EasyManuals Logo
Home>Edge-Core>Wireless Access Point>EAP8518

Edge-Core EAP8518 User Manual

Edge-Core EAP8518
261 pages
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
Page #217 background imageLoading...
Page #217 background image
C
HAPTER
27
| Wireless Security Commands
– 217 –
cipher-suite This command defines the cipher algorithm used to encrypt the global key
for broadcast and multicast traffic when using WPA or WPA2 security.
SYNTAX
multicast-cipher <aes-ccmp | tkip >
aes-ccmp - Use AES-CCMP encryption for the unicast and multicast
cipher.
tkip - Use TKIP encryption for the multicast cipher. TKIP or AES-
CCMP can be used for the unicast cipher depending on the capability
of the client.
DEFAULT SETTING
None
COMMAND MODE
Interface Configuration (Wireless-VAP)
COMMAND USAGE
â—† WPA and WPA2 enable a VAP to support different unicast encryption
keys for each client. However, the global encryption key for multicast
and broadcast traffic must be the same for all clients.
â—† TKIP provides data encryption enhancements including per-packet key
hashing (i.e., changing the encryption key on each packet), a message
integrity check, an extended initialization vector with sequencing rules,
and a re-keying mechanism. Select TKIP if there are clients in the
network that are not WPA2 compliant.
â—† TKIP defends against attacks on WEP in which the unencrypted
initialization vector in encrypted packets is used to calculate the WEP
key. TKIP changes the encryption key on each packet, and rotates not
just the unicast keys, but the broadcast keys as well. TKIP is a
replacement for WEP that removes the predictability that intruders
relied on to determine the WEP key.
â—† AES-CCMP (Advanced Encryption Standard Counter-Mode/CBCMAC
Protocol): WPA2 is backward compatible with WPA, including the same
802.1X and PSK modes of operation and support for TKIP encryption.
The main enhancement is its use of AES Counter-Mode encryption with
Cipher Block Chaining Message Authentication Code (CBC-MAC) for
message integrity. The AES Counter-Mode/CBCMAC Protocol (AES-
CCMP) provides extremely robust data confidentiality using a 128-bit
key. The AES-CCMP encryption cipher is specified as a standard
requirement for WPA2. However, the computational intensive
operations of AES-CCMP requires hardware support on client devices.
Therefore to implement WPA2 in the network, wireless clients must be
upgraded to WPA2-compliant hardware.

Table of Contents

Questions and Answers:

Question and Answer IconNeed help?

Do you have a question about the Edge-Core EAP8518 and is the answer not in the manual?

Edge-Core EAP8518 Specifications

General IconGeneral
BrandEdge-Core
ModelEAP8518
CategoryWireless Access Point
LanguageEnglish

Related product manuals