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server recovers, it resumes portal authentication on the interface. For more information, see
Configuring the portal fail-permit feature
Portal packets include user login packets, user logout packets, and heartbeat packets. Heartbeat packets
are periodically sent by a server. By detecting heartbeat packets, the device can detect the server's
actual status more quickly than by detecting other portal packets.
Only the IMC portal authentication server supports sending heartbeat packets. To test server reachability
by detecting heartbeat packets, you must enable the server heartbeat feature on the IMC portal
authentication server.
To configure portal authentication server detection:
Step Command
Remarks
1.
Enter system view.
system-view
N/A-
2.
Enter portal
authentication server
view.
portal server
server-name
N/A
3.
Configure portal
authentication server
detection.
server-detect
[
timeout
timeout
]
log
By default, portal authentication
server detection is disabled.
This feature takes effect regardless
of whether portal authentication is
enabled on an interface or not.
Configuring portal Web server detection
A portal authentication process cannot complete if the communication between the access device and
the portal Web server is broken. To address this problem, you can enable portal Web server detection
on the access device.
With the portal Web server detection feature, the access device simulates a Web access process to
initiate a TCP connection to the portal Web server. If the TCP connection can be established successfully,
the access device considers the detection successful, and the portal Web server is reachable. Otherwise,
it considers the detection to have failed. Portal authentication status on interfaces of the access device
does not affect the portal Web server detection feature.
You can configure the following detection parameters:
•
Detection interval
—Interval at which the device detects the server reachability.
•
Maximum number of consecutive failures
—If the number of consecutive detection failures reaches
this value, the access device considers that the portal Web server is unreachable.
You can configure the device to take the following actions when the server reachability status changes:
•
Sending a log message, which contains the name, the current state, and the original state of the
portal Web server.
•
Enabling portal fail-permit. When the portal Web server is unreachable, the portal fail-permit
feature on an interface allows users on the interface to have network access. When the server
recovers, it resumes portal authentication on the interface. For more information, see "
the portal fail-permit feature
To configure portal Web server detection: