6.0.3

Table Of Contents
vCenter Server Two-Factor Authentication
vCenter Single Sign-On allows you to authenticate by using the name and password of a user in an identity
source that is known to vCenter Single Sign-On, or using Windows session authentication for Active
Directory identity sources. Starting with vSphere 6.0 Update 2, you can also authenticate by using a smart
card (UPN-based Common Access Card or CAC), or by using an RSA SecurID token.
Two-Factor Authentication Methods
The two-factor authentication methods are often required by government agencies or large enterprises.
Common Access Card
(CAC) Authentication
CAC authentication allows access only to users who aach a physical card to
the USB drive of the computer where they log in. If the PKI is deployed so
that the smart card certicates are the only client certicates that are issued
by the CA, then only smart card certicates are presented to the user. The
user selects a certicate, and is then prompted for a PIN. Only users who
have both the physical card and the PIN that matches the certicate can log
in.
RSA SecurID
Authentication
For RSA SecureID authentication, your environment must include a correctly
congured RSA Authentication Manager. If the Platform Services Controller
is congured to point to the RSA server, and if RSA SecurID Authentication
is enabled, users can then log in with their user name and token.
N vCenter Single Sign-On supports only native SecurID, it does not
support RADIUS authentication.
Specifying a Non-Default Authentication Method
Administrators can perform the setup from the Platform Services Controller Web interface, or by using the
sso-config script (sso-config.bat on Windows and sso-config.sh on the appliance).
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For Common Access Card authentication, you set up your Web browser by using the sso-config script,
and you can perform the vCenter Single Sign-On setup from the Platform Services Controller Web
interface or by using sso-config. Setup includes enabling CAC authentication, conguring certicate
revocation policies, and seing up a login banner.
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For RSA SecureID, you use the sso-config script to congure RSA Authentication Manager for the
domain, and to enable RSA token authetication. The authentication method displays in the
Platform Services Controller Web interface if enabled, but you cannot congure RSA SecureID
authentication from the Web interface.
Combining Different Authentication Methods
You can enable or disable each authentication method separately using sso-config. It might make sense, for
example, to leave user name and password authentication enabled initially while you are testing one of the
two-factor authentication methods, and to then set only one authentication method as enabled.
vSphere Security
36 VMware, Inc.