Configuring your machine for a network

IEEE 802.1x Authentication

IEEE 802.1x is an IEEE standard for wired and wireless networks that limits access from unauthorized network devices. Your Brother machine (supplicant) sends an authentication request to a RADIUS server (Authentication server) through your access point (authenticator). After your request has been verified by the RADIUS server, your machine can access the network.

Authentication methods

LEAP (For wireless network)

Cisco LEAP (Lightweight Extensible Authentication Protocol) has been developed by Cisco Systems, Inc. which uses a user ID and password for authentication.

EAP-FAST

EAP-FAST (Extensible Authentication Protocol-Flexible Authentication via Secured Tunneling) has been developed by Cisco Systems, Inc. which uses a user ID and password for authentication, and symmetric key algorithms to achieve a tunneled authentication process.

The Brother machine supports the following inner authentication methods:

EAP-FAST/NONE

EAP-FAST/MS-CHAPv2

EAP-FAST/GTC

EAP-MD5 (For wired network)

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EAP-MD5 (Extensible Authentication Protocol-Message Digest Algorithm 5) uses a user ID and password for challenge-response authentication.

PEAP

PEAP (Protected Extensible Authentication Protocol) has been developed by Microsoft Corporation, Cisco Systems and RSA Security. PEAP creates an encrypted SSL (Secure Sockets Layer)/TLS (Transport Layer Security) tunnel between a client and an authentication server, for sending a user ID and password. PEAP provides mutual authentication between the server and the client.

The Brother machine supports the following inner authentications:

PEAP/MS-CHAPv2

PEAP/GTC

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