Access Device As The Initiator; 802.1X Authentication Procedures; A Comparison Of Eap Relay And Eap Termination - HP 5920 Series Configuration Manual

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Access device as the initiator

The access device initiates authentication, if a client cannot send EAPOL-Start packets. One example is
the 802.1X client available with Windows XP.
The access device supports the following modes:
Multicast trigger mode—The access device multicasts Identity EAP-Request packets periodically
(every 30 seconds by default) to initiate 802.1X authentication.
Unicast trigger mode—Upon receiving a frame with the source MAC address not in the MAC
address table, the access device sends an Identity EAP-Request packet out of the receiving port to
the unknown MAC address. It retransmits the packet if no response has been received within a
certain time interval.

802.1X authentication procedures

802.1X authentication has two approaches: EAP relay and EAP termination. You choose either mode
depending on support of the RADIUS server for EAP packets and EAP authentication methods.
EAP relay mode:
EAP relay is defined in IEEE 802.1X. In this mode, the network device uses EAPOR packets to send
authentication information to the RADIUS server, as shown in
Figure 27 EAP relay
In EAP relay mode, the client must use the same authentication method as the RADIUS server. On
the network access device, you only need to use the dot1x authentication-method eap command
to enable EAP relay.
EAP termination mode:
In EAP termination mode, the network access device terminates the EAP packets received from the
client, encapsulates the client authentication information in standard RADIUS packets, and uses
PAP or CHAP to authenticate to the RADIUS server, as shown in
Figure 28 EAP termination

A comparison of EAP relay and EAP termination

61
Figure
27.
Figure
28.

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