(work in progress)
Participating in OpenRoaming as an ANP means
a) adding a number of Passpoint Roaming Consortium Organization Identifiers (RCOIs) in the beacons of the Wi-Fi network and
b) to have an uplink into the OpenRoaming RADIUS infrastructure.
In order to signal that eduroam users are welcome, a set of these RCOIs can be used. Below are two common choices. Note that the SSID for the network is then arbitrary but SHOULD NOT be "eduroam" as there are known side-effects on supplicants when the network configuration matches both by SSID and by RCOI.
The configuration snippets that enable OpenRoaming with the "OpenRoaming All" and an uplink to the eduroam OT proxy are on the following pages:
Hotspots which want to become eduroam SPs but cannot use the SSID "eduroam" should use the eduroam Roaming Consortium Organisation Identifier (RCOI)
00-1B-C5-04-60 [configured in end-user device to be displayed as: "eduroam®"]
to indicate that their Passpoint network is willing to accept eduroam guests.
For the actual request routing, there are three possible ways:
1a) is currently the most viable option.
There are currently no plans to move away from using the SSID "eduroam" as the single user-facing identifier for hotspots operated directly by an eduroam participating organisation. If this ever changes, the Roaming Consortium Organisation Identifier
00-1B-C5-04-6F [configured in end-user device to be displayed as: "eduroam®"]
is reserved for that purpose. It is configured in some supplicants but not expected to be emitted by any SP which has an SSID "eduroam" at this point.
However, eduroam SPs which deploy a separate onboarding SSID can benefit from the Online Sign-Up capabilities in Passpoint R2 and above. They should configure their eduroam SSID to emit the OSU (Online Sign-Up) portions of Passpoint and configure the OSU server URL as defined below as the target server for Online Sign-Up. Their onboarding SSID must then allow access for end-users to that URL and to eduroam CAT.
eduroam Identity Providers interested in letting their users authenticate in a third-party roaming scenario may need to implement some elements of the eduroam Service Definition which are typically only optional.
In particular, for participation in OpenRoaming, the following is REQUIRED:
The DNS zone for the Identity Provider's realm name must include a NAPTR record for their realm pointing to an eduroam OpenRoaming interchange proxy. The example below targets the general-purpose proxy operated by eduroam OT; the target host may be different for eduroam NROs who operate their own proxy:
realm.name. 43200 IN NAPTR 100 10 "s" "aaa+auth:radius.tls.tcp" "" _radsec._tcp.openroaming.eduroam.org.
When your user is actually roaming with OpenRoaming, this is visible is the RADIUS datagrams due to the RADIUS Attribute
Operator-Name = 4<string>
where the string is the WBA Identifier of the organisation that operates the hotspot.
Starting with version 2.1, the eduroam onboarding toolset (eduroam CAT and eduroam Managed IdP) integrates Passpoint network definitions in general, and OpenRoaming settings in particular, in its standard workflow. This version is currently available for testing on https://cat-test.eduroam.org with a stale copy of production data.
CAT automatically injects network definitions based on the eduroam Roaming Consortium Organisation identifier (RCOI 00-1B-C5-04-60 with the Display Name "eduroam®") on all platforms where this is possible and does not create nuisances for end users.
When their eduroam NRO has enabled the feature set in their country's tenancy (which they do by setting "OpenRoaming: Allow Organisation Opt-In" in their NRO settings), eduroam IdPs can easily have CAT create OpenRoaming enabled installers by adding a single attribute in the "Media-Specific" category. This will include the RCOIs 5A-03-BA-00-00 "OpenRoaming for All Identities, settlement-free, no personal data requested, baseline QoS") and 5A-03-BA-08-00 ("OpenRoaming for Educational or Research Identities, settlement-free, no personal data requested, baseline QoS") in the installers. The attribute is called "OpenRoaming" and can take one of four values:
Value | Meaning |
---|---|
Ask User | During download on the web interface, users will be actively asked whether they want to have OpenRoaming access included in their installer (on platforms where OpenRoaming installation is technically feasible). They are shown and need to acknowledge the OpenRoaming T&Cs before the download starts. Where not technically feasible, users will get a standard eduroam installer download and won't see the OpenRoaming T&Cs. |
Ask User, T&Cs pre-agreed | During download on the web interface, users will be actively asked whether they want to have OpenRoaming access included in their installer (on platforms where OpenRoaming installation is technically feasible). By selecting this value, the IdP asserts that their end users have already seen and accepted the OpenRoaming T&Cs; the download flow does not repeat this acknowledgement. Where not technically feasible, users will get a standard eduroam installer download and won't see the OpenRoaming T&Cs. |
Always | Include the OpenRoaming access details in all installers (where technically feasible). The users are shown and need to acknowledge the OpenRoaming T&Cs before the download starts. Where not technically feasible, users will get a standard eduroam installer download and won't see the OpenRoaming T&Cs. |
Always, T&Cs pre-agreed | Include the OpenRoaming access details in all installers (where technically feasible). By selecting this value, the IdP asserts that their end users have already seen and accepted the OpenRoaming T&Cs; the download flow does not repeat this acknowledgement. Where not technically feasible, users will get a standard eduroam installer download and won't see the OpenRoaming T&Cs. |
These platforms are not configured for Passpoint.
Both for eduroam CAT and eduroam Managed IdP, the eduroam Passpoint profile is always included and the OpenRoaming Passpoint profile is optionally included. Installation of these may fail if the chipset and driver on the machine does not support Passpoint. Such failures are silently ignored (and only the eduroam SSID configuration is then installed); no user inconvenience.
For eduroam Managed IdP, eduroam Passpoint-based profiles are always installed alongside the SSID-based ones. This is expected to work throughout the product palette of Apple, and with no additional user interaction. OpenRoaming is not currently enabled on Managed IdP.
eduroam CAT will install OpenRoaming Passpoint profiles when enabled (all EAP types); it will however only install the eduroam Passpoint profile if the IdP's chosen EAP type is "EAP-TLS". This is because of known user nuisances regarding multiple username/password prompts for multiple SSID and Passpoint profiles which CAT minimises by omitting that extra prompt for eduroam Passpoint.
eduroam Passpoint profiles and the optional OpenRoaming Passpoint profiles can be installed only with the new geteduroam app (i.e. not with the predecessor "eduroamCAT"). geteduroam has varying support for Passpoint profiles depending on the Android version and whether the IdP chose "Ask" vs. "Always" - the "Always" variant currently has better support across all supported Android versions; "Ask" support needs special IdP workarounds.
Intrinsic support for OpenRoaming exists on later (read, newer) devices and versions of Android. For example, recent Google Pixel devices (Pixel 5 and later) show "OpenRoaming" as a network when a HS2.0 hotspot is detected. You then have the choice to enable roaming to this network by choosing to use your Google account associated with your Android phone. Apps like 'Cisco Openroaming' also enable an account on the same network. CAT profiles installed with geteduroam will show "<realm name> via Passpoint" instead but do not associated with the "OpenRoaming" SSID. On some Samsung devices, you may see "OpenRoaming available using Samsung Account" instead, which will function in a similar fashion as the Google Pixel.
TBD.
TBD.
eduroam currently operates a beta-quality central interchange point with OpenRoaming. Third-party SPs find it automatically by looking up NAPTR records in DNS for aaa+auth for the respective realm. Identity Providers need to configure a NAPTR record, see above.
eduroam plans to operate an OSU server which directs unprovisioned end-users to the eduroam CAT toolset. The provisional URL for this server is
https://cat-osu.eduroam.org/soap/?idp=X
GeGC to decide on terms and conditions for letting random SPs serve eduroam users.