Work flow in a windows environment – 8e6 Technologies Enterprise Filter Authentication R3000 User Manual

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Work flow in a Windows environment

1. The administrator stores the 8e6 Authenticator client

(authenticat.exe) in a network-shared location that a
login script can access.

2. Using a Windows machine, an end user logs on the

domain, or logs on the eDirectory tree via a Novell client.

3. The end user’s login script evokes authenticat.exe.

4. The 8e6 Authenticator client determines the authentica-

tion environment by examining the Windows registry,
then retrieves the username and domain name using
either Windows or Novell APIs, and sends this informa-
tion (LOGON event) to the R3000.

5. The R3000 looks up the groups to which the end user

belongs (Windows AD, PDC, or eDirectory through
LDAP or NTLM/Samba), and determines the profile
assignment.

6. The R3000 sets the profile for the end user with user-

name (including the group name, if it is available) and IP.

7. The 8e6 Authenticator client continually sends a “heart-

beat” to the R3000—with a specified interval of seconds
between each “heartbeat”—until the end user logs off.

8. The end user logs off, and the 8e6 Authenticator client

sends a LOGOFF event to the R3000. The R3000
removes the user's profile.

NOTE: The 8e6 Authenticator can handle up to 20 logons per
second.

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