freebsd-nq/contrib/hostapd/hostapd.eap_user
2007-07-09 16:15:06 +00:00

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# hostapd user database for integrated EAP authenticator
# Each line must contain an identity, EAP method(s), and an optional password
# separated with whitespace (space or tab). The identity and password must be
# double quoted ("user"). Password can alternatively be stored as
# NtPasswordHash (16-byte MD4 hash of the unicode presentation of the password
# in unicode) if it is used for MSCHAP or MSCHAPv2 authentication. This means
# that the plaintext password does not need to be included in the user file.
# Password hash is stored as hash:<16-octets of hex data> without quotation
# marks.
# [2] flag in the end of the line can be used to mark users for tunneled phase
# 2 authentication (e.g., within EAP-PEAP). In these cases, an anonymous
# identity can be used in the unencrypted phase 1 and the real user identity
# is transmitted only within the encrypted tunnel in phase 2. If non-anonymous
# access is needed, two user entries is needed, one for phase 1 and another
# with the same username for phase 2.
#
# EAP-TLS, EAP-PEAP, EAP-TTLS, EAP-SIM, and EAP-AKA do not use password option.
# EAP-MD5, EAP-MSCHAPV2, EAP-GTC, EAP-PAX, EAP-PSK, and EAP-SAKE require a
# password.
# EAP-PEAP and EAP-TTLS require Phase 2 configuration.
#
# * can be used as a wildcard to match any user identity. The main purposes for
# this are to set anonymous phase 1 identity for EAP-PEAP and EAP-TTLS and to
# avoid having to configure every certificate for EAP-TLS authentication. The
# first matching entry is selected, so * should be used as the last phase 1
# user entry.
#
# "prefix"* can be used to match the given prefix and anything after this. The
# main purpose for this is to be able to avoid EAP method negotiation when the
# method is using known prefix in identities (e.g., EAP-SIM and EAP-AKA). This
# is only allowed for phase 1 identities.
#
# Multiple methods can be configured to make the authenticator try them one by
# one until the peer accepts one. The method names are separated with a
# comma (,).
#
# [ver=0] and [ver=1] flags after EAP type PEAP can be used to force PEAP
# version based on the Phase 1 identity. Without this flag, the EAP
# authenticator advertises the highest supported version and select the version
# based on the first PEAP packet from the supplicant.
# Phase 1 users
"user" MD5 "password"
"test user" MD5 "secret"
"example user" TLS
"DOMAIN\user" MSCHAPV2 "password"
"gtc user" GTC "password"
"pax user" PAX "unknown"
"pax.user@example.com" PAX 0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef
"psk user" PSK "unknown"
"psk.user@example.com" PSK 0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef
"sake.user@example.com" SAKE 0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef
"ttls" TTLS
"not anonymous" PEAP
# Default to EAP-SIM and EAP-AKA based on fixed identity prefixes
"0"* AKA,TTLS,TLS,PEAP,SIM
"1"* SIM,TTLS,TLS,PEAP,AKA
"2"* AKA,TTLS,TLS,PEAP,SIM
"3"* SIM,TTLS,TLS,PEAP,AKA
"4"* AKA,TTLS,TLS,PEAP,SIM
"5"* SIM,TTLS,TLS,PEAP,AKA
# Wildcard for all other identities
* PEAP,TTLS,TLS,SIM,AKA
# Phase 2 (tunnelled within EAP-PEAP or EAP-TTLS) users
"t-md5" MD5 "password" [2]
"DOMAIN\t-mschapv2" MSCHAPV2 "password" [2]
"t-gtc" GTC "password" [2]
"not anonymous" MSCHAPV2 "password" [2]
"user" MD5,GTC,MSCHAPV2 "password" [2]
"test user" MSCHAPV2 hash:000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f [2]