Terminology, Terminology -7 – HP Identity Driven Manager Software Series User Manual
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About ProCurve Identity Driven Manager
Terminology
Terminology
Authentication
The process of proving the user’s identity. In networks this involves the use
of usernames and passwords, network cards (smartcards, token cards, etc.),
and a device’s MAC address to determine who and/or what the "user" is.
Authentication
Authentication servers are responsible for granting or denying access to the
Server
network. Also referred to as RADIUS servers because most current authenti
cation servers implement the RADIUS protocol.
Authorization
The process that determines what an authenticated user can do. It establishes
what network resources the user is, or is not permitted to use.
Bandwidth
Amount of network resources available. Generally used to define the amount
of network resources a specific user can consume at any given time. Also
referred to as rate-limiting.
Client
An end-node device such as a management station, workstation, or mobile PC
attempting to access the network. Clients are linked to the switch through a
point-to-point LAN link, either wired or wireless.
Edge Device
A network device (switch or wireless access point) that connects the user to
the rest of the network. The edge devices can be engaged in the process of
granting user access and assigning a user’s access rights and restrictions.
IDM Agent
The IDM Agent resides on the RADIUS server. It inspects incoming authenti
cation requests, and inserts appropriate authorization information (IDM
Access Profiles) into the outgoing authentication reply.
QoS
Quality of Service, relates to the priority given to outbound traffic sent from
the user to the rest of the network.
RADIUS
Remote Authentication Dial-in User Service, (though it also applies to authen
tication service in non-dial-in environments)
RADIUS Server
A server running the RADIUS application on your network. This server
receives user connection requests from the switch, authenticates users, and
then returns all necessary information to the edge device.
Realm
A Realm is similar to an Active Directory Domain, but it works across non-
Windows (Linux, etc.) systems. Generally specified in User-name as
"user@realm."
VLAN
A port-based Virtual LAN configured on the switch. When the client connec
tion terminates, the port drops its membership in the VLAN.
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