How do I set up vpdn tunnelling on a Cisco?
Contributed by Alex S. Burba (burba@iite.ru). Add this to your Cisco configuration: vpdn enable And set up a user in your Radiator to authenticate and configure your end of the tunnel. The user name is exactly the same as the domain or realm that is to be tunnelled: {DOMAIN} Password=”cisco”, Service-Type = Outbound-User cisco-avpair = “vpdn:tunnel-id={NAS name}”, cisco-avpair = “vpdn:ip-addresses={GW ip}”, cisco-avpair = “vpdn:nas-password={password}”, cisco-avpair = “vpdn:gw-password={password}” where {DOMAIN} is the domain or realm to be tunnelled, {NAS name} is conventionally the name of the router at the other end of the tunnel. The other end of the tunnel needs to be set up with complementary attributes. 97. How do I use Disconnect-Request The first thing to understand is that, as always, the Radius protocol is implemented in a client/server architecture, in which the client sends requests to the server. Note that there is no mechanism in the protocol for a server to send a reque