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IEEE 802.1x Authenticati on Standard:

802.1x Authentication Standard

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Page 1: 802.1x Authentication Standard

IEEE 802.1x Authenticati

on Standard:

Page 2: 802.1x Authentication Standard

Terms: Supplicant - The User or Client to be

authenticated Radius Server – The Server doing the

authentication Authenticator – The device between the

Supplicant & the Radius Server EAPOL – (Extensible Authentication

Protocol Over LANs)

Page 3: 802.1x Authentication Standard

How it Works: The Authenticator sends an EAP request

packet to the Supplicant. The Supplicant sends an EAP packet to

the Authenticator. The Authenticator sends a packet to the

Radius Server. The Radius Server challenges the

Authenticator with a token or password.

Page 4: 802.1x Authentication Standard

How it Works: continued…

The Authenticator changes it from the IP to EAPOL.

The Supplicant responds to the challenge and passes it to the Authentication Server.

If there’s a successful challenge, then the Authentication Server responds with a success message allowing access to the LAN.

Page 5: 802.1x Authentication Standard

Example:

Page 6: 802.1x Authentication Standard

Key Aspects: Supplicant = End station software

Authenticator = Wired switch or SSID

Authentication Server = Ensures certificate or passwords are correct

Page 7: 802.1x Authentication Standard

Benefits: IEEE Standard 98% of all switches

support 802.1x

Good authentication

‘Pre-connect’ enforcement of access policies

Page 8: 802.1x Authentication Standard

Drawbacks: Incompatibilities with certain switches

Some security issues

Tough to deploy

Does not have a ‘post-connect’