Numbers and Symbols
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| Secure LAN Advisor | | The Secure LAN Advisor is an HTML tutorial/help system in the
Server Manager GUI that walks you through the tasks and Server Manager
screens for securing WLANs with the HP-UX AAA Server.
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A - B
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| A-V Pair | | Attribute-value pair.
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| AAA | | Abbreviation for Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting.
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| AAA Server | | A software application that performs authentication, authorization,
and accounting functions.
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| Access-Accept | | AAA Server returns an Access-Accept to
the client when an Access-Request is valid. The Access-Accept will contain A-V pairs that specify what services the authenticated user is authorized to use.
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| Access-Challenge | | The AAA Server returns an Access-Challenge
to the client when it is necessary to issue a
challenge that the user must respond to. The
client will resubmit the request with the user-supplied information
to the AAA Server.
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| Access-Reject | | The AAA Server returns an Access-Reject
to the client when an Access-Request is invalid.
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| Access-Request | | Created by the client, the Access-Request
contains A-V Pairs, such as the user’s
name, password, and ID of the client. The client submits the Access-Request
to an AAA Server. If the server can validate
the client, the server will attempt to match a user entry in its database
with information in the Access-Request to authenticate the user.
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| Accounting | | Logging session and usage information for session control and
billing purposes.
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| Administrator | | Special user, known by the system on which the AAA
Server is running. The administrator is able to configure
and to manage the AAA Server.
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| Application Service Provider | | Third-party entities that manage and distribute software-based
services and solutions to customers across a wide area network from
a central data center, abbreviated as ASP.
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| ASP | | Application Service Provider.
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| Attribute-Value Pair | | The RADIUS protocol defines things in terms of attributes. Each
attribute may take on one of a set of values. When a RADIUS packet
is exchanged among clients and servers, one or more attributes and
values are sent pairwise from the client to the server. For the AAA
Server software, all valid attributes and values are listed in the dictionary file, abbreviated as A-V pair.
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| Authentication | | The process of identifying and proving the identity of an entity,
for example, a user, a network client, or a network server.
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| Authorization | | The process of determining what types of activities is permitted.
Usually, authorization is in the context of authentication; once users
are authenticated, they may be authorized different types of access
or activity.
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| Bit mask | | A method for storing settings. A bit mask makes use of the fact
that binary numbers are made up of 1's and 0's. Each digit in a binary
number is equivalent to one bit. In the HP-UX AAA Server, bit masks
are used to set different configurations while setting up OTP authentication.
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C - D
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| Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol | | Log-in security procedure for dial-in access. Rather than send
an unencrypted password, a random number is sent to the client as
a challenge. The challenge is one-way hashed with the password, and
the result is sent back to the server. The server does the same with
its copy of the password and verifies that it gets the same result
to authenticate the user, abbreviated as CHAP.
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| CHAP | | Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol.
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| Client | | NAS, proxy server, or other networking device that uses the
AAA Server services to authenticate and authorize users.
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| Common Open Policy Service | | A query and response protocol that can be used to exchange policy
information between a policy server (Policy Decision Point or PDP)
and its clients (Policy Enforcement Points or PEPs, such as a router),
abbreviated as COPS.
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| COPS | | Common Open Policy Service.
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| DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) | | Protocol that automatically and dynamically assigns IP addressees.
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| Dialed Number Identification Service | | Each request is authenticated locally or forwarded to a remote
server according to the number called to access a network service.
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| DNIS | | Dialed Number Identification Service.
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E - F - G
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| EAP | | Extensible Authentication Protocol.
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| Extensible Authentication Protocol | | Described in RFC 2284, abbreviated as EAP.
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| Finite State Machine | | The Finite State Machine is the component of the AAA Server
software that controls the flow of access request authentication and
accounting request handling, abbreviated as FSM.
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| Forwarding Server | | The AAA Server that receives an Access-Request from a client and forwards that request
to another AAA server for authentication.
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| FSM | | Finite State Machine.
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| GTC (Generic Token Card) | | Carries user specific token cards for authentication. The main
feature in GTC is Digital Certificate/Token Card-based Authentication.
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H - I - J - K
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| Hard token | | Also called token devices. A physical authentication device
such as a SmartCard that displays the OTP.
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| Hint | | When a user requests access to a service of a specific configuration,
a client may provide this information in an Access-Request as a hint to the AAA Server. The server may reject the request based on the hints or supply
the service as specified by the hints, by the server’s configuration,
or by a combination of the hints and the server’s configuration.
