802.1x/LEAP Connection

How do I connect to a LEAP encrypted network with the 2.0 update? My network at work requires LEAP, with Domain, username and password.....

This article may be of assistance. I have yet to get it working on my Touch here at SLU, but I do have friends reporting that it works on the iPhone just fine.
http://wifinetnews.com/archives/008391.html

Similar Messages

  • E90 eap-leap connectivity, as usual not working...

    Sorry folks, here we go again.... I have already made some search in the forum about the topic and also tried them accordingly to no avail. First try, general error, second try it will crash (screen will blank out and restart, what a graceful exit!!!) Well I cant count how many restart I made and Im a little bit tired, maybe I need some help. =)
    Anyway here's my settings : (this setting is working perfectly on windows XP, so I assume its a handphone or handphone config issue)
    Model : E90
    Firmware : 07.24.0.3
    Name : CompanyRoam
    Data Bearer : Wireless LAN
    WLan Net name : CompanyRoam
    Network Status : Public
    WLan Net. Mode : Infrastructure
    WLan Security Mode : 802.1x
    Wlan Security Settings :
    WPA/WPA2 : EAP
    EAP plug-in settings : EAP-LEAP (Disabled everything but this)
    Username : *username* (also tried *username*\*domain*)
    Prompt Password : No (tried yes then no, as said in some forum)
    Password : myDomainPassword
    Others : ip address using dhcp

    After more research on Eap-Leap connectivity, I found someone that can connect to our corporate wifi but using a Nokia E60.
    My settings were the same as his E60, i even ask him to place his username and password to my Nokia E90 and still it crashes. So finally conluded this is a firmware problem.
    It is so embarrasing the same NOKIA manufacturer, even the same E-SERIES and does not work. Hopefully by next firrware this should work.
    So for E90 users out there, no eap-leap connectivity as of my current firmware. I will continue to update this thread as new firmware arrives.

  • 802.11n 5ghz Connection Problem with OS X 10.4.11 Tiger

    I've searched the communities for answer to this vexing issue to no avail, so I am trying a post.
    Situation:
    I have a dual-band 1TB TC at home set up with three networks: 802.11g/b/a, 802.11n ((5ghz), and Guest Network (g/b).  There are four Macs accessing it: (2) mid-2009 15" MacBook Pros, 2009 MacBook Air, mid-2006 24" iMac.  All are running Snow Leopard 10.6.7 except the 24" iMac (Core 2 Duo) running 10.4.11.
    All Macs can connect to to all networks EXCEPT the iMac which has a problem with the 802.11n (5ghz) connection ONLY.  The iMac has the n-enabler installed (can see it registered when looking at Network Utility).  In fact, the iMac will connect but any attempt to access to the Internet or TC disk stalls the system.  Switch back to 802.11g and everything is fine.
    I've looked at the Console for guidance but cannot find anything problematic (to my eyes, anyway).  I booted this iMac to Snow Leopard from an external disk and the problem cannot be duplicated, so I am assuming this is not a hardware issue with the iMac.  I also, did a fresh install of Tiger and updated it to 10.4.11 plus all Airport updates and n-ebabler on an external drive, booted from this drive and have the same issue with the 5 ghz n-connection.
    By the way, when connected to 802.11n (5ghz) network with the iMac, I have full bars on the menubar fan, but then one bar drops after a minute or so.  When this happens, I cannot access the Internet nor the TC disk.
    I've tried various tweaks as described in the many, many discussion threads here: resets, establish new locations, clear/repair the keychain, and many others.
    I did not have this problem in the past with this iMac, so don't know what has changed with the system configuration.  The g-connection is rock-solid, so Internet access is fine, but file transfer speeds ober the network are obviously much slower now than with the 5ghz n-connection.
    Anyone have any ideas?  Without suggesting an upgrade to 10.6...clearly that should do the trick.  I have other reasons for running Tiger on the iMac.
    Thanks.

    I wonder if all the activity was too much for the hard drive and it failed....you might contact Apple about this repair extension program to see if you qualify...
    http://www.apple.com/support/macbook/hd/repairextension/

  • IPhone Wi-Fi: WEP, 802.X, LEAP???

    At work, the Wi-Fi network is like:
    WEP
    802.X
    LEAP
    On my laptop, when logging on to the wi-fi, the username is like so: domain\username
    Is 802.X only supported under WPA encryption and not WEP? If so, does that mean I'm more or less screwed when it comes to my work wi-fi. I can't get any reception from ATT in the building I work in, so wi-fi would be nice
    I've messed around with the confi utility and I still can't get it to log on...any help would be appreciated. Thanks!!

    The "domain" used for windows login is not the same as domains for DNS so you don't need to do anything about the DNS or DHCP settings.
    You should try your username both ways:
    Username
    OR
    Domain\Username
    Both are possible, it depends on the local setup of your network. Your local IT people will know the right authentication credentials to use. Many companies set up LEAP authentication based on your windows network login credentials but it doesn't have to be done that way.

  • Leap connecting to BlackBerry Link on Windows 7 Pro SP1 64-bit

    Connecting with USB cable, you are prompted, initially to install drivers.  This initiates the installation of the Device Manager, BlackBerry Link and BlackBerry Blend. After installing/un-installing/re-installing the software several times, checking a raft of knowledgebase articles, I still cannot get Link to recognize an attached device over USB. If I look at the device manager, I have the BlackBerry (USB Serial Bus Controllers) and Black Berry Virtual Private Network (Network Adapters) and have attempted updating the drivers for these. During software uninstallations, I have also purged directories and registry entries. I am running ESET A/V and have disabled A/V and Firewall during software installs. I have tried connecting with the Leap in various states (Airplane Mode, with WiFi on, With WiFi/Mobile Network on). In every case, the device asks to Install Drivers, etc. and is not visible in the BlackBerry Device Manager.

    try copying the installation files to a desktop folder and installing from the folder.
    if that fails, download the installation files,
    Downloads available:
    Suites and Programs:  CC 2014 | CC | CS6 | CS5.5 | CS5 | CS4 | CS3
    Acrobat:  XI, X | 9,8 | 9 standard
    Premiere Elements:  12 | 11, 10 | 9, 8, 7
    Photoshop Elements:  12 | 11, 10 | 9,8,7
    Lightroom:  5.6| 5 | 4 | 3
    Captivate:  8 | 7 | 6 | 5
    Contribute:  CS5 | CS4, CS3
    Download and installation help for Adobe links
    Download and installation help for Prodesigntools links are listed on most linked pages.  They are critical; especially steps 1, 2 and 3.  If you click a link that does not have those steps listed, open a second window using the Lightroom 3 link to see those 'Important Instructions'.

  • After 10.6.8 upgrade, MacBook PRO doesn't acquire IP address via 802.11n wireless connection

    After upgrading a MacBook Pro to 10.6.8, the machine connects to an 802.11n wireless access point, but will not acquire an IP address using DHCP.  An iMac running 10.6.7, and an iPad2 both successfully connect and acquire DHCP IP addresses to the same access point.  The access point is an HP Procurve MSM422 access point, a commercial data center level access point.
    The MacBook Pro did acquire a connection and IP address when running 10.6.7, so this seems to be a regression introduced with the upgrade to 10.6.8.
    The MacBook Pro running 10.6.8 will acquire an 802.11g connection to the same access point without any problems.  The access point has different SSIDs for 802.11n and 802.11g.
    Changing the IP settings on the MacBook Pro from DHCP to a fixed IP address doesn't solve the problem.
    Just wanted to document this situation for those following problems with migration to 10.6.8.
    If anyone uncovers the reason and has a work around for this situation, please share.  I'll keep looking, too.  I plan to do a combo install of 10.6.8 later today to see if this remedies the situation.

    Deleting and recreating the AirPort connection doesn't help this problem.  Neither does turning the AirPort on/then off, going from DHCP to FIXED IP addresses, or repairing permissions.  I even upgraded the firmware in the HP MSM422 access point from 5.4.29 to 5.5.1 and that didn't make any difference, either. 
    Using the combo installer to reinstall 10.6.8 did fix the problem. 

  • Ap521 - 802.1x LEAP - with IAS ?

    Hi there,
    I wanted to do 802.1x PEAP with my AP521 in standalone access-point. unfortunetely.. in the data sheet it seems to support only LEAP with AP521.
    http://www.cisco.com/en/US/prod/collateral/wireless/ps7306/ps7319/ps7338/product_data_sheet0900aecd8060c220.html
    LEAP
    Dynamic-WEP
    Open-EAP Network-EAP
    So,  as I have Microsoft IAS, I was trying to figure out if LEAP is supported ... it seems that officialy not :
    http://www.cisco.com/en/US/tech/tk722/tk809/technologies_q_and_a_item09186a00805e8297.shtml
    and from microsoft also
    http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc785368(WS.10).aspx
    But, some people on forum said there is some things you can do to make it work...
    https://supportforums.cisco.com/message/1295984#1295984
    By default, the access point sends reauthentication requests to the authentication server with the service-type attribute set to authenticate-only. However, some Microsoft IAS servers do not support the authenticate-only service-type attribute. Changing the service-type attribute to login-only ensures that Microsoft IAS servers recognize reauthentication requests from the access point. Use the dot11 aaa authentication attributes service-type login-only global configuration command to set the service-type attribute in reauthentication requests to login-only.
    http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/wireless/ps4570/products_configuration_guide_chapter09186a00802091b1.html
    What Do you Think ?? did you guys done that ?
    thanks

