Initiating 802.1X Authentication; 802.1X Client As The Initiator; Access Device As The Initiator - HP 10500 Series Configuration Manual

Security configuration guide
Hide thumbs Also See for 10500 Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

EAP-Message
RADIUS encapsulates EAP packets in the EAP-Message attribute, as shown in
takes 79, and the Value field can be up to 253 bytes. If an EAP packet is longer than 253 bytes, RADIUS
encapsulates it in multiple EAP-Message attributes.
Figure 36 EAP-Message attribute format
Message-Authenticator
RADIUS includes the Message-Authenticator attribute in all packets that have an EAP-Message attribute
to check their integrity. The packet receiver drops the packet if the calculated packet integrity checksum
is different from the Message-Authenticator attribute value. The Message-Authenticator prevents EAP
authentication packets from being tampered with during EAP authentication.
Figure 37 Message-Authenticator attribute format

Initiating 802.1X authentication

Both the 802.1X client and the access device can initiate 802.1X authentication.

802.1X client as the initiator

The client sends an EAPOL-Start packet to the access device to initiate 802.1X authentication. The
destination MAC address of the packet is the IEEE 802.1X specified multicast address
01-80-C2-00-00-03 or the broadcast MAC address. If any intermediate device between the client and
the authentication server does not support the multicast address, you must use an 802.1X client (the HP
iNode 802.1X client, for example) that can send broadcast EAPOL-Start packets.

Access device as the initiator

The access device initiates authentication, if a client cannot send EAPOL-Start packets (for example, 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.
75
Figure
36. The Type field

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents