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Man Pages
chilli(8) FreeBSD System Manager's Manual chilli(8)

chilli - A Software Access Controller for Captive Portal and WPA

chilli --help

chilli --version

chilli [ configuration options ]

chilli -fd [ configuration options ] # for debugging in foreground

chilli is a software access controller typically used in Wireless LAN HotSpot. It supports of two different access methods for a Wireless LAN HotSpot: Universal Access Method (UAM) as well as Wireless Protected Access (WPA). This version of chilli is called CoovaChilli, a fork of the original ChilliSpot. See http://coova.org/ for more information.

chilli has three major interfaces: A downlink interface for accepting connections from clients, a radius interface for authenticating clients and an uplink network interface for forwarding traffic to other networks.

Authentication of clients is performed by an external radius server. For UAM the CHAP-Challenge and CHAP-Password as specified by RFC 2865 is used. For WPA the radius EAP-Message attribute as defined in RFC 2869 is used. The message attributes described in RFC 2548 are used for transferring encryption keys from the radius server to chilli. Furthermore the radius interface supports accounting.

The downlink interface accepts DHCP and ARP requests from clients. The client can be in two states: Unauthenticated and authenticated. In unauthenticated state, web requests from the client are redirected to an authentication web server - the captive portal.

In a typical application unauthenticated clients will be forwarded to a web server and prompted for username and password. The web server forwards the user credentials to chilli by means of web browser redirects. On the chilli side, authentication requests are forwarded to a radius server. If authentication is successful the state of the client is changed to authenticated. This authentication method is known as Universal Access Method (UAM).

As an alternative to UAM, the access points can be configured to authenticate the clients by using Wireless Protected Access (WPA). In this case, authentication credentials are forwarded from the WPA access point to chilli by using the radius protocol. The received radius request is proxied by chilli and forwarded to the radius server.

The uplink interface is implemented by using the TUN/TAP driver. When chilli is started, a tun interface is established and an optional external configuration script is called.

Runtime errors are reported using the syslogd (8) facility.

Configuration parameters set on the command line always take precedent over anything configured in a file. See chilli.conf(5) for a complete list of possible configurations. Here are just a few common command line options:

--help
Print help and exit.

--version
Print version and exit.

--fg
Run in foreground (default = off)

--debug
Run in debug mode (default = off)

--conf file
Configuration file to use instead of the default below. See chilli.conf(5) for more inforamtion.

--pidfile file
File to put the process ID instead of the default below.

--cmdsock file
UNIX socket file for inter-process communication instead of default below.

--statedir path
Directory of nonvolatile data instead of default below.

/usr/local/etc/chilli.conf
The main chilli configuration file.

/usr/local/etc/chilli/defaults
Default configurations used by the chilli init.d and functions scripts.

/usr/local/etc/chilli/config

Location specific configurations used by chilli init.d and functions scripts. Copy the defaults file mentioned above and edit.

/usr/local/etc/chilli/functions

Helps configure chilli by loading the above configurations, sets some defaults, and provides functions for writing main.conf, hs.conf, and local.conf based on local and possibily centralized. See chilli.conf(5)

/usr/local/etc/init.d/chilli

The init.d file for chilli which defaults to using the above configurations to build a set of configurations files in the /usr/local/etc/chilli directory - taking local configurations and optionally centralized configurations from RADIUS or a URL. See chilli.conf(5)

/var/run/chilli.sock
UNIX socket used to daemon communication. See chilli_query(1)

/var/run/chilli.pid

Process ID file.

/usr/local/etc/chilli/www/

The typical directory for embedded web content served up by chilli using a minimal web server. A convenient place for the splash page, embedded captive portal, and JSON javascript resources.

Sending HUP to chilli will cause the configuration file to be reread and DNS lookups to be performed. The configuration options are not affected by sending HUP: fg , conf , pidfile , statedir , net , dynip , statip , uamlisten , uamport , radiuslisten , coaport , coanoipcheck , proxylisten , proxyport , proxyclient , proxysecret , dhcpif , dhcpmac , lease , or eapolenable

The above configuration options can only be changed by restarting the daemon.

chilli.conf(5) chilli-radius(5) chilli_query(1) chilli_radconfig(1) chilli_response(1) syslogd(8)

See http://coova.org/ for further documentation and community support. The original ChilliSpot project homepage is/was at www.chillispot.org.

Besides the long options documented in this man page chilli also accepts a number of short options with the same functionality. Use chilli --help for a full list of all the available options.

The TUN/TAP driver is required for proper operation of the chilli server. Linux kernels later than 2.4.7 already include the driver, but typically needs to be loaded manually with modprobe tun or automaticly by adding alias char-major-10-200 tun to the /etc/modules.conf configuration file. For other platforms see http://vtun.sourceforge.net/tun/ for information on how to install and configure the TUN/TAP driver.

CoovaChilli and ChilliSpot are licensed under the Gnu Public License. Copyright (C) 2002-2005 by Mondru AB., 2006-2007 David Bird <david@coova.com>, All rights reserved.

August 2007

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