-This is radsecproxy 1.4.1 from June 11 2010.
+This is radsecproxy 1.6.5 from 2013-09-06.
radsecproxy is a generic RADIUS proxy that supports both UDP and TLS
(RadSec) RADIUS transports. There is also experimental support for
TCP and DTLS.
-It should build on most Linux and BSD platforms by simply typing
+It should build on most Unix and OSX platforms by simply typing
"./configure && make". It is possible to specify which RADIUS
transport the build should support. Without any special options to
configure, all transports supported by the system will be enabled.
See the output from "configure --help" for how to change this.
+Known build issues:
+- Older BSD's (like NetBSD 4.x) need newer OpenSSL in order to support
+ DTLS. Workaround: ./configure --disable-dtls.
+
+- FreeBSD 6.x need newer OpenSSL to build at all. OpenSSL 1.0.0c from
+ ports is fine f.ex., configure radsecproxy with `--with-ssl=/usr/local'.
+
To use radsecproxy you need to create a config file which normally is
called "/etc/radsecproxy.conf". You can also specify the location
with the "-c" command line option (see below). For further
documentation at
http://software.uninett.no/radsecproxy/?page=documentation
-There are five options that may be specified on the command line:
+The following options may be specified on the command line:
"-c configfile" to specify a non-default config file path.
"-d loglevel" to set a loglevel of 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 where 5 is the
most detailed.
"-f" to run the proxy in the foreground with logging to stderr.
Without "-f" the default is to detach as a daemon and log to
syslog.
+"-i pidfile" to name a file to which the PID is written.
"-v" just prints version information and exits.
"-p" (pretend) makes the proxy go through the configuration files as
normal, but stops before creating any sockets or doing any