On Thursday 26 February 2009 02:51:04 Jesus arteche wrote: > Someone can tell me how or where can i find some information about how to > implement a system that when an user connect to my wifi the first web > that appear when he open the web browser it will be my enterprise web. I > have connected a debian server to my acces point with a bind, dhcp server > and a firewall (iptables).
The term for this is generally "captive portal". A web search for that term should give you a number of useful applications, some of which will be free software and may be available for Debian. I've never had the need to set up such a system. [1] However, one of my roommates is using such as system, based on WifiDog, IIRC. I'm not sure if it is available for Debian, but I've heard mostly good things about it. -- Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. ,= ,-_-. =. b...@iguanasuicide.net ((_/)o o(\_)) ICQ: 514984 YM/AIM: DaTwinkDaddy `-'(. .)`-' http://iguanasuicide.net/ \_/ [1] Actually, I despise captive portals. The first thing I do with a network connection is not "open a web browser". I'll use email (via SSL) and SSH for hours before I need a web browser. Captive portals also confuse the crap out of my RSS feed reader. Heck, my web browser doesn't even open a web page when it starts (I use about:blank), so I have to make use some address to go to so that the captive portal with authenticate me and I can freakin' use the fsckin' Internet which is much larger than "the web". For the love of $deity, provide some method for regular users to bypass the captive portal (e.g. if their MAC address is known-good).
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