1 / 20

Wireless Security and Accounting with 802.1X

Wireless Security and Accounting with 802.1X. Introduction. Background Why 802.1X? What is 802.1X? Implementing 802.1X at UTD The future of 802.1X and network security. Background.

laverty
Download Presentation

Wireless Security and Accounting with 802.1X

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Wireless Security and Accounting with802.1X

  2. Introduction • Background • Why 802.1X? • What is 802.1X? • Implementing 802.1X at UTD • The future of 802.1X and network security

  3. Background • Student housing apartments comprise the largest apartment complex in D/FW Metroplex – 1200 units, 67 buildings • Peak usage of almost 1000 simultaneous users • Student housing security provided by SSID cloaking, WEP, and Bluesocket gateway doing web authentication • Campus security provided by WEP, SSID cloaking, and MAC address registration

  4. The Criteria • Client availability and ease of use • Scalable and robust • Ease of integration with existing security and identity systems • Low cost • And, of course, the best security possible

  5. 802.1X Meets the Challenge • Client availability and ease of use • Most OSes now come with 802.1X clients, more added frequently • No more requirement for SSID cloaking and MAC registration • Scalable and robust • As scalable as your APs, no extra density calculations • Ease of integration with existing security and identity systems • Most RADIUS implementations integrate with LDAP and SQL • Low cost • Only required purchase of two servers and a commercial certificate • Provides exceptional accounting information

  6. The Best Overall Security • Authenticates users in a variety of methods • Robust, dynamically keyed encryption • Pushes the security perimeter to the absolute entry point of the network by securing connections at the AP • Protects authenticated clients from unauthenticated clients • Mutual authentication • Mitigates connection hijacking

  7. What is 802.1X? • Port Access Authentication • Originally designed for authenticating ports on wired LANs • Port traffic, except for 802.1X, blocked until successful authentication • Three Components • Supplicant (client) • Authenticator (switch, AP, other NAS, preferably RADIUS capable) • Authentication Server (sometimes part of Authenticator, otherwise RADIUS server) • Utilizes the Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) • As such, it is sometimes known as EAPoL (EAP over LAN) • RADIUS server must be EAP capable

  8. 802.1X Meets Wireless • Associations (wireless clients) become virtual “ports” • Frequent reauthentications reset key information and insure no session hijacking has occured • EAPoL Key frame used to provide dynamic encryption • Now used as the basis for enterprise authentication in WPA and WPA2 (802.11i)

  9. EAP Demystified • Originally designed for PPP authentication • Authentication framework • Authenticators only need to recognize a few well defined messages • Request/Response • Success/Failure • EAP subtypes allow for new types of authentication to be added without requiring upgrades to the Authenticators • Only Supplicants and Authentication Servers need to implement details of new EAP types

  10. EAP Types • EAP-MD5 • Does NOT provide for dynamic encryption • User authenticated by password • Network NOT authenticated to user (no mutual authentication) • EAP-TLS • Provides for dynamic encryption • User and network mutually authenticated using certificates • EAP-TTLS and PEAP • Provides for dynamic encryption • Network authenticated using certificate • Client authentication tunneled inside of EAP-TLS

  11. UTD Chooses PEAP • Specifically PEAP-MSCHAPv2 • Native to Windows XP and above (available from Microsoft for Windows 2000 in SP4) • Also implemented in most other supplicants (Open1X, MacOS X 10.3, etc) • Allows clients to authenticate with familiar username and password • Does not require helpdesk intervention to set up connection

  12. Hardware Details • 802.1X Capable Access Points • UTD currently uses Proxim APs • Almost any enterprise-class AP • Two RADIUS Servers • Provides for failover • Not required to be beefy • RADIUS is a lightweight service, even with TLS sessions and frequent reauthentications • Low-end Dell PowerEdge servers

  13. Software Details • Fedora Core OS • MySQL • Provides policy enforcement and accounting backend for RADIUS • Holds special case users that do not exist in LDAP tree • FreeRADIUS • Ties in with LDAP and SQL to form authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA) framework for wireless LAN

  14. PEAP Certificate • Certificate required for network authentication • Certificate must contain the TLS Web Server Authentication Extended Key Usage Attribute • Required by Microsoft supplicant • OID .1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.1 • Exists in commercial web server SSL certificates • Commercial certificate obtained from VeriSign • No need for “roll-your-own” CA • Help desk not required to load CA certificate on user machines

  15. MSCHAPv2 • Password hashes in LDAP tree incompatible with MSCHAPv2 • New ntPassword attribute added to LDAP schema to hold NTLMv2 hashed password • Attribute ONLY accessible to RADIUS LDAP profile • Web account management system updated to populate ntPassword attribute when password change occurs

  16. Rollout Timeline • Six months before rollout • Web account management system updated to load NT hashed password • RADIUS servers configured and tested • Two weeks before rollout • Notification posted to students of change • Web pages with instructions for setting up 802.1X in various OSes provided • Printed versions of instructions provided at help desk and apartment complex leasing office • Rollout • Campus router interface created for wireless LAN (previously handled by Bluesocket gateway) • DHCP updated - new address space, unknown clients allowed • APs reconfigured to require 802.1X authentication

  17. Recent Additions • Homegrown FreeRADIUS module for blocking virus infected machines • Blocks machines based on RADIUS Calling-Station-Id attribute (MAC Address) • Fed automatically from IDS • Blocking at “perimeter” extremely useful here • Windows Domain Machine Authentication • Domain member machines must be able to authenticate as a machine for domain user credentials to be processed • FreeRADIUS proxies Windows machine authentications to a Microsoft IAS RADIUS server • FreeRADIUS still controls connection policy

  18. Where do we go from here? • Rollout to our main campus • Use of accounting data for detailed usage reports • More policy management using dynamically assigned VLANs • Authenticated guest access using temporary credentials • 802.1X for public wired switchports? • VoFi phones on the near horizon

  19. Federated Wireless Network Authentication • I2 SALSA-NetAuth Group • Working to enable institutional members to authenticate to networks (wireless/wired) at other institutions using their home credentials. • Enable roaming between HiEd, K-12, government, industry • Employs 802.1X and RADIUS peering • Biweekly Conference Calls • Thursday 11am-12pm: Feb 24, Mar 10 • 866-411-0013, 0184827 • salsa-fwna @ internet2 list • “subscribe salsa-fwna” to sympa @ internet2

  20. Resources • UTD 802.1X Client Setup Instructions • http://www.utdallas.edu/ir/cats/network/wlan/8021x/ • EAP Capable RADIUS Servers • FreeRADIUS http://www.freeradius.org/ • Microsoft IAS http://www.microsoft.com/ias/ • Steel Belted RADIUS http://www.funk.com/ • Radiator http://www.open.com.au/radiator/ • Federated Wireless NetAuth (FWNA) Internet2 Group • http://security.internet2.edu/fwna/

More Related