C H A P T E R 9 Configuring Ieee 802.1X Port-Based Authentication; Device Roles - Cisco WS-C2960-24LC-S Software Configuration Manual

Software guide
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Understanding IEEE 802.1x Port-Based Authentication

Device Roles

With IEEE 802.1x port-based authentication, the devices in the network have specific roles, as shown
in
Figure
Figure 9-1
Workstations
(clients)
Catalyst 2960 Switch Software Configuration Guide
9-2
IEEE 802.1x Accounting Attribute-Value Pairs, page 9-8
Using IEEE 802.1x Authentication with Inaccessible Authentication Bypass, page 9-13
Using IEEE 802.1x Authentication with Voice VLAN Ports, page 9-14
Using IEEE 802.1x Authentication with MAC Authentication Bypass, page 9-16
9-1.
IEEE 802.1x Device Roles
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 IEEE 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 standard.)
To resolve Windows XP network connectivity and IEEE 802.1x authentication issues, read
Note
the Microsoft Knowledge Base article at this URL:
http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q303/5/97.ASP
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 RADIUS security system with Extensible
Authentication Protocol (EAP) extensions is the only supported authentication server. It is available
Chapter 9
Configuring IEEE 802.1x Port-Based Authentication
Authentication
server
(RADIUS)
OL-8603-04

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Ws-c2960s-24td-lWs-c2960s-48lpd-lCatalyst 2960

Table of Contents