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Page 187
LGB5028A User‘s Manual
Chapter 7: Security
RADIUS-Assigned QoS Enabled: When RADIUS-assigned QoS is both globally enabled and enabled (checked) on a given port,
the switch reacts to QoS Class information carried in the RADIUS Access-Accept packet transmitted by the RADIUS server when a
supplicant is successfully authenticated. If present and valid, traffic received on the supplicant's port will be classified to the given
QoS Class. If (re-)authentication fails, the RADIUS Access-Accept packet no longer carries a QoS Class or it's invalid, or the
supplicant is otherwise no longer present on the port, the port's QoS Class is immediately reverted to the original QoS Class
(which may be changed by the administrator in the meantime without affecting the RADIUS-assigned).
This option is only available for single-client modes, that is:
• Port-based 802.1X
• Single 802.1X
RADIUS attributes used in identifying a QoS Class:
Refer to the written documentation for a description of the RADIUS attributes needed to successfully identify a QoS Class. The
User-Priority-Table attribute defined in RFC4675 forms the basis for identifying the QoS Class in an Access-Accept
packet.
Only the first occurrence of the attribute in the packet will be considered, and to be valid, it must follow this rule:
• All 8 octets in the attribute's value must be identical and consist of ASCII characters in the range 0–3, which translates into the
desired QoS Class in the range [0; 3].
RADIUS-Assigned VLAN Enabled: When RADIUS-assigned VLAN is both globally enabled and enabled (checked) for a given
port, the switch reacts to VLAN ID information carried in the RADIUS Access-Accept packet transmitted by the RADIUS server
when a supplicant is successfully authenticated. If present and valid, the port's Port VLAN ID will be changed to this VLAN ID, the
port will be set to be a member of that VLAN ID, and the port will be forced into VLAN unaware mode. Once assigned, all traffic
arriving on the port will be classified and switched on the RADIUS-assigned VLAN ID.
If (re-)authentication fails, the RADIUS Access-Accept packet no longer carries a VLAN ID or it's invalid, or the supplicant is
otherwise no longer present on the port, the port's VLAN ID is immediately reverted to the original VLAN ID (which may be
changed by the administrator without affecting the RADIUS-assigned).
This option is only available for single-client modes, that is:
• Port-based 802.1X
• Single 802.1X
For troubleshooting VLAN assignments, use the "Monitor,” “VLANs,” “VLAN Membership” and “VLAN Port" pages. These
pages show which modules have (temporarily) overridden the current Port VLAN configuration.
RADIUS attributes used in identifying a VLAN ID: RFC2868 and RFC3580 form the basis for the attributes used in identifying a
VLAN ID in an Access-Accept packet. The following criteria are used:
• The Tunnel-Medium-Type, Tunnel-Type, and Tunnel-Private-Group-ID attributes must all be present at least once in the
Access-Accept packet.
• The switch looks for the first set of these attributes that have the same Tag value and fulfills the following requirements (if Tag
== 0 is used, the Tunnel-Private-Group-ID does not need to include a Tag):
- Value of Tunnel-Medium-Type must be set to "IEEE-802" (ordinal 6).
- Value of Tunnel-Type must be set to "VLAN" (ordinal 13).
- Value of Tunnel-Private-Group-ID must be a string of ASCII chars in the range 0–9, which is interpreted as a decimal string
representing the VLAN ID. Leading “0”s are discarded. The final value must be in the range [1; 4095].
Guest VLAN Enabled: When a Guest VLAN is both globally enabled and enabled (checked) for a given port, the switch
considers moving the port into the Guest VLAN according to the rules outlined next.