.

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