Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 296

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Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 and 3032 for Dell Software Configuration Guide

OL-13270-03

Chapter 10 Configuring IEEE 802.1x Port-Based Authentication

Configuring IEEE 802.1x Authentication

The IEEE 802.1x protocol is supported on Layer 2 static-access ports, voice VLAN ports, and
Layer 3 routed ports, but it is not supported on these port types:

Trunk port—If you try to enable IEEE 802.1x authentication on a trunk port, an error message
appears, and IEEE 802.1x authentication is not enabled. If you try to change the mode of an
IEEE 802.1x-enabled port to trunk, an error message appears, and the port mode is not changed.

Dynamic ports—A port in dynamic mode can negotiate with its neighbor to become a trunk
port. If you try to enable IEEE 802.1x authentication on a dynamic port, an error message
appears, and IEEE 802.1x authentication is not enabled. If you try to change the mode of an
IEEE 802.1x-enabled port to dynamic, an error message appears, and the port mode is not
changed.

Dynamic-access ports—If you try to enable IEEE 802.1x authentication on a dynamic-access
(VLAN Query Protocol [VQP]) port, an error message appears, and IEEE 802.1x authentication
is not enabled. If you try to change an IEEE 802.1x-enabled port to dynamic VLAN assignment,
an error message appears, and the VLAN configuration is not changed.

EtherChannel port—Do not configure a port that is an active or a not-yet-active member of an
EtherChannel as an IEEE 802.1x port. If you try to enable IEEE 802.1x authentication on an
EtherChannel port, an error message appears, and IEEE 802.1x authentication is not enabled.

Switched Port Analyzer (SPAN) and Remote SPAN (RSPAN) destination ports—You can
enable IEEE 802.1x authentication on a port that is a SPAN or RSPAN destination port.
However, IEEE 802.1x authentication is disabled until the port is removed as a SPAN or RSPAN
destination port. You can enable IEEE 802.1x authentication on a SPAN or RSPAN source port.

Before globally enabling IEEE 802.1x authentication on a switch by entering the dot1x
system-auth-control
global configuration command, remove the EtherChannel configuration from
the interfaces on which IEEE 802.1x authentication and EtherChannel are configured.

If you are using a device running the Cisco Access Control Server (ACS) application for
IEEE 802.1x authentication with EAP-Transparent LAN Services (TLS) and EAP-MD5, make sure
that the device is running ACS Version 3.2.1 or later.

VLAN Assignment, Guest VLAN, Restricted VLAN, and Inaccessible Authentication Bypass

These are the configuration guidelines for VLAN assignment, guest VLAN, restricted VLAN, and
inaccessible authentication bypass:

When IEEE 802.1x authentication is enabled on a port, you cannot configure a port VLAN that is
equal to a voice VLAN.

The IEEE 802.1x authentication with VLAN assignment feature is not supported on trunk ports,
dynamic ports, or with dynamic-access port assignment through a VMPS.

You can configure IEEE 802.1x authentication on a private-VLAN port, but do not configure
IEEE 802.1x authentication with port security, a voice VLAN, a guest VLAN, a restricted VLAN,
or a per-user ACL on private-VLAN ports.

You can configure any VLAN except an RSPAN VLAN, private VLAN, or a voice VLAN as an
IEEE 802.1x guest VLAN. The guest VLAN feature is not supported on internal VLANs (routed
ports) or trunk ports; it is supported only on access ports.

After you configure a guest VLAN for an IEEE 802.1x port to which a DHCP client is connected,
you might need to get a host IP address from a DHCP server. You can change the settings for
restarting the IEEE 802.1x authentication process on the switch before the DHCP process on the
client times out and tries to get a host IP address from the DHCP server. Decrease the settings for

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