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| IETF | | Internet Engineering Task Force.
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| Integrated Services Digital Network | | A digital access line, abbreviated as ISDN.
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| Interlink | | Used to connect multiple AAA servers in a fabric with SLAs and
to establish policies among them.
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| Internet Engineering Task Force | | Internet standards setting organization, abbreviated as IETF.
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| Internet Protocol | | A Layer 3 (network layer) protocol that contains addressing
information and some control information that allows packets to be
routed, abbreviated as IP.
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| Internet Research Task Force | | A group associated with IETF focusing on research rather than
standards, abbreviated as IRTF.
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| Internet Service Provider | | Communications service company that provides Internet access
and services to its customers. ISPs range in size from small independents
serving a local calling area to large, established telecommunications
companies, abbreviated as ISP.
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| IP | | Internet Protocol.
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| IPv6 | | IPv6 is the new version of the Internet Protocol (IP) that builds
on the current version of IP (IPv4). IPv6 provides improvements in
addressing, configuration, and security.
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| IRTF | | Internet Research Task Force.
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| ISDN | | Integrated Services Digital Network.
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| ISP | | Internet service provider.
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L - M - N
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| LAS | | Local Authorization Server.
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| LDAP | | Lightweight Directory Access Protocol.
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| LEAP | | Lightweight Extensible Authentication Protocol.
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| Lightweight Directory Access Protocol | | Used for directories providing naming, location, management,
security, and other services for Internet networking, abbreviated
as LDAP.
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| Lightweight Extensible Authentication Protocol | | Supports and manages the dynamic Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP)
key exchange between Cisco Aironet 802.11x wireless LAN clients and
access points, abbreviated as LEAP.
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| Local Authorization Server | | A Local authorization server is the HP-UX AAA code that authorizes,
accounts, and bill users based on realms, abbreviated as LAS.
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| MS-CHAP | | Microsoft Challenge-Handshake Authentication Protocol is an
implementation of the CHAP protocol that Microsoft created to authenticate
remote Windows workstations. In most respects, MS-CHAP is identical
to CHAP, but there are a few differences. MS-CHAP is based on the
encryption and hashing algorithms used by Windows networks, and the
MS-CHAP response to a challenge is in a format optimized for compatibility
with Windows operating systems.
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| NAI | | Network Access Identifier
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| NAS | | Network Access Server
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| navigation tree | | Refers to the navigation links on the left side of the Server
Manager GUI.
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| Network Access Server | | A device that interfaces telephony circuits to the network,
abbreviated as NAS.
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O - P - Q
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| OATH | | An industry-wide collaboration to develop an open-reference
architecture for two-factor and OTP authentication
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| OTP | | One-Time Password. This password is valid for one-time use only.
Using an OTP reduces the risk of an unauthorized intruder gaining
access to the network.
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| PAP | | Password Authentication Protocol.
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| Password Authentication Protocol | | A simple password protocol that transmits a user name and password
across the network, unencrypted, abbreviated as PAP.
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| PEAP (Protected EAP) | | Functionally very similar to TTLS, but does not encapsulate
legacy authentication methods. PEAP features include: Dynamic Key
Exchange; Mutual Authentication; and, Encrypted Tunnelling.
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| Point-to-Point Protocol | | The standard protocol for dial-up networking. The family of
standards covers many aspects including authentication, encryption,
compression, addressing, multi-protocols, etc., abbreviated as PPP.
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| Policy | | Policy is a very broadly used term. To the AAA server, it means
the conditionally applicable set of attribute-value pairs that an
AAA protocol, such as RADIUS, may support. HP-UX AAA policies are
simple or complex decisions that control the authentication, authorization,
and accounting process for a user's access request.
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| PPP | | Point-to-Point Protocol.
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| Protocol | | A set of rules established between two devices to allow communications
to occur.
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| Proxy | | The mechanism that allows one system to mediate between two
other systems in response to protocol requests. A RADIUS server can
act as a proxy client and forward an Access-Request to another AAA server for authentication. As a proxy client, the
server would mediate the requests and replies between the client where
the Access-Request originated from and the server that the request
was forwarded to.
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R - S
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| RADIUS | | Remote Access Dial In User Service.
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| RADIUS Client | | A NAS or other device that sends requests to an AAA server.
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| RAS | | Remote Access Server.
