Appendix D Wireless LANs
VSG1435-B101 Series User’s Guide
374
The following figure shows the relative effectiveness of these wireless security
methods available on your ZyXEL Device.
Note: You must enable the same wireless security settings on the ZyXEL Device and
on all wireless clients that you want to associate with it.
IEEE 802.1x
In June 2001, the IEEE 802.1x standard was designed to extend the features of
IEEE 802.11 to support extended authentication as well as providing additional
accounting and control features. It is supported by Windows XP and a number of
network devices. Some advantages of IEEE 802.1x are:
• User based identification that allows for roaming.
• Support for RADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial In User Service, RFC 2138,
2139) for centralized user profile and accounting management on a network
RADIUS server.
• Support for EAP (Extensible Authentication Protocol, RFC 2486) that allows
additional authentication methods to be deployed with no changes to the access
point or the wireless clients.
RADIUS
RADIUS is based on a client-server model that supports authentication,
authorization and accounting. The access point is the client and the server is the
RADIUS server. The RADIUS server handles the following tasks:
• Authentication
Determines the identity of the users.
Table 127
Wireless Security Levels
SECURITY
LEVEL
SECURITY TYPE
Least
Secure
Most Secure
Unique SSID (Default)
Unique SSID with Hide SSID Enabled
MAC Address Filtering
WEP Encryption
IEEE802.1x EAP with RADIUS Server
Authentication
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA)
WPA2
Summary of Contents for VSG1435-B101 - V1.10
Page 2: ......
Page 8: ...Safety Warnings VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 8 ...
Page 10: ...Contents Overview VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 10 ...
Page 20: ...Table of Contents VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 20 ...
Page 21: ...21 PART I User s Guide ...
Page 22: ...22 ...
Page 42: ...Chapter 2 The Web Configurator VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 42 ...
Page 71: ...71 PART II Technical Reference ...
Page 72: ...72 ...
Page 78: ...Chapter 5 Network Map and Status Screens VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 78 ...
Page 150: ...Chapter 8 Home Networking VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 150 ...
Page 154: ...Chapter 9 Static Routing VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 154 ...
Page 178: ...Chapter 11 Policy Forwarding VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 178 ...
Page 196: ...Chapter 12 Network Address Translation NAT VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 196 ...
Page 202: ...Chapter 13 Dynamic DNS Setup VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 202 ...
Page 228: ...Chapter 16 Firewall VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 228 ...
Page 234: ...Chapter 18 Parental Control VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 234 ...
Page 282: ...Chapter 25 Traffic Status VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 282 ...
Page 286: ...Chapter 26 IGMP Status VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 286 ...
Page 294: ...Chapter 28 Remote Management VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 294 ...
Page 298: ...Chapter 29 Time Settings VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 298 ...
Page 302: ...Chapter 30 Logs Setting VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 302 ...
Page 318: ...Chapter 34 Troubleshooting VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 318 ...
Page 348: ...Appendix A Setting up Your Computer s IP Address VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 348 ...
Page 358: ...Appendix B IP Addresses and Subnetting VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 358 ...
Page 384: ...Appendix D Wireless LANs VSG1435 B101 Series User s Guide 384 ...