User Documentation

User Manual Managed Switches
40
1. When the supplicant receives an "EAP Request/Identity" frame, it sends an "EAP
Response/Identity" frame with its username back to the authenticator.
2. If the RADIUS server is used as the authentication server, the authenticator relays the "EAP
Response/Identity" frame from the supplicant by encapsulating it into a "RADIUS
Access-Request" frame and sends to the RADIUS server. When the authentication server
receives the frame, it looks up its database to check if the username exists. If the username is not
present, the authentication server replies with a "RADIUS Access-Reject" frame to the
authenticator if the server is a RADIUS server or just indicates failure to the authenticator if the
Local User Database is used. The authenticator sends an "EAP-Failure" frame to the supplicant.
3. The RADIUS server sends a "RADIUS Access-Challenge," which contains an "EAP Request"
with an authentication type to the authenticator to ask for the password from the client. RFC 2284
defines several EAP authentication types, such as "MD5-Challenge," "One-Time Password," and
"Generic Token Card." Currently, only "MD5-Challenge" is supported. If the Local User Database
is used, this step is skipped.
4. The authenticator sends an "EAP Request/MD5-Challenge" frame to the supplicant. If the
RADIUS server is used, the "EAP Request/MD5-Challenge" frame is retrieved directly from the
"RADIUS Access-Challenge" frame.
5. The supplicant responds to the "EAP Request/MD5-Challenge" by sending an "EAP
Response/MD5-Challenge" frame that encapsulates the user's password using the MD5 hash
algorithm.
6. If the RADIUS server is used as the authentication server, the authenticator relays the "EAP
Response/MD5-Challenge" frame from the supplicant by encapsulating it into a "RADIUS
Access-Request" frame along with a "Shared Secret," which must be the same within the
authenticator and the RADIUS server, and sends the frame to the RADIUS server. The RADIUS
server checks against the password with its database, and replies with "RADIUS Access-Accept"
or "RADIUS Access-Reject" to the authenticator. If the Local User Database is used, the
password is checked against its database and indicates success or failure to the authenticator.
7. The authenticator sends "EAP Success" or "EAP Failure" based on the reply from the
authentication server.