Thank you,

This was what I was looking for.

 

Dale Harville 
Network Administrator 
Galveston College 
4015 Ave Q. 
Galveston, TX 77550 
409-944-1356 

________________________________

From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tim Cantin
Sent: Thursday, March 06, 2008 3:24 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: revocation list

 

In User Management -> User Roles -> Traffic Controls put the IP
addresses of your Certificate Authorities in the Unauthenticated role
(or your equivalent). Also a handy place for things like update.nai.com
and ftp.nai.com for anti-virus updates...

 

-Tim

 

---

Tim Cantin, Senior Network Engineer

Wellesley College, IS/Technology Infrastructure Group

223 Simpson Hall East, 106 Central Street
Wellesley, Massachusetts 02481-8203
http://www.wellesley.edu/~tcantin/
<BLOCKED::http://www.wellesley.edu/~tcantin/> 
phone: (781)283-3520 fax: (781)283-3682 

 

From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dale Harville
Sent: Thursday, March 06, 2008 4:07 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: revocation list

 

How do you open up the filters?

 

Dale Harville 
Network Administrator 
Galveston College 
4015 Ave Q. 
Galveston, TX 77550 
409-944-1356 

________________________________

From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mike King
Sent: Thursday, March 06, 2008 1:21 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: revocation list

 

Hi Shane.

Yes, you have to open up the filters to allow clients to contact your CA
to get the CRL.

But this is not a Cisco requirement.  This is a Microsoft Internet
Explorer requirement.

CCAA uses IE  to perform the http part of the session.  So if your IE is
configured to check for a CRL, then CCAA will need it.

You can disable it in IE advanced options, and IE won't require it
anymore.  But the better answer is to just allow access to it.


Mike 

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