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never get authenticated, because the switch will cancel on-going backend
authentication server requests whenever it receives a new EAPOL Start frame from
the supplicant. And since the server hasn't yet failed (because the X seconds haven't
expired), the same server will be contacted upon the next backend authentication
server request from the switch. This scenario will loop forever. Therefore, the server
timeout should be smaller than the supplicant's EAPOL Start frame retransmission
rate.
Single 802.1X
In port-based 802.1X authentication, once a supplicant is successfully authenticated
on a port, the whole port is opened for network traffic. This allows other clients
connected to the port (for instance through a hub) to piggy-back on the successfully
authenticated client and get network access even though they really aren't
authenticated. To overcome this security breach, use the Single 802.1X variant.
Single 802.1X is really not an IEEE standard, but features many of the same
characteristics as does port-based 802.1X. In Single 802.1X, at most one supplicant
can get authenticated on the port at a time. Normal EAPOL frames are used in the
communication between the supplicant and the switch. If more than one supplicant is
connected to a port, the one that comes first when the port's link comes up will be the
first one considered. If that supplicant doesn't provide valid credentials within a certain
amount of time, another supplicant will get a chance. Once a supplicant is
successfully authenticated, only that supplicant will be allowed access. This is the
most secure of all the supported modes. In this mode, the
Port Security
module is
used to secure a supplicant's MAC address once 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
Summary of Contents for FSM-510G series
Page 14: ...14 2 2 2 Monitor Menu...
Page 15: ...Command Descriptions 15 2 2 3 Diagnostics Menu 2 2 4 Maintenance Menu...
Page 26: ...26 2 3 9 Port...
Page 96: ...96 Updates the table starting with the entry after the last entry currently displayed...
Page 164: ...164 Click to undo any changes made locally and revert to previously saved values...
Page 186: ...186 Click to undo any changes made locally and revert to previously saved values...
Page 201: ...Command Descriptions 201 Click to refresh the page...
Page 202: ...202 2 4 14 Detailed Statistics...
Page 204: ...204 Check this box to refresh the page automatically Automatic refresh occurs every 3 seconds...
Page 212: ...212 Click to refresh the page immediately Clear all statistics...
Page 214: ...214 Refreshes the displayed table starting from the input fields Flushes all dynamic entries...
Page 220: ...220 Click to refresh the page immediately...
Page 248: ...248 Updates the table starting with the entry after the last entry currently displayed...
Page 254: ...254 Updates the table starting with the entry after the last entry currently displayed...
Page 260: ...260 Updates the table starting with the entry after the last entry currently displayed...