Hi,
The document you gave is good, except for the client certificate part. I
don't want to have to give certificates out to everyone on my wireless
network. Is there a way to get around this?
err no. EAP-TLS uses client and server certificates. if you want to use
just the server cert then
Hi,
network, mac xp. I wouldn't mind using plain text passwords if that could
be forced. The only configurations that get close to working get as far as
machapv2, then fail because of no nt/lm password. If I could use the
password from my ldap connection which seems to be working nicely,
network, mac xp. I wouldn't mind using plain text passwords if that could
be forced. The only configurations that get close to working get as far as
machapv2, then fail because of no nt/lm password. If I could use the
password from my ldap connection which seems to be working nicely,
Hello all,
I'm looking for a simple way to protect access to my wireless network. I'm
seeing a lot of old documentation on how to use EAP-TLS to protect the
wireless network. I've found lots of old documentation on how to setup WPA
Enterprise. I would like some updated docuentation on how to do
simplest, don't turn it on.
On 9/18/07, Kent Thomas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello all,
I'm looking for a simple way to protect access to my wireless
network. I'm
seeing a lot of old documentation on how to use EAP-TLS to protect the
wireless network. I've found lots of old documentation
On Tue, 2007-09-18 at 08:13 -0600, Kent Thomas wrote:
Hello all,
I'm looking for a simple way to protect access to my wireless network. I'm
seeing a lot of old documentation on how to use EAP-TLS to protect the
wireless network. I've found lots of old documentation on how to setup WPA
Phil,
Thanks a million for the reply. You are the first to actually reply with
some info for me to look at.
The document you gave is good, except for the client certificate part. I
don't want to have to give certificates out to everyone on my wireless
network. Is there a way to get around this?
If you have XP clients your best option is PEAP. Read instructions in
eap.conf about setting it up. But that will work only if your passwords
are stored in plain text or NT hash (not much to do with EAP but
MSCHAPv2 used as tunnel authentication protocol). If your passwords are
encrypted in some
Ivan,Thanks a million. I've been looking at using peap. I have a mixed
network, mac xp. I wouldn't mind using plain text passwords if that could
be forced. The only configurations that get close to working get as far as
machapv2, then fail because of no nt/lm password. If I could use the
If you are in control of Ldap server then you can enforce whatever
password scheme you see fit. If you map Clertext-Password attribute to
plain text passwords in Ldap everything will work fine. But if you are
using crypt, sha or such on your passwords, mschap will never work.
Your eap.conf is
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