| Item |
| Description |
|
|
| Set the authentication sleep period. |
| Sleep Period |
| 5 minutes by default |
|
| Note: | |
|
|
| |
|
|
| Within the authentication sleep period, no users on this port are |
|
|
| allowed to try to pass authentication. |
|
|
| Set the aging time. |
| Aging time |
| 1 hour by default |
|
| Note: | |
|
|
| |
|
|
| If there is no traffic of authenticated users through a port within the |
|
|
| aging time, the port will be aged out and enters the Block state. |
| Ldb |
| Enable/disable the LDB feature on a port. |
|
| Disabled by default | |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
Configuring an Authentication Server
On this page, you can configure different authentication servers for different VLANs.
Select Security > LDB > Authentication IP. The Authentication Server Configuration Page Opens.
Figure 3-77 Authentication server configuration page
Click Add, select the VLAN interface, and specify the authentication server IP address and subnet mask to establish an association between a VLAN and an authentication server, as shown in 0.
Figure 3-78 Configure an authentication server
Configuring a User Account
On this page, you can configure user accounts for local authentication.
Select Security > LDB > User Configuration. The User Account Configuration Page Opens.