LXE mx6 Verweisanleitung

Seite von 338
 
E-EQ-MX6RG-E 
 
MX6 Reference Guide 
 
Chapter 7   Wireless Network Configuration 
 
Introduction 
The MX6 uses an internal SyChip Pegasus radio and has the Meetinghouse supplicant installed. 
The radio can be configured to use WEP (Wired Equivalency Privacy), LEAP (Light Extensible 
Authentication Protocol) or WPA (Wi-Fi Protected Access). 
To configure radio security with an SSID or WEP, use the 802.11b configuration tool under the 
Settings | Connections | 802.11b settings tab only. 
To configure the Sychip radio for LEAP or WPA functionality, all configuration is done with the 
Meetinghouse Aegis supplicant. With no profile set up in the 802.11b settings tab, the “AP Search 
Threshold” has been defaulted to “Medium Density”. 
Important: 
LXE recommends that all radio configuration be performed using either the 802.11b settings tab 
or the Meetinghouse AEGIS Client security supplicant, they should not both be configured at the 
same time. 
Configuring an MX6 Radio without WPA 
See Chapter 4 “System Configuration” section titled “Meetinghouse AEGIS Client” and “Pegasus 
Settings” for Windows Mobile versions 7.03, 7.11 and 7.13. 
Configuring an MX6 Radio for WPA 
The MX6 uses an internal radio and has the Meetinghouse supplicant installed. To configure the 
radio for WPA functionality the Pegasus Settings (or 802.11b Settings) configuration tool is not 
used. All configuration is done with the Meetinghouse Aegis supplicant. 
WPA Definitions 
WPA 
Wi-Fi Protected Access 
Supplicant 
In an authentication system, supplicant refers to the client machine that 
wants to gain access to the network e.g. the MX6. 
Authentication 
Server 
A device used in network access control. It stores the usernames and 
passwords that identify the clients logging on, or it may hold the 
algorithms for token access. For access to specific network resources, 
the server may itself store user permissions and company policies or 
provide access to directories that contain the information.  
RADIUS is the most widely used protocol for authentication servers. 
The authentication server may be a stand-alone system or software that 
resides in an Ethernet switch, wireless access point (AP) or network 
access server (NAS). 
Access Point 
Hardware and software product (computer) that performs an Ethernet to 
Radio Frequency bridging function over radios in the 2.4GHz band. 
GTC 
Generic Token Card. In security systems, a small device the size of a 
credit card that displays a constantly changing ID code. A user first 
enters a password and then the card displays an ID that the user reads