Re: IAS as RADIUS
- From: "Neteng" <neteng.ccie@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 7 Sep 2006 14:31:25 -0500
The "supplicant" is a piece of software on the client PC. Windows XP is the
only MS OS that comes with a 802.1x supplicant (but a poor one). 802.1x was
developed to prevent unauthorized PC's from being placed on the network.
Note I said PC's, not users. Do you want to prevent non-corporate PC's from
being on the network and/or unauthorized people from getting on the network?
MAC ACL's would be horrible to manage so I would try and stay away from
that.
"the" <shirtrippa@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:eDpR1iq0GHA.2072@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
know
"Neteng" <neteng.ccie@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:OwW5wEq0GHA.1588@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
You need to deploy 802.1x. Your switches need to support it and each
client
may need a supplicant. It will not be free by any means and I do not
thenof
any free solutions out there.
i thought the client in 802.1x was the supplicant? maybe im going about
this all wrong, so let me simplify this, is there a way to deny network
access to unauthorized users that plug into our network?
We're in a non AD enviroment, have windows and linux servers, and catalyst
2950 switches.
My impression was all i needed to do was set up my switches to talk to a
RADIUS server, wich i wanted to be IAS since it comes with windows 2k3,
when someone plugs into an ehternet jack they would be denied accessunless
they could provide valid credentials. What am i really looking at to get
this to work?
.
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