beautypg.com

Accounting, Introduction to isp domain, Introduction to aaa services – H3C Technologies H3C S3600 Series Switches User Manual

Page 509: Introduction to radius, What is radius

background image

1-2

Accounting

AAA supports the following accounting methods:

z

None accounting: No accounting is performed for users.

z

Remote accounting: User accounting is performed on a remote RADIUS or TACACS server.

Introduction to ISP Domain

An Internet service provider (ISP) domain is a group of users who belong to the same ISP. For a

username in the format of userid@isp-name or userid.isp-name, the isp-name following the "@" or “.”

character is the ISP domain name. The access device uses userid as the username for authentication,

and isp-name as the domain name.

In a multi-ISP environment, the users connected to the same access device may belong to different

domains. Since the users of different ISPs may have different attributes (such as different forms of

username and password, different service types/access rights), it is necessary to distinguish the users

by setting ISP domains.

You can configure a set of ISP domain attributes (including AAA policy, RADIUS scheme, and so on) for

each ISP domain independently in ISP domain view.

Introduction to AAA Services

Introduction to RADIUS

AAA is a management framework. It can be implemented by not only one protocol. But in practice, the

most commonly used service for AAA is RADIUS.

What is RADIUS

Remote Authentication Dial-in User Service (RADIUS) is a distributed service based on client/server

structure. It can prevent unauthorized access to your network and is commonly used in network

environments where both high security and remote user access service are required.

The RADIUS service involves three components:

z

Protocol: Based on the UDP/IP layer, RFC 2865 and 2866 define the message format and

message transfer mechanism of RADIUS, and define 1812 as the authentication port and 1813 as

the accounting port.

z

Server: RADIUS Server runs on a computer or workstation at the center. It stores and maintains

user authentication information and network service access information.

z

Client: RADIUS Client runs on network access servers throughout the network.

RADIUS operates in the client/server model.

z

A switch acting as a RADIUS client passes user information to a specified RADIUS server, and

takes appropriate action (such as establishing/terminating user connection) depending on the

responses returned from the server.

z

The RADIUS server receives user connection requests, authenticates users, and returns all

required information to the switch.

Generally, a RADIUS server maintains the following three databases (see

Figure 1-1

):

z

Users: This database stores information about users (such as username, password, protocol

adopted and IP address).

This manual is related to the following products: