ZyXEL P-660HW-D1 Guia Do Utilizador

Página de 460
Prestige 660H/HW Series User’s Guide
 Splitters and Microfilters
402
WPA
User Authentication 
WPA applies IEEE 802.1x and Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) to authenticate 
wireless stations using an external RADIUS database. 
Encryption 
WPA improves data encryption by using Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) or 
Advanced Encryption Standard (AES), Message Integrity Check (MIC) and IEEE 802.1x. 
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 PMK to dynamically generate unique data 
encryption keys to encrypt every data packet that is wirelessly communicated between the AP 
and the wireless stations. This all happens in the background automatically.
AES (Advanced Encryption Standard) also uses a secret key. This implementation of AES 
applies a 128-bit key to 128-bit blocks of data.
The Message Integrity Check (MIC) is designed to prevent an attacker from capturing data 
packets, altering them and resending them. The MIC provides a strong mathematical function 
in which the receiver and the transmitter each compute and then compare the MIC. If they do 
not match, it is assumed that the data has been tampered with and the packet is dropped. 
By generating unique data encryption keys for every data packet and by creating an integrity 
checking mechanism (MIC), TKIP makes it much more difficult to decrypt data on a Wi-Fi 
network than WEP, making it difficult for an intruder to break into the network. 
The encryption mechanisms used for WPA and WPA-PSK are the same. The only difference 
between the two is that WPA-PSK uses a simple common password, instead of user-specific 
credentials. The common-password approach makes WPA-PSK susceptible to brute-force 
password-guessing attacks but it’s still an improvement over WEP as it employs an easier-to-
use, consistent, single, alphanumeric password.