Rogue AP classifications
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enables administrators to group rogue APs as Friendly, Malicious, Custom, , or Unclassified,
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uses configurable rules to automate the categorization and state assignment of unauthorized APs, and
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allows both automatic and manual reclassification of rogues based on network security requirements.
Additional reference information
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By default, no classification rules are active, so all unknown access points are assigned the Unclassified state. Administrators must enable classification rules to begin organizing rogue access points.
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When rules are enabled, all rogue access points in the Alert state are reclassified automatically based on the latest conditions and rule configurations.
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Changing or adding a rule triggers reclassification of all applicable rogue access points that are in the Alert state.
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You can manually move any rogue or ad hoc rogue access point to Unclassified and state, which represents the default state. Manually moved rogues are subject to rule-based reclassification.
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Rule-based classification does not apply to ad hoc rogues and rogue clients.
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You can configure up to 64 rogue classification rules per controller .
How the controller classifies rogue access points
When the controller software receives a rogue report from one of its managed access points, it follows this process:
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If the unknown access point is listed in the friendly MAC address list, the controller classifies it as Friendly.
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If it is not on the friendly MAC list, the controller applies the configured rogue classification rules.
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Rule-based classification is not applied to rogue access points that were manually classified.
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If a rogue matches the criteria in a classification rule, the controller assigns the classification type specified in that rule.
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If a rogue does not match any configured rules, it remains Unclassified.
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If a rogue access point is detected on the same wired network, the controller marks its state as Threat and classifies it as Malicious automatically (regardless of rules). You can manually contain such rogues, changing their state to Contained. If the rogue becomes unavailable, the controller moves it to the Alert state until you manually contain it.
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Administrators can always manually change the classification type and state of an access point as needed.
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Before classification, rogue access points are marked Pending.
Examples: Classification mapping
|
Rule-Based Classification Type |
Rogue State |
|---|---|
|
Custom |
|
|
Delete |
Deletes the rogue AP. |
| Friendly |
|
| Malicious |
|
| Unclassified |
|
As mentioned earlier, the controller can automatically change the classification type and rogue state of an unknown AP based on user-defined rules. Alternatively, you can manually move the unknown AP to a different classification type and rogue state.
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