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PLANET ISW-1022MPT User Manual

Page 120

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User’s Manual of ISW-1022M Series and ISW-1033MT

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Client

—the device (workstation) that requests access to the LAN and switch services and responds to requests

from the switch. The workstation must be running 802.1X-compliant client software such as that offered in the

Microsoft Windows XP operating system. (The client is the supplicant in the IEEE 802.1X specification.)

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Authentication server

—performs the actual authentication of the client. The authentication server validates the

identity of the client and notifies the switch whether or not the client is authorized to access the LAN and switch

services. Because the switch acts as the proxy, the authentication service is transparent to the client. In this

release, the Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS) security system with Extensible

Authentication Protocol (EAP)

extensions is the only supported authentication server; it is available in Cisco

Secure Access Control Server version 3.0. RADIUS operates in a client/server model in which secure

authentication information is exchanged between the RADIUS server and one or more RADIUS clients.

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Switch (802.1X device)

—controls the physical access to the network based on the authentication status of the

client. The switch acts as an intermediary (proxy) between the client and the authentication server, requesting

identity information from the client, verifying that information with the authentication server, and relaying a

response to the client. The switch includes the RADIUS client, which is responsible for encapsulating and

decapsulating the Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) frames and interacting with the authentication server.

When the switch receives EAPOL frames and relays them to the authentication server, the Ethernet header is

stripped and the remaining EAP frame is re-encapsulated in the RADIUS format. The EAP frames are not

modified or examined during encapsulation, and the authentication server must support EAP within the native

frame format. When the switch receives frames from the authentication server, the server's frame header is

removed, leaving the EAP frame, which is then encapsulated for Ethernet and sent to the client.

„

Authentication Initiation and Message Exchange

The switch or the client can initiate authentication. If you enable authentication on a port by using the dot1x port-control

auto

interface configuration command, the switch must initiate authentication when it determines that the port link state

transitions from down to up. It then sends an EAP-request/identity frame to the client to request its identity (typically, the

switch sends an initial identity/request frame followed by one or more requests for authentication information). Upon

receipt of the frame, the client responds with an EAP-response/identity frame.

However, if during bootup, the client does not receive an EAP-request/identity frame from the switch, the client can initiate

authentication by sending an EAPOL-start frame, which prompts the switch to request the client's identity

If 802.1X is not enabled or supported on the network access device, any EAPOL frames from the

client are dropped. If the client does not receive an EAP-request/identity frame after three attempts

to start authentication, the client transmits frames as if the port is in the authorized state. A port in

the authorized state effectively means that the client has been successfully authenticated.

When the client supplies its identity, the switch begins its role as the intermediary, passing EAP frames between the client

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