Cisco Systems 3130 User Manual

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Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 for Dell Software Configuration Guide
OL-13270-01
Chapter 9      Configuring IEEE 802.1x Port-Based Authentication
Understanding IEEE 802.1x Port-Based Authentication
Figure 9-5
Multiple Host Mode Example
IEEE 802.1x Accounting
The IEEE 802.1x standard defines how users are authorized and authenticated for network access but 
does not keep track of network usage. IEEE 802.1x accounting is disabled by default. You can enable 
IEEE 802.1x accounting to monitor this activity on IEEE 802.1x-enabled ports:
User successfully authenticates.
User logs off.
Link-down occurs.
Re-authentication successfully occurs.
Re-authentication fails.
The switch does not log IEEE 802.1x accounting information. Instead, it sends this information to the 
RADIUS server, which must be configured to log accounting messages.
IEEE 802.1x Accounting Attribute-Value Pairs
The information sent to the RADIUS server is represented in the form of Attribute-Value (AV) pairs. 
These AV pairs provide data for different applications. (For example, a billing application might require 
information that is in the Acct-Input-Octets or the Acct-Output-Octets attributes of a RADIUS packet.)
AV pairs are automatically sent by a switch that is configured for IEEE 802.1x accounting. Three types 
of RADIUS accounting packets are sent by a switch:
START–sent when a new user session starts
INTERIM–sent during an existing session for updates
STOP–sent when a session terminates
 lists the AV pairs and when they are sent are sent by the switch:
1
01227
Wireless clients
Access point
Authentication
server
(RADIUS)
Table 9-1
Accounting AV Pairs
Attribute Number
AV Pair Name
START
INTERIM
STOP
Attribute[1]
User-Name
Always
Always
Always
Attribute[4]
NAS-IP-Address
Always
Always
Always
Attribute[5]
NAS-Port
Always
Always
Always