T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3476.1 | | IROCZ::D_NELSON | Dave Nelson LKG1-3/A11 226-5358 | Fri Mar 21 1997 10:20 | 8 |
| RE: .0
Please explain what a "user certificate" is?
Regards,
Dave
|
3476.2 | for example: | NETRIX::"eirc gan@bejvc" | ericgan | Sun Mar 23 1997 08:15 | 11 |
| For example:
In the dial up user's interface, it should display:
"user name: xxxxx "
"password: xxxxx"
Then he can enter the network.
And one 90M can supports more user names in every port.
That's all.
eric
[Posted by WWW Notes gateway]
|
3476.3 | | IROCZ::D_NELSON | Dave Nelson LKG1-3/A11 226-5358 | Sun Mar 23 1997 10:09 | 16 |
| RE: .2
DNAS has extensive user authentication features. We support usernames,
passwords adn simple user profiles stored on the DECserver (in NVRAM).
We also support distributed user authentication via: RADIUS, SecurID and
Kerberos V4.
What I thought you meant was some form of "single sign on" or Windows
NT Domain authentication (that provides single sign on).
Have you looked at the Security chapters of the NAS Management Guide?
Regards,
Dave
|
3476.4 | | NETRIX::"eric gan@bejvc" | eric gan | Sun Mar 23 1997 21:53 | 10 |
| Please confirm:
>DNAS has extensive user authentication features. We support usernames,
>passwords adn simple user profiles stored on the DECserver (in NVRAM).
You mean without any outside software?
Thanks,
eric
[Posted by WWW Notes gateway]
|
3476.5 | | IROCZ::D_NELSON | Dave Nelson LKG1-3/A11 226-5358 | Mon Mar 24 1997 10:00 | 17 |
| RE: .4
>>We support usernames, passwords and simple user profiles stored on the
>>DECserver (in NVRAM).
> You mean without any outside software?
Yes. This feature is intended to support small offices and act as a
"backup" authentication method should the server-based ones be down. You
could possibly get up to 30 users in the NVRAM, if their names, passwords,
etc are short. The limit is by total character count, not by a fixed number
of entries.
Regards,
Dave
|