    Phillippe,
         PEAP is supported through the APs which is most likely what you will use in a Microsoft environment.  This is covered under the Open-EAP heading.
    --Jesse

  • Certificates to 802.1x LEAP ethernet and wireless clients

    Hello guys, I have just configured a radius server, active directory domain controller and certificate server on one windows 2003 pc. I have generate a self-signed digital certificate and used certificate server to generate a root certificate from it. I have exported it as a 'public key only' and saved it on the desktop of the radius server.
    1) I configure the radius server policy to accept connections from wireless and Ethernet connections using 'PEAP'
    2) And that the user must supply a user name and password from active directory. Before entering the network.
    3) I am planning on using 802.1x port security ( config-if # dot1x port-security auto )on the switch connecting to the pc
    4) i am planning on pointint the switch to server and server to switch. i will also configure the client network cards for PEAP.
    What I don't know is how will the client pc get this certificate that is on my radius server? Do they need to have a copy on their own machines for them to be able to communicate with the server? This is where I am lost
    Thanks

    Certificates are a matter of trust - if an entity trusts the root (your CA) of a user certificate, and the certificate itself has no other problems, then it automatically trusts the certificate. If your RADIUS server and user/machine certificates all came from the same root (your self-signed CA), and you put the root certificate (public key version) in the trusted list, then you are good to go.
    If you are using the Microsoft PKI services on your server (that is also your domain controller), then I'm pretty sure that your windows computers will automatically trust your root once the windows computers have been joined to your domain.
    Also - for PEAP on Windows computers, you can completely disable the client's verification of the (RADIUS) server certificate. It's great for testing, but I recommend deploying with server certificate validation enabled.
    Lastly - if you're building a lab, you may also want to investigate user and computer certificates and EAP-TLS. Windows CA with windows clients makes it very simple to deploy. Macintoshes are a pain, no matter what kind of CA you use.

  • Sharing 802.1x wifi connection via ethernet (to PS3 for example) - workarounds?

    The situation is this: my university network is 802.1x wireless, and I need to share the connection over Ethernet to a device that isn't compatible with 802.1x wireless. When I try to do this, Mavericks comes up with a message saying:
    Your Internet connection cannot be shared because it is protected by 802.1X.
    Now, the workaround that the IT dept has given me is this:
    Open apple script editor and paste everything between the lines below into a new file:
    ===================================================================
    try
    do shell script "sudo /usr/sbin/sysctl -w net.inet.ip.forwarding=1" with administrator privileges
    do shell script "sudo /usr/sbin/natd -interface en1 -dynamic" with administrator privileges
    do shell script "sudo /sbin/ipfw add divert natd all from any to any via en1" with administrator privileges
    end try
    ===================================================================
    Click on the compile button to make sure there are no errors. Then click on File and Export. Change the File Format to Application. Then click save.
    Run the file you have just saved by double clicking on it. You will be prompted for your Mac username and password.
    It's not working however. Any thoughts? Anything that I could change?

    Thanks for the video, definitely helpful. I followed the steps exactly, but I can only get to the "Test Internet" connection section and it fails.
    The Xbox passes the Network section of the test, but the test fails after that.

  • 802.1x wireless connection

    alright so i thought during the keynote speech for software update 2.0, steve jobs said the iphone would support the 802.1x security protocol. The wireless network at my university uses this method and all i see for security choices for a new wireless connection is wep, wpa, wpa2, wpa enterprise, and wpa2 enterprise.
    here's my school's setup instructions for Mac OS X
    http://www.slu.edu/Documents/its/qr-billikenwireless-mac.pdf
    is it just not possible or am I not figuring it out right?

    802.1X is now working for me...
    Our school even has a page with instructions for the iPhone/iTouch
    http://8help.osu.edu/3454.html
    This is not the same as the instructions for Macintosh.
    Of course, the instructions for YOU may be different. Ask your ITS people!

  • Airport Express 802.11g cannot connect with OS X 10.8.3

    Hi just updated my MacBook Pro to OS X to 10.8.3.  I have an older model Airport Express (802.11g) that I have been able use to set up wireless speakers via Airport Utility 5.6 and 5.6.1.  However, this most recent Mountain Lion update has rendered my Airport Express useless.  I have to restart Airport Express each time I want to try to use it, to which Airport Utility will find the device and successfully add it to my existing wifi to allow me to play music wirelessly through my speakers. The second I close my MacBook, though, everything disconnects and Airport Utility is no longer able to find my device.  The green light is steady on the Airport Express, so I know that is hooked up and working correctly.  Is there a fix for this....?  Thank you!

