AT-TQ2403 Management Software User's Guide

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Field

Description

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cipher Suites

Select the cipher you want to use:

 

 

 

 

TKIP

 

 

 

 

CCMP (AES)

 

 

 

 

Both

 

 

Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) is the default.

TKIP: It provides a more secure encryption solution than WEP keys. The TKIP process more frequently changes the encryption key used and better ensures that the same key will not be re-used to encrypt data (a weakness of WEP). TKIP uses a 128-bit "temporal key" shared by clients and access points. The temporal key is combined with the client's MAC address and a 16-octet initialization vector to produce the key that will encrypt the data. This ensures that each client station uses a different key to encrypt data. TKIP uses RC4 to perform the encryption, which is the same as WEP. But TKIP changes temporal keys every 10,000 packets and distributes them, thereby greatly improving the security of the network.

CCMP (AES): Counter mode/CBC-MAC Protocol (CCMP) is an encryption method for IEEE 802.11i that uses the Advanced Encryption Algorithm (AES). It uses a CCM combined with Cipher Block Chaining Counter mode (CBC-CTR) and Cipher Block Chaining Message Authentication Code (CBC-MAC) for encryption and message integrity.

Both: When both TKIP and CCMP are selected, both TKIP and AES clients can associate with the access point. Client stations configured to use WPA with RADIUS must have one of the following to be able to associate with the AP:

A valid TKIP RADIUS IP address and valid shared Key

A valid CCMP (AES) IP address and valid shared Key

Clients not configured to use WPA with RADIUS will not be able to associate with AP. By default both TKIP and CCMP are selected. When both TKIP and CCMP are selected, client stations configured to use WPA with RADIUS must have one of the following:

A valid TKIP RADIUS IP address and RADIUS Key

A valid CCMP (AES) IP address and RADIUS Key