PLANET WGSW-20160HP User Manual

Page 243

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User’s Manual of WGSW-20160HP/WGSW-24040HP series

243

successfully authenticated.

Multi 802.1X

Multi 802.1X is - like Single 802.1X - not an IEEE standard, but a variant that

features many of the same characteristics. In Multi 802.1X, one or more

supplicants can get authenticated on the same port at the same time. Each

supplicant is authenticated individually and secured in the MAC table using the

Port Security module.

In Multi 802.1X it is not possible to use the multicast BPDU MAC address as

destination MAC address for EAPOL frames sent from the switch towards the

supplicant, since that would cause all supplicants attached to the port to reply to

requests sent from the switch. Instead, the switch uses the supplicant's MAC

address, which is obtained from the first EAPOL Start or EAPOL Response

Identity frame sent by the supplicant. An exception to this is when no supplicants

are attached. In this case, the switch sends EAPOL Request Identity frames

using the BPDU multicast MAC address as destination - to wake up any

supplicants that might be on the port.

The maximum number of supplicants that can be attached to a port can be

limited using the Port Security Limit Control functionality.

MAC-based Auth.

Unlike port-based 802.1X, MAC-based authentication is not a standard, but

merely a best-practices method adopted by the industry. In MAC-based

authentication, users are called clients, and the switch acts as the supplicant on

behalf of clients. The initial frame (any kind of frame) sent by a client is snooped

by the switch, which in turn uses the client's MAC address as both username and

password in the subsequent EAP exchange with the RADIUS server. The 6-byte

MAC address is converted to a string on the following form "xx-xx-xx-xx-xx-xx",

that is, a dash (-) is used as separator between the lower-cased hexadecimal

digits. The switch only supports the MD5-Challenge authentication method, so

the RADIUS server must be configured accordingly.

When authentication is complete, the RADIUS server sends a success or failure

indication, which in turn causes the switch to open up or block traffic for that

particular client, using the Port Security module. Only then will frames from the

client be forwarded on the switch. There are no EAPOL frames involved in this

authentication, and therefore, MAC-based Authentication has nothing to do with

the 802.1X standard.

The advantage of MAC-based authentication over port-based 802.1X is that

several clients can be connected to the same port (e.g. through a 3rd party

switch or a hub) and still require individual authentication, and that the clients

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