    See if setting a static IP will correct the problem.  Step 5 in the document below will walk you through the steps.  Let me know what happens. 
    Printer Does Not Maintain Wireless Connection
    I am a printer tech for HP.

  • E51 WLAN 802.1x LEAP

    Hi folks,
    I configured a wireless lan with Cisco Access Point protected by 802.1x and EAP-LEAP.
    Nokia E61 and E65 are working fine with the following configuration:
    Data bearer: Wireless LAN
    WLAN netw.name: phone
    Network status: Public
    WLAN netw.mode: Infrastructure
    WLAN Security mode: 802.1x
    WALN Security sett
    WPA Mode: EAP
    EAP Plugins: EAP-LEAP (username + passowrd)
    Few days ago I bought a new E51 but it doesn't work with the same configuration and returns an error message.
    I double checked all text entry and tried to upgrade to the lastest firmware release (200.34.36) but with the same result.
    If I open the WLAN (no encryption and no authentication) the phone works fine so it isn't an hardware issue.
    Any ideas?
    Thanks in advance.
    Regards,
    Stefano

    Help please...
    My cell haven't this plugin "LEAP"
    I used this plugin, but after update the software(firmware. by N.S.U.), the "eapLeap" plugin  disapeared by the list...
    The currently firmware is 40.2.005. It have not this plugin...
    Where can we get this? (eap leap)
    Tnx!

  • PowerBook and iMac 802.11 G connectivity issues

    I have a Linksys WCG200 (Cable modem/ 4 port wired /802.11G wireless router) that I use to share internet with two notebook PCs (work) and my Powerbook G4 and iMac G5. This set-up has worked flawlessly for 6 months.
    Recently, I have run into the issue of not being able to connect wirelessly with my Macs. If I take the PowerBook to within a few feet fo the router, it will sometimes "see" it, but then when attempting to connect, it will indicate "there was an error connecting to the network". The PC notebooks see the router OK and my MACs see all the neighbors SSID's, but not mine. My SSID is not hidden, and I can still wire the MACs to the router and connect OK.
    The firmware on the Linksys is not user upgradeable and I have not changed it.
    All software updates on the MACs are current.
    Any ideas?

    Cheers for the quick replies, but I'm feeling particularly stupid today. I'm going to the recommended website on the BT help page to do it - http://bt.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/32376/kw/802.11n/c/346,502,504 - but it's just now showing up. "Problem loading page" and all that.
    Ah well, I just checked the streaming video problem using another device, and it works fine, so I'm guessing the problem is nothing to do with my network and something to do with the 360.

  • HT3546 802.11ac bridge connectivity Issues

    I have been unsuccessful in connecting any 802.11ac bridge, regardless of brand. This is a new airport extreme and should accept any ac compatible bridge. Manual setup also does not work. No luck connecting in a secured or unsecured network. Suggestions?

    You might want to review the System Requirements for the "ac" product, as it sounds like you are trying to set up the "ac" product using an older 5.x.x version of AirPort Utility. Don't think that will work well at all.
    From the Product Specifications:    http://www.apple.com/airport-extreme/specs/
    Setup and Administration
    iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch with iOS 5 or later and AirPort Utility 1.3
    Mac with OS X Lion v10.7.5 or later and AirPort Utility 6.3
    The Apple 802.11ac products will "bridge" together just fine, whether you are using Ethernet or wireless to connect the devices togerther.
    Setup is virtually automatic using AirPort Utility 6.3 on a Mac, or the utility on an iOS device.
    An Ethernet "bridge" would probably work with another brand, but I doubt that wireless would work, as Apple uses proprietary settings to "extend a wireless network". Chances are very slim that you will be able to get Apple to work with another brand of router using wireless.

  • Speed Tests Results for 802.11ac Wireless Connections

    Using the new Apple MacBook Air with 802.11ac wireless, I tested copying a file and a folder to both the new 802.11ac AirPort Extreme router housing a USB-connected hard disk and the less recent 802.11n Apple AirPort Extreme router housing a similar USB-connected hard disk.
    The results of the tests are summarized in the table below. The movie file was ripped from a DVD movie, and the Microsoft folder is simply the Microsoft Office 2011 folder in my Applications folder containing 14,231 items.
    The MacBook Air computer was located 6–8 feet away from each router with no intervening obstructions. While this was not a scientific test, it demonstrated to me that 802.11ac wireless is clearly superior to 802.11n in a real world setting. I assume that the lower relative performance of 802.11ac versus 802.11n for the large folder containing many files is due to overhead in copying and writing files from and to the hard disks. Ditto for the Gigabit Ethernet test.

    Great resource for speedtesting: www.speedtest.net
    Will show you ping speed, upload/download speeds for your connection. Try for each then post results.

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