■
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
Mapping a User Domain Name to a Virtual Router
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.
Mapping User Requests Without a Valid Domain Name
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.
8
■
Mapping a User Domain Name to a Virtual Router
JUNOSe 11.0.x Broadband Access Configuration Guide
Summary of Contents for JUNOSE 11.0.X MULTICAST ROUTING
Page 6: ...vi...
Page 28: ...xxviii Table of Contents JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 36: ...xxxvi List of Tables JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 42: ...2 Managing Remote Access JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 204: ...164 Managing RADIUS and TACACS JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 292: ...252 Monitoring RADIUS Relay Server JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 336: ...296 RADIUS Client Terminate Reasons JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 368: ...328 Managing L2TP JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 444: ...404 PPP Accounting Statistics JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 494: ...454 Managing DHCP JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 510: ...470 DHCP Local Server Configuration Tasks JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 556: ...516 Configuring DHCP Relay Proxy JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 616: ...576 Managing the Subscriber Environment JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 674: ...634 Managing Subscriber Services JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 767: ...Part 7 Index Index on page 729 Index 727...
Page 768: ...728 Index JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...