ZyXEL Communications 5 Series User Manual

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 Chapter 12 Wireless Screens
ZyWALL 5/35/70 Series User’s Guide
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Figure 139   EAP Authentication 
The details below provide a general description of how IEEE 802.1x EAP authentication 
works. 
• The wireless station sends a start message to the ZyWALL. 
• The ZyWALL sends a request identity message to the wireless station for identity 
information.
• The wireless station replies with identity information, including user name and password. 
• The RADIUS server checks the user information against its user profile database and 
determines whether or not to authenticate the wireless station.
WPA
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) is a subset of the IEEE 802.11i standard. Key differences 
between WPA and WEP are user authentication and improved data encryption. 
User Authentication 
WPA applies IEEE 802.1x and Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) to authenticate 
wireless clients using an external RADIUS database. 
Encryption 
WPA improves data encryption by using Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP), Message 
Integrity Check (MIC) and IEEE 802.1x. 
Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) uses 128-bit keys that are dynamically generated and 
distributed by the authentication server. It includes a per-packet key mixing function, a 
Message Integrity Check (MIC) named Michael, an extended initialization vector (IV) with 
sequencing rules, and a re-keying mechanism.
TKIP regularly changes and rotates the encryption keys so that the same encryption key is 
never used twice. The RADIUS server distributes a Pairwise Master Key (PMK) key to the AP 
that then sets up a key hierarchy and management system, using the pair-wise key to 
dynamically generate unique data encryption keys to encrypt every data packet that is 
wirelessly communicated between the AP and the wireless clients. This all happens in the 
background automatically.