R2511-HP MSR Router Series Security Configuration Guide(V5)

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Displaying and maintaining HWTACACS
Task Command
Remarks
Display the configuration or statistics of
HWTACACS schemes.
display hwtacacs [ hwtacacs-server-name
[ statistics ] ] [ | { begin | exclude | include }
regular-expression ]
Available in
any view.
Display information about buffered
stop-accounting requests for which no
responses have been received.
display stop-accounting-buffer hwtacacs-scheme
hwtacacs-scheme-name [ | { begin | exclude |
include } regular-expression ]
Available in
any view.
Clear HWTACACS statistics.
reset hwtacacs statistics { accounting | all |
authentication | authorization }
Available in
user view.
Clear buffered stop-accounting
requests that get no responses.
reset stop-accounting-buffer hwtacacs-scheme
hwtacacs-scheme-name
Available in
user view.
Configuring AAA methods for ISP domains
By default, the device uses local (default) AAA methods for users in an ISP domain. To use other AAA
methods for them, configure the device to reference existing AAA schemes for the ISP domain. For
information about configuring AAA schemes, see "Configuring RADIUS schemes" and "Configuring
HW
TACACS schemes."
To use local authentication for users in an ISP domain, first configure local user accounts on the device
(see "Configuring local user attributes")
.
Creating an ISP domain
In a networking scenario with multiple ISPs, the device can connect users of different ISPs. Different ISP
users can have different user attributes (such as username and password structures), different service
types, and different rights. To manage these ISP users, you need to create ISP domains and then
configure AAA methods and domain attributes for each ISP domain.
The device can accommodate up to 16 ISP domains, including the system-defined ISP domain system.
You can specify one ISP domain as the default domain.
On the device, each user belongs to an ISP domain. If a user provides no ISP domain name at login, the
device considers the user belongs to the default ISP domain.
The device chooses an authentication domain for each user in the following order:
The authentication domain specified for the access module
The ISP domain in the username
The default ISP domain of the device
The ISP domain specified for users with unknown domain names
If all the domains are unavailable, user authentication will fail.
NOTE:
Support for the authentication domain confi
g
uration depends on the access module. You can specify an
authentication domain for 802.1X, portal, or MAC address authentication.
To create an ISP domain: