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Unied Access Point Administrator’s Guide
Unied Access Point Administrator’s Guide
Page 63
March 2012
Section 4 - Managing the Access Point
Conguring 802.1X Authentication
On networks that use IEEE 802.1X, port-based network access control, a supplicant (client) cannot gain access to
the network until the 802.1X authenticator grants access. If your network uses 802.1X, you must congure 802.1X
authentication information that the AP can supply to the authenticator.
To congure the UAP 802.1X supplicant user name and password by using the Web interface, click the
Authentication tab and congure the elds shown in the table below.
Figure 31 - Modify 802.1X Supplicant Authentication Settings
Field Description
802.1X Supplicant Click Enabled to enable the Administrative status of the 802.1X Supplicant.
Click Disabled to disable the Administrative status of the 802.1X Supplicant.
EAP Method Select one of the following EAP methods to use for communication between the AP and the
authenticator:
•) MD5
•) PEAP
•) TLS
Username Enter the user name for the AP to use when responding to requests from an 802.1X
authenticator.
The user name can be 1 to 64 characters in length. ASCII printable characters are allowed,
which includes upper and lower case alphabetic letters, the numeric digits, and special
symbols such as @ and #.
Password Enter the password for the AP to use when responding to requests from an 802.1X
authenticator.
The password can be 1 to 64 characters in length. ASCII printable characters are allowed,
which includes upper and lower case letters, numbers, and special symbols such as @ and
#.
Certicate File
Status
Indicates whether a certicate le is present and when that certicate expires.
Certicate File
Upload
Upload a certicate le to the AP by using HTTP or TFTP:
•) HTTP Browse to the location where the certicate le is stored and click Upload.
•) TFTP — Specify the IP address of the TFTP server where the certicate le is located
and provide the le name, including the le path, then click Upload.
Table 34 - IEEE 802.1X Supplicant Authentication
Note: After you congure the settings on the Authentication page, you must click Apply to apply
the changes and to save the settings. Changing some settings might cause the AP to stop and
restart system processes. If this happens, wireless clients will temporarily lose connectivity. We
recommend that you change AP settings when WLAN trafc is low.