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You are here: Home arrow Forum arrow Ethical Hacking Discussions and Related Certificationsarrow Hardwarearrow 802.1x Cisco and AD
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May 24, 2012, 10:41:14 PM *
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Author Topic: 802.1x Cisco and AD  (Read 6330 times)
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scottr
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« on: January 15, 2009, 08:57:54 AM »

How secure is 802.1x? Is it as easy to bypass as port security using mac addresses? Can you spoof the SID of a computer and join to the network or is there further verification that is done through the RADIUS server outside of just the machine or user SID? I am about to dig in and research this further but I figured this would be a great place to start.

« Last Edit: January 19, 2009, 03:11:34 PM by scottr » Logged
ajohnson
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« Reply #1 on: January 15, 2009, 10:19:39 AM »

What versions of Windows are you using?

Quote
Q.   Is there a method to automate configuring 802.1X authentication settings for wired LANs for Windows XP or Windows Server 2003?
   
A. There is currently no method to automate the configuration of 802.1X settings for wired connections for clients running Windows XP or Windows Server 2003. The Wireless Network (IEEE 802.11) Policies Group Policy extension in Windows Server 2003-based Active Directory domains only applies to wireless connections.

Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008 support configuration of 802.1X settings for wired connections at the command line (through commands in the netsh lan context) and through Computer Configuration Group Policy.

http://www.microsoft.com/technet/network/wired/wiredfaq.mspx

Depending on the number of machines you have, that could be a real hassle.

This article might give you some direction as well. It's focused on an early version of Server 2008, but it still has a lot of good information.
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Chan
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« Reply #2 on: January 15, 2009, 01:17:49 PM »

I think the "how secure is 802.1x" depends on how much 802.1x you're willing to implement, it's a bit of a broad standard from what I know.

You can require computer certificates, only available over an initial wired connection (if you're talking wireless) and a valid user cert once you've logged on before being dropped into the right valan etc all do-able with a 2k3 AD. Plus side of requiring both certs is you can revoke either Smiley

Yeah getting the initial comp cert could be a pain if you've got a huge amount of laptops to secure, but it only needs to be done once. I've seen it done with a couple of hundred machines in very little time.

This is all 802.1x for wireless connections, which seems fairly nails. - wired I've had no experience with.
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charlottebandit
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« Reply #3 on: January 21, 2009, 10:56:41 PM »

How secure is 802.1x? Is it as easy to bypass as port security using mac addresses? Can you spoof the SID of a computer and join to the network or is there further verification that is done through the RADIUS server outside of just the machine or user SID? I am about to dig in and research this further but I figured this would be a great place to start.

802.1x provides excellent L/2 security for AAA services.  Depending on which authentication protocol you're using for 802.1x authentication (EAP-FAST, EAP-TLS) and RADIUS on the backend. 

It would be easier to install a keylogger than trying to spoof 802.1X credentials IMO as you would first have to be able to do a MITM attack through either ARP, DNS, DHCP, MAC, IP spoofing which can be blocked at the switch. 
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