HP-UX AAA Server A.07.01 Administrator's Guide
Example 31-4 Examples of Login-IPv6-Host Attribute Syntax
fedc:ba98:7654:3210:fedc:ba98:7654:3210
12ab::4871
2222::4
hostname.domain.com
CAUTION: A value of 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF in the
Login-IPv6-Host indicates that the radius clients (NAS) must allow the user to select
an address or name of the server to be connected to.
A value of 0x0 in the Login-IPv6-Host indicates that the Radius clients (NAS) must
select an address or the name of the server the user has to be connected to.
HP recommends that you set the value of Login-IPv6-Host keeping the above
considerations in mind.
Framed-IPv6-Route
This attribute provides routing information to be configured for the user on the NAS.
Example 31-5 Example of a Framed-IPv6-Route Attribute Syntax
12ab::cd30:0:0:0:0/64 fedc:ba98:7654:3210:fedc:ba98:7654:3210 1
NOTE: The format of the Framed-IPv6-Route attribute must contain a destination
prefix optionally followed by a slash and a decimal length that specifies how many
high order bits of the prefix to use. This is followed by a space, a gateway address, a
space, and one or more metrics (encoded in decimal) separated by spaces.
Framed-IPv6-Pool
This attribute is sent by the AAA server to the NAS and contains the name of an assigned
pool that must be used to assign an IPv6 address for the user. The pool is a string
attribute sent to the NAS. This value is returned to the NAS. The NAS then handles
the IPv6 prefix allocation based on the value returned. If a NAS does not support
multiple address pools, the NAS must ignore this attribute.
Example 31-6 Example of a Framed-IPv6-Pool Attribute Syntax
Pool1
UserPool
With Tunneling
When the AAA server receives an Access-Request from a client that matches the user,
fred-eng, it will first attempt to match the password to the User-Password attribute
384 Configuration Files