FreeRADIUS
CUPS
FreeRADIUS | CUPS | |
---|---|---|
14 | 52 | |
2,010 | 1,841 | |
0.5% | 0.5% | |
10.0 | 2.3 | |
6 days ago | 5 months ago | |
C | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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FreeRADIUS
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My collection of Ansible roles for self-hosting everything with Rocky Linux and FreeIPA
FreeRADIUS WiFi authentication server
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Network discovery tool options for unknown devices
It needs to be supported at your edge switching. Most vendors support it. You usually just need some kind of RADIUS server. FreeRADIUS is one of the better options.
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Managing passwords for 100+ network equipment
You can link it back to your Windows AD account with Windows NPS, or you can use some free Radius or TACACS software package like FreeRadius, https://freeradius.org/
- FreeRADIUS attribute to override dynamic profile?
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Methods to Secure Amazon AppStream and Amazon WorkSpaces
In WorkSpaces, the only way to enable MFA is through a Radius server integrated either with an on-premises AD or an AWS Managed AD. This approach will allow you to use authentication apps like Google Authenticator to first authenticate the username and password against your Active Directory and the Radius Server will be responsible to authenticate the One-Time Password (OTP) generated by Google Authenticator. One of the open-source Radius software that can be used is FreeRadius.
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Radius solution that can easily integrate with LDAP (for wifi)
I wonder why your sys admins didn't try FreeRADIUS. It ships with detailed config examples also for using LDAP for authentication.
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Azure AD to login to wifi?
You can setup an freeradius server(or 2) to handle the authentication requests (https://freeradius.org/)
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RADIUS authentication with PHP 8
The last I knew, the client server(s) were running Apache HTTPD on Fedora 35. We use a RADIUS server for centralized authentication for the web-based applications on those servers. I believe it is using FreeRADIUS but that is a complete guess.
- Radius server: Fast, feature-rich, modular, and scalable
- FreeRADIUS/freeradius-server - FreeRADIUS - A multi-protocol policy server.
CUPS
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A new, modern, and secure print experience from Windows
If your printer for example supports IPP and Postscript or PDF then that would be possible. Higher end (commercial) HP printers usually offer this functionality. Take a look at CUPS [1] if you want to know more about IPP.
[1] https://www.cups.org/
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Trying to set up an old Zebra LP2844 as a network printer
Your best bet is to set up a print server. The support page even has a CUPS driver. CUPS is well known for supporting a lot of printers. I run it on an old Mac-mini running Ubuntu. You can run it on something as small as a Raspberry Pi.
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PostScript’s Sudden Death in Sonoma
Apple should be more open about their removals. It isn't clear how this affects their CUPS implementation or PostScript printers https://www.cups.org
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Microsoft to kill off third-party printer drivers in Windows
CUPS is under the Apache License 2.0 , so they can just use it, if they wanted: https://github.com/apple/cups/blob/master/LICENSE
They won't of course.
- On the harm shareholders can do to OpenSource
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My collection of Ansible roles for self-hosting everything with Rocky Linux and FreeIPA
CUPS printing server
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Is this easily solvable? I am going crazy
Another alternative is for you to set up a print server in VLAN20. Then set up the print server to print to the printer in VLAN99. CUPS is pretty easy to set up.
- “Sorry to bother you” me, to my printer
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Sharing a Printer in a WiFi Network
But after both Apple and Linux switched their CUPS-based printing systems to Python 3 or some other breaking change that I don't mind to understand, the only way to print a document seemed to be using a PC running Microsoft Windows. So I had to save a PDF in the cloud or email it to myself, then startup Windows on a laptop physically connected to the printer, start the printing process, check if the paper has been printed successfully, and shut down Windows. What a waste of time and energy!
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House upgrade: Need to keep an old USB-only printer connected wirelessly, would this work? (Old Router connected to new router)
Another option is to set up a print server. There are free print server programs that you can run on a computer. CUPS is pretty popular. I used to run it on a Raspberry Pi for an ancient LaserJet 1012. That printer just keeps going.
What are some alternatives?
daloRADIUS - daloRADIUS is an advanced RADIUS web management application for managing hotspots and general-purpose ISP deployments. It features user management, graphical reporting, accounting, a billing engine, and integrates with OpenStreetMap for geolocation. The system is based on FreeRADIUS with which it shares access to the backend database.
Nginx Proxy Manager - Docker container for managing Nginx proxy hosts with a simple, powerful interface
FreeIPA - Mirror of FreeIPA, an integrated security information management solution
Paperless - Scan, index, and archive all of your paper documents
Keycloak - Open Source Identity and Access Management For Modern Applications and Services
mayan-edms
OpenID/OpenID Connect
cups - OpenPrinting CUPS Sources
RADIUS-to-Okta-MFA - A utility to support Windows Remote Desktop Gateway MFA with Okta.
EdPaper - Helps you organizing your paperwork
Pomerium - Pomerium is an identity and context-aware reverse proxy for zero-trust access to web applications and services.
pfSense - Main repository for pfSense