U
SER
A
UTHENTICATION
6-12
6. Authentication
– One of the following authentication methods is
employed:
Password Authentication (for SSH v1.5 or V2 Clients)
a. The client sends its password to the server.
b. The switch compares the client's password to those stored in
memory.
c. If a match is found, the connection is allowed.
Note:
To use SSH with only password authentication, the host public key
must still be given to the client, either during initial connection or
manually entered into the known host file. However, you do not
need to configure the client’s keys.
Public Key Authentication
– When an SSH client attempts to contact the
switch, the SSH server uses the host key pair to negotiate a session key
and encryption method. Only clients that have a private key
corresponding to the public keys stored on the switch can access it.
The following exchanges take place during this process:
Authenticating SSH v1.5 Clients
a. The client sends its RSA public key to the switch.
b. The switch compares the client's public key to those stored in
memory.
c. If a match is found, the switch uses its secret key to generate a
random 256-bit string as a challenge, encrypts this string with the
user’s public key, and sends it to the client.
d. The client uses its private key to decrypt the challenge string,
computes the MD5 checksum, and sends the checksum back to the
switch.
e. The switch compares the checksum sent from the client against that
computed for the original string it sent. If the two checksums
match, this means that the client's private key corresponds to an
authorized public key, and the client is authenticated.
Summary of Contents for 7824M/FSW - annexe 1
Page 2: ......
Page 24: ...TABLE OF CONTENTS xxiv ...
Page 28: ...TABLES xxviii ...
Page 32: ...FIGURES xxxii Figure 16 3 DNS Cache 16 7 ...
Page 34: ...GETTING STARTED ...
Page 46: ...SYSTEM DEFAULTS 1 12 ...
Page 62: ...SWITCH MANAGEMENT ...
Page 74: ...CONFIGURING THE SWITCH 3 12 ...
Page 112: ...BASIC MANAGEMENT TASKS 4 38 ...
Page 168: ...USER AUTHENTICATION 6 30 ...
Page 223: ...SHOWING PORT STATISTICS 9 33 Figure 9 12 Port Statistics ...
Page 230: ...ADDRESS TABLE SETTINGS 10 6 ...
Page 304: ...CLASS OF SERVICE 13 16 ...
Page 316: ...QUALITY OF SERVICE 14 12 ...
Page 338: ...MULTICAST FILTERING 15 22 ...
Page 346: ...DOMAIN NAME SERVICE 16 8 ...
Page 348: ...COMMAND LINE INTERFACE IP Interface Commands 35 1 ...
Page 362: ...OVERVIEW OF COMMAND LINE INTERFACE 17 14 ...
Page 494: ...USER AUTHENTICATION COMMANDS 21 48 ...
Page 514: ...CLIENT SECURITY COMMANDS 22 20 ...
Page 540: ...ACCESS CONTROL LIST COMMANDS 23 26 ...
Page 558: ...INTERFACE COMMANDS 24 18 ...
Page 576: ...MIRROR PORT COMMANDS 26 4 ...
Page 582: ...RATE LIMIT COMMANDS 27 6 ...
Page 616: ...SPANNING TREE COMMANDS 29 28 ...
Page 644: ...VLAN COMMANDS 30 28 ...
Page 664: ...CLASS OF SERVICE COMMANDS 31 20 ...
Page 678: ...QUALITY OF SERVICE COMMANDS 32 14 ...
Page 720: ...APPENDICES ...
Page 726: ...SOFTWARE SPECIFICATIONS A 6 ...
Page 730: ...TROUBLESHOOTING B 4 ...
Page 746: ...INDEX Index 6 ...
Page 747: ......