Campus Network as a Service
CNaaS NAC - Installation
Introduction
CNaaS NAC provides a way for clients to authenticate themselves using IEEE 802.1X and/or MAB.
Features:
- Automatic registration of MAB clients.
- Periodic cleanup of inactive clients.
- Replication between primary and secondary server.
- API which can be used for all sorts of integrations.
- Port-locking, possible to bind clients to a single switch port for enhanced security.
- Fancy web UI written in React.
CNaaS NAC consists of two parts, NAC and NAC frontend, both runs in Docker.
Docker
We are using Docker Compose to manage all containers. First of all we want to start the CNaaS NAC containers without the frontend and a minimal YAML-file can look something like this (of course secrets and passwords should be replaced):
version: '3.7' services: nac_api: build: ./api/ ports: - 1443:4430 networks: cnaas: ipv4_address: 172.31.0.10 depends_on: - nac_postgres nac_radius: build: ./radius ports: - 1812:1812/udp - 1813:1813/udp networks: cnaas: ipv4_address: 172.31.0.20 environment: - RADIUS_SERVER_SECRET=testing123 - RADIUS_NO_PORT_LOCK=True depends_on: - nac_api volumes: - type: volume source: nac-freeradius-data target: /etc/Freeradius/3.0/ - type: volume source: nac-var-data target: /var/ - type: volume source: nac-api-certs target: /opt/cnaas/certs/ nac_postgres: build: ./postgres volumes: - type: volume source: nac-postgres-data target: /var/lib/postgresql/data/ environment: - POSTGRES_USER=cnaas - POSTGRES_PASSWORD=cnaas - POSTGRES_DB=nac ports: - 5432:5432 networks: cnaas: ipv4_address: 172.31.0.30 networks: cnaas: driver: bridge name: cnaas ipam: config: - subnet: 172.31.0.0/24 driver_opts: com.docker.network.bridge.name: br-cnaas volumes: nac-postgres-data: external: false nac-freeradius-data: external: false nac-var-data: external: false nac-api-certs: external: false
This will launch the containers needed for NAC. If you need to edit any configuration files for FreeRADIUS (out of the scope of this document) the easiest is to either run bash inside the nac_radius container and edit the files or do it from the host and use the directory in which nac-freeradius-data is mounted. Control socket etc for radmin is enabled inside the container for debugging.
To launch the frontend we must first have CNaaS Auth POC running, instructions available here: CNaaS Auth POC server installation. The compose file f or CNaaS NAC Front looks like this:
version: '3.7' services: cnaas_front: build: ./front/ ports: - 4443:4443 environment: - NAC_API_URL=https://url-to-nac-api/ - NAC_FRONT_URL=https://url-to-cnaas-front/ - AUTH_API_URL=https://url-to-cnaas-auth-poc/ volumes: - type: volume source: cnaas-front-cert target: /opt/cnaas/cert volumes: cnaas-front-cert: external: true
The three variables above should point to the URL the NAC API container exposes, the URL to the CNaaS NAC Front container and finally URL to the auth server. This works in the same way as for CNaaS NMS.