Mapping A User Domain Name To A Virtual Router; Mapping User Requests Without A Valid Domain Name - Juniper JUNOSE SOFTWARE FOR E SERIES 11.3.X - BROADBAND ACCESS CONFIGURATION GUIDE 2010-10-12 Configuration Manual

Software for e series broadband services routers broadband access configuration guide
Hide thumbs Also See for JUNOSE SOFTWARE FOR E SERIES 11.3.X - BROADBAND ACCESS CONFIGURATION GUIDE 2010-10-12:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

JunosE 11.3.x Broadband Access Configuration Guide

Mapping a User Domain Name to a Virtual Router

Mapping User Requests Without a Valid Domain Name

8
Use to specify the B-RAS license.
The license is a unique string of up to 15 alphanumeric characters.
NOTE: Acquire the license from Juniper Networks Customer Service or your
Juniper Networks sales representative.
You can purchase licenses that allow up to 2,000, 4,000, 8,000, 16,000, 32,000, or
48,000 simultaneous active IP, LAC, and bridged Ethernet interfaces.
Example
host1(config)#license b-ras jwmR4k8D
Use the no version to disable the license.
See license b-ras
You can configure RADIUS authentication, accounting, and local address pools for a
specific virtual router and then map a user domain to that virtual router.
The router keeps track of the mapping between domain names and virtual-routers. Use
the aaa domain-map command to map a user domain to a virtual router.
NOTE: This domain name is not the NT domain sometimes found on the
Dialup Networking dialog box.
When the router is configured to require authentication of a PPP user, the router checks
for the appropriate user domain-name-to-virtual-router mapping. If it finds a match, the
router sends a RADIUS authentication request to the RADIUS server configured for the
specific virtual router.
You can create a mapping between a domain name called default and a specific virtual
router so that the router can map user names that contain a domain name that does not
have an explicit map.
If a user request is submitted with a domain name for which the router cannot find a
match, the router looks for a mapping between the domain name default and a virtual
router. If a match is found, the user's request is processed according to the RADIUS server
configured for the named virtual router. If no entry is found that maps default to a specific
virtual router, the router sends the request to the RADIUS server configured on the default
virtual router.
Copyright © 2010, Juniper Networks, Inc.

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Junose 11.3

Table of Contents