User Manual User guide

802.1x Setting / Ca SeRveR
Use certicate chain: When the Extensible Authentication Protocol
(EAP) authentication type — such as TLS, TTLS or PEAP — is
selected and requires certication to tell the client what credentials to
accept from the authentication server in order to verify the server, you
need to enable this function. Choose the preferred server from the
drop-down menu to issue the certicate. If “Any Trusted CA” is
selected, any CA (certication authority) on the list (which is provided
by the Microsoft Certicate Store) is permitted.
Allow intermediate certicates: A server designates an issuer as a
trusted root authority by placing the issuer’s self-signed certicate,
which contains the issuers public key, into the trusted root certication
authority certicate store of the host computer. Intermediate or
subordinate certication authorities are trusted only if they have a
valid certication path from a trusted root certication authority.
Server Name: Enter the authentication server name.
802.1x Setting / SSo
With SSO (Single Sign-On), a user logs in once and gains access to
all systems without being prompted to log in again at each of them.
Once the user has successfully logged in to the operating system, he
or she has access to different services. NOTE: This tab is unavailable
in Windows 2000 and XP. In those systems, the SSO conguration
options are located on the SSO tab of the conguration utilitys main
navigation bar.
Enable SSO (Single Sign On): Click to turn on the SSO service.
CONFIGURATION
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