Ieee 802.1x, Radius – ALFA NETWORK R36 User Manual

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for authentication. The default data encryption type for WPA is AES.

WPA1_WPA2 — Clients using WPA or WPA2 with an 802.1X authentication method

are accepted for authentication. The default data encryption type is TKIP/AES.

WPA Algorithms — Selects the data encryption type to use. (Default is determined

by the Security Mode selected.)

TKIP — Uses Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) keys for encryption. WPA

specifies TKIP as the data encryption method to replace WEP. TKIP avoids the
problems of WEP static keys by dynamically changing data encryption keys.

AES — Uses Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) keys for encryption. WPA2 uses

AES Counter-Mode encryption with Cipher Block Chaining Message Authentication
Code (CBC-MAC) for message integrity. The AES Counter-Mode/CBCMAC Protocol
(AESCCMP) provides extremely robust data confidentiality using a 128- bit key. Use
of AES-CCMP encryption is specified as a standard requirement for WPA2. Before
implementing WPA2 in the network, be sure client devices are upgraded to
WPA2-compliant hardware.

TKIP/AES — Uses either TKIP or AES keys for encryption. WPA and

WPA2 mixed modes allow both WPA and WPA2 clients to associate to a common
SSID. In mixed mode, the unicast encryption type (TKIP or AES) is negotiated for
each client.

Key Renewal Interval — Sets the time period for automatically changing data

encryption keys and redistributing them to all connected clients. (Default: 3600
seconds)

PMK Cache Period — WPA2 provides fast roaming for authenticated clients by

retaining keys and other security information in a cache, so that if a client roams
away from an access point and then returns reauthentication is not required. This
parameter sets the time for deleting the cached WPA2 Pairwise Master Key (PMK)
security information. (Default: 10 minutes)

Pre-Authentication — When using WPA2, pre-authentication can be enabled that

allows clients to roam to another access point and be quickly associated without
performing full 802.1X authentication.
(Default: Disabled)

IEEE 802.1X

AND

RADIUS

IEEE 802.1X is a standard framework for network access control that uses a central
RADIUS server for user authentication. This control feature prevents unauthorized
access to the network by requiring an 802.1X client application to submit user
credentials for authentication. The 802.1X standard uses the Extensible
Authentication Protocol (EAP) to pass user credentials (either digital certificates,

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