Overview Of Wep Parameters - NETGEAR WGR614 v6 Reference Manual

54 mbps wireless router
Hide thumbs Also See for WGR614 v6:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

This process is illustrated below.
802.11b Authentication
Shared Key Steps
1) Authentication
request sent to AP
3) Client encrypts
challenge text and
sends it back to AP
5) Client connects to network
Figure 7-2: Shared key authentication

Overview of WEP Parameters

Before enabling WEP on an 802.11 network, you must first consider what type of encryption you
require and the key size you want to use. Typically, there are three WEP Encryption options
available for 802.11 products:
1. Do Not Use WEP: The 802.11 network does not encrypt data. For authentication purposes, the
network uses Open System Authentication.
2. Use WEP for Encryption: A transmitting 802.11 device encrypts the data portion of every
packet it sends using a configured WEP Key. The receiving device decrypts the data using the
same WEP Key. For authentication purposes, the network uses Open System Authentication.
3. Use WEP for Authentication and Encryption: A transmitting 802.11 device encrypts the data
portion of every packet it sends using a configured WEP Key. The receiving device decrypts the
data using the same WEP Key. For authentication purposes, the wireless network uses Shared Key
Authentication.
Note: Some 802.11 access points also support Use WEP for Authentication Only (Shared Key
Authentication without data encryption).
W ire le ss N e tworkin g B a sics
Reference Manual for the 54 Mbps Wireless Router WGR614 v6
2) AP sends challenge text
4) AP decrypts, and if correct,
authenticates client
202-10099-01, April 2005
IN TER N ET
W LA N
LO CA L
MODEL
FVM318
Cable/DSL
ProSafeWirelessVPN Security Firewall
PWR
TEST
Cable or
DLS modem
D -5

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Wgr614v7

Table of Contents