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| Realm | | A realm is a logical group of users, who usually can be authenticated
using one particular method. Grouping users into realms simplifies
the management of those users in a distributed environment. For example,
an ISP’s users may be from different organizations located
in different cities. Each organization already has one way or another
to authenticate its users and each corresponds to a realm. Each realm
would be responsible for managing its users, providing authentication
and authorization for their access requests. A realm has a name that
looks very much like a domain name, but they bear different meanings.
Realms are only used by the AAA Server to determine where an authentication
request should be sent and what kind of authentication to request,
etc. Naming a realm with its domain name simplifies things for the
users, since their access ids will then look the same as their e-mail
addresses. A realm may also have multiple aliases, providing a way
to shorten long realm names.
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| Remote Access Dial In User Service | | An authentication and accounting protocol defined by the IETF
in a series of RFCs, abbreviated as RADIUS.
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| Remote Access Server | | A service that allows remote clients running Microsoft Windows
or Windows NT to dial in to a network, abbreviated as RAS.
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| Remote Server | | In the context of a proxied Access-Request, the remote server is the AAA server that receives the request from
the forwarding server. The remote server authenticates
the request and sends a reply to the forwarding server.
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| Request For Comment | | The basis for an IETF standard, abbreviated as RFC.
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| RFC | | Request For Comment.
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| SAT | | Simultaneous access token.
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| Server Manager | | A Web-based graphical user interface which provides an interface
between an administrator and the AAA servers. In addition to creating,
modifying, and deleting entries in many of the server’s configuration
files, an administrator may start and stop the AAA server, access
the server’s status and system time, retrieve information from
accounting and session logs, and terminate sessions.
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| Service | | The RADIUS client provides a service to
the dial-in user, such as PPP or Telnet.
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| Session | | Each service provided by the client to a dial-in user constitutes a session, with the
beginning of the session defined as the point where service is first
provided and the end of the session defined as the point where service
is ended. A user may have multiple sessions in parallel or series
if the RADIUS client supports that feature.
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| Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) | | SNMP provides a mechanism for a centrally located management
workstation to monitor the activity of remote computers and network
services.
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| Simultaneous Access Token | | The concept of token helps define and enforce policies in regard
to modem pool sharing among various participating institutions. A
simultaneous access token is required when a user accesses a non-priority
modem. Tokens are allocated to realms and are grouped into pools.
The total number of tokens a realm has is defined by the HP-UX AAA
server so that the LAS may control simultaneous use, abbreviated as
SAT.
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| SLA | | Service Level Agreement.
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| SLS | | Service Level Specification.
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| Soft Token | | Software that enables an existing smart phone or PDA to act
as a one-time password token
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| SQL Access | | A feature that allows AAA Server to interact with an SQL compliant
database.
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T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z
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| TLS (Transport Layer Security) | | Uses TLS (also known as SSL) to authenticate the client using
its digital certificate. Note: some wireless supplicants require specific
extensions to support certificates for EAP. TLS features include:
Dynamic Key Exchange; Mutual Authentication; Digital Certificate/Token
Card-based Authentication; and, Encrypted Tunnelling.
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| Token | | See Simultaneous Access Token.
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| Token Pool | | A token pool contains a number of tokens belonging to some organization
and having a given name. These tokens may be shared among one or more
realms.
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| TTLS (Tunnelled-Transport Layer Security) | | Can carry additional EAP or legacy authentication methods like
PAP and CHAP. Integrates with the widest variety of password storage
formats and existing password-based authentication systems. Wireless
supplicants available for a large number of clients. TTLS features
include: Dynamic Key Exchange; Mutual Authentication; Password-based
Authentication; and, Encrypted Tunnelling.
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| Tunneling | | A secure connection between a client workstation and an intranet
or other network, that provides a VPN to a user.
This connection may be a voluntary tunnel initiated by the client
or a compulsory tunnel initiated during authentication by a server
or other dedicated network equipment.
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| Users | | Individuals whom the AAA server must authenticate and authorize
before by they can access an organization’s service, such as
Internet access through an ISP.
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| Virtual Private Network | | A network service offered by public carriers in which the user
is provided a network that in many ways appears as if it is a private
network (user-unique addressing, network management capabilities,
dynamic reconfiguration, etc.) but which, in fact, is provided over
the carrier's public network facilities, abbreviated as VPN.
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| VPN | | Virtual Private Network.
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