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RADIUS server and multiple secondary RADIUS servers. The secondary servers function as the backup of
the primary server. The device chooses servers based on the following rules:
•
When the primary server is in active state, the device communicates with the primary server.
•
If the primary server fails, the device performs the following tasks:
{
Changes the server status to blocked.
{
Starts a quiet timer for the server.
{
Tries to communicate with a secondary server in active state that has the highest priority.
•
If the secondary server is unreachable, the device performs the following tasks:
{
Changes the server status to blocked.
{
Starts a quiet timer for the server.
{
Tries to communicate with the next secondary server in active state that has the highest priority.
•
The search process continues until the device finds an available secondary server or has checked
all secondary servers in active state. If no server is available, the device considers the
authentication or accounting attempt a failure.
•
When the quiet timer of a server expires or you manually set the server to the active state, the status
of the server changes back to active. The device does not check the server again during the
authentication or accounting process.
•
When you remove a server in use, communication with the server times out. The device looks for a
server in active state by first checking the primary server, and then checking secondary servers in
the order they are configured.
•
When the primary server and secondary servers are all in blocked state, the device tries to
communicate with the primary server.
•
When one or more servers are in active state, the device tries to communicate with these active
servers only, even if the servers are unavailable.
•
When a RADIUS server's status changes automatically, the device changes this server's status
accordingly in all RADIUS schemes in which this server is specified.
By default, the device sets the status of all RADIUS servers to active. However, in some situations, you must
change the status of a server. For example, if a server fails, you can change the status of the server to
blocked to avoid communication attempts to the server.
To set the status of RADIUS servers:
Step Command
Remarks
1.
Enter system view.
system-view
N/A
2.
Enter RADIUS scheme view.
radius scheme
radius-scheme-name
N/A