802.1X Network Access Control - D-Link DWS-3000 Series Configuration Manual

Unified wired & wireless access system
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802.1X Network Access Control

Port-based network access control allows the operation of a system's port(s) to be controlled to
ensure that access to its services is permitted only by systems that are authorized to do so.
Port Access Control provides a means of preventing unauthorized access by supplicants or
users to the services offered by a System. Control over the access to a switch and the LAN to
which it is connected can be desirable in order to restrict access to publicly accessible bridge
ports or departmental LANs.
The Unified Switch achieves access control by enforcing authentication of supplicants that are
attached to an authenticator's controlled ports. The result of the authentication process
determines whether the supplicant is authorized to access services on that controlled port.
A PAE (Port Access Entity) can adopt one of two roles within an access control interaction:
Authenticator – Port that enforces authentication before allowing access to services avail-
able via that Port.
Supplicant – Port that attempts to access services offered by the Authenticator.
Additionally, there exists a third role:
Authentication server – Server that performs the authentication function necessary to
check the credentials of the supplicant on behalf of the Authenticator.
Completion of an authentication exchange requires all three roles. The Unified Switch
supports the authenticator role only, in which the PAE is responsible for communicating with
the supplicant. The authenticator PAE is also responsible for submitting information received
from the supplicant to the authentication server in order for the credentials to be checked,
which determines the authorization state of the port. Depending on the outcome of the
authentication process, the authenticator PAE then controls the authorized/unauthorized state
of the controlled Port.
Authentication can be handled locally or via an external authentication server. Two are:
Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS) or Terminal Access Controller Access
Control System (TACACS+). The Unified Switch currently supports RADIUS for 802.1X.
RADIUS supports an accounting function to maintain data on service usages. Under RFC
2866, an extension was added to the RADIUS protocol giving the client the ability to deliver
accounting information about a user to an accounting server. Exchanges to the accounting
server follow similar guidelines as that of an authentication server but the flows are much
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