You can set up the access point to authenticate
client devices using a combination of MAC-based and EAP authentication
(see the SSID Manager
window). When you enable this feature, client devices that associate
to the access point using 802.11 open authentication first attempt
MAC authentication. If MAC authentication succeeds, the client device
joins the network. If the client is also using EAP authentication,
it attempts to authenticate using EAP. If MAC authentication fails,
the access point waits for the client device to attempt EAP authentication.
Client Holdoff Time
Click the radio button to either disable or
enable client holdoff time. If you enable holdoff, enter the number
of seconds that the access point should wait after an authentication
failure before a subsequent authentication request is processed.
EAP or MAC Reauthentication Interval
Click the radio button to either disable or enable
reauthentication. If you enable reauthentication, you can specify
the interval or accept the interval given by the authentication
server. If you choose to specify the interval, enter the interval
in seconds that the access point waits before forcing an authenticated
client to reauthenticate.
EAP Client Timeout (optional)
Enter the amount of time the access point should
wait for wireless clients to respond to EAP authentication requests.
TKIP MIC
Failure Holdoff Time
Click the radio button to either
disable or enable holdoff time. If you enable holdoff time, you
can enter the interval in seconds. If the access point detects two
MIC failures within 60 seconds, it blocks all TKIP clients on that
interface for the holdoff time period specified here.
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