- Table of Contents
-
- 06-Network
- 01-VRF
- 02-Interface
- 03-Interface pairs
- 04-Interface collaboration
- 05-4G
- 06-Security zones
- 07-VLAN
- 08-MAC
- 09-DNS
- 10-ARP
- 11-ND
- 12-GRE
- 13-IPsec
- 14-ADVPN
- 15-L2TP
- 16-SSL VPN
- 17-Routing table
- 18-Static routing
- 19-Policy-based routing
- 20-OSPF
- 21-BGP
- 22-RIP
- 23-IP multicast routing
- 24-PIM
- 25-IGMP
- 26-DHCP
- 27-HTTP
- 28-SSH
- 29-NTP
- 30-FTP
- 31-Telnet
- 32-MAC authentication
- 33-MAC address whitelist
- 34-MAC access silent MAC info
- 35-MAC access advanced settings
- 36-IP authentication
- 37-IPv4 whitelist
- 38-IPv6 whitelist
- 39-Wireless
Title | Size | Download |
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32-MAC authentication | 22.54 KB |
MAC authentication
This help contains the following topics:
· Configure MAC authentication
Introduction
MAC authentication controls network access by authenticating source MAC addresses on an interface. The feature does not require client software, and users do not have to enter a username and password for network access. The device initiates a MAC authentication process when it detects an unknown source MAC address on a MAC authentication-enabled interface.
Configure MAC authentication
1. Click the Network tab.
2. In the navigation pane, select Security Access > MAC Access > MAC Authentication.
3. Select Enable to enable global MAC authentication.
4. Select Enable interface-specific MAC authentication to enable MAC authentication for the target interface.
5. Click Edit for the target interface to enter the Edit MAC Authentication page.
6. Configure the MAC authentication parameters.
Table 1 MAC authentication configuration items
Item |
Description |
Authentication ISP domain |
Specify an authentication ISP domain for users that access the interface. |
Server unreachable for reauthentication |
Select whether to log off users or allow users to stay online if no server is reachable for reauthentication of the users. |
7. Click OK.