Radius profiles – Proxim AP-4000 User Manual

Page 106

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Advanced Configuration

AP-4000 Series User Guide

Radius Profiles

106

Radius Profiles

Configuring Radius Profiles on the AP allows the administrator to define a profile for RADIUS Servers used by the system
or by a VLAN. The network administrator can define

RADIUS Servers per Authentication Mode and per VLAN

.

The AP communicates with the RADIUS server defined in a profile to provide the following features:

MAC Access Control Via RADIUS Authentication

802.1x Authentication using RADIUS

RADIUS Accounting

Also,

RADIUS Based Management Access

allows centralized user management.

The network administrator can configure default RADIUS authentication servers to be used on a system-wide basis, or in
networks with VLANs enabled the administrator can also configure separate authentication servers to be used for MAC
authentication, EAP authentication, or Accounting in each VLAN. You can configure the AP to communicate with up to six
different RADIUS servers per VLAN/SSID:

• Primary Authentication Server (MAC-based authentication)
• Back-up Authentication Server (MAC-based authentication)
• Primary Authentication Server (EAP/802.1x authentication)
• Back-up Authentication Server (EAP/802.1x authentication)
• Primary Accounting Server
• Back-up Accounting Server

The back-up servers are optional, but when configured, the AP will communicate with the back-up server if the primary
server is off-line. After the AP has switched to the backup server, it will periodically check the status of the primary
RADIUS server every five (5) minutes. Once the primary RADIUS server is again online, the AP automatically reverts
from the backup RADIUS server back to the primary RADIUS server. All subsequent requests are then sent to the
primary RADIUS server.

You can view monitoring statistics for each of the configured RADIUS servers.

RADIUS Servers per Authentication Mode and per VLAN

The user can configure separate RADIUS authentication servers for each authentication mode and for each SSID
(VLAN). For example:

• The user can configure separate RADIUS servers for RADIUS MAC authentication and 802.1x authentication
• The user can configure separate RADIUS servers for each VLAN: VLAN1 could support only WEP clients, whereas

VLAN2 could support 802.1x and WEP clients.

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