Yes, you can get LEAP to work with Cisco and some other devices, but LEAP is a flawed proprietary protocol. When analyzed and found subject to offline dictionary attacks Cisco circled the wagons and threw FUD until FAST was developed and deployed. LEAP has never been publically documented by Cisco, though you can find reverse engineering about it on the net.

So to repeat;
- Not a standard
- Not publically described
- Subject to attack/cracking - there is at least one tool for it.

That is why you should avoid it.

Dave.

http://ipsecs.com/web/?p=66
http://www.willhackforsushi.com/?page_id=41

Quoting pesho <pesho.tmp.m...@gmail.com>:

It does. It is a Aironet 350 device and it has internal RADIUS as well, which
we are able to authenticate against(using LEAP).


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