Dell W-AP135 manuel d'utilisation

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- nom du fabricant et année de fabrication Dell W-AP135
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- signes de sécurité et attestations confirmant la conformité avec les normes pertinentes

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Tout d'abord, il contient la réponse sur la structure, les possibilités du dispositif Dell W-AP135, l'utilisation de divers accessoires et une gamme d'informations pour profiter pleinement de toutes les fonctionnalités et commodités.

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Table des matières du manuel d’utilisation

  • Page 1

    1 FIPS 140-2 Non-Proprietary Security Policy for Aruba AP-13 4, AP -135 and Dell W- AP 134, W - A P1 35 Wireless A ccess Points Version 1.2 February 20 12 Aruba Networks™ 1322 Crossman Ave. Sunnyvale, C A 94089- 1113[...]

  • Page 2

    2[...]

  • Page 3

    3 1 INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................................................. 5 1.1 A RUBA D ELL R ELATIONSHIP ............................................................................................................. 5 1.2 A CRONYMS A ND A BBREVIATION S ......................[...]

  • Page 4

    4 4.1.3 Wireless Clien t Authenticatio n ................................................................................................. 23 4.1.4 Strength of Authentication Mech anisms ................................................................................... 23 4.2 S ERVICES ..............................................................[...]

  • Page 5

    5 1 Introduction This document constitutes t he non-prop rietary Cryptographic Mod ule Security Policy for the AP - 134 , AP- 135 Wireless Access Points with FIP S 140 -2 Level 2 validation fro m Aruba Networks. This securit y policy describes how the AP meets the securit y requirements of FIPS 1 40 -2 Level 2, and how to place and maintain the AP [...]

  • Page 6

    6 SHA Secure Hash Algorithm SN MP Sim ple Network Management Protocol SPOE Serial & Power Over Ethernet TEL Tamper-Evident Label TFTP Trivial File Transfer Proto col WLAN Wireless Local Area Network[...]

  • Page 7

    7 2 Product O v er v iew This section i ntroduces the var ious Aruba Wireless Access P oin ts, providing a brief overview and sum mary of the physical features of eac h model covered b y this FIPS 140 -2 security polic y. 2.1 AP - 134 This section introduces t he Aruba AP- 134 Wireless Access Po int (AP) with FIPS 140 -2 Level 2 validation. It desc[...]

  • Page 8

    8 The module provides the foll owing po wer interfaces:  48V DC 802.3af or 80 2.3at or P oE + interoperable Po w er -over-Ethernet (Po E) with i ntelli-source PSE sourcing intelligence  12V DC for external AC s upplied power (adapter so ld separately) 2.1.1.3 Indicator LEDs There are 5 bicolor (power, EN ET and WLAN) LEDs which o perate as fo[...]

  • Page 9

    9 2.2 AP -1 35 This section introduces t he Aruba AP- 13 5 W ireless Access P oint (AP) with FIPS 140 -2 Level 2 validation. It describes the purp ose of the AP, its physical a ttributes, and its interfaces. The Aruba AP- 13 5 is hi gh-performance 802.1 1n (3x3:3) MIMO, dual-radio (concurrent 8 02.11a/n + b/g/n) indoor wireless access point s capab[...]

  • Page 10

    10  5V DC for external AC supplied power (adapter sold separately) 2.2.1.3 Indicator LEDs There are 5 b icolor (power, ENET and WLAN) LEDs which oper ate as follows: Table 2- AP -1 35 Indicator LEDs Label Function Action Status PWR AP power / read y status Off No power to AP Red Initial power-up co ndition Flashing – Green Device booting, not [...]

  • Page 11

    11 3 Module Objecti v es This section d escribes th e a ssurance level s for each o f the areas described in the FIPS 140 -2 Standar d. In addition, it pro vides information on placing the module i n a FIPS 140 -2 approved configuration. 3.1 Security Levels Section Section Title Level 1 Cryptographic Module Sp ecification 2 2 Cryptographic Module P[...]

  • Page 12

    12 3.2.2 AP - 134 TEL Placement This section displays all the TEL locations of the Aruba AP -134. T he A P-134 requires a minimum o f 5 TELs to be applied as follo ws: 3.2.2.1 To detect openin g of the chassis cover: 1. Spanning the bottom and top chassis covers and placed in the front left corner 2. Spanning the bottom and top chassis covers and p[...]

  • Page 13

    13 Figure 4 : AP -134 Top View Figure 5: AP -134 Right View Figure 6: AP -134 Bottom View 3.2.3 AP - 135 TEL Placement This section displays all the T EL locations of the Aruba A P- 135 . The A P-134 requires a m inimum of 5 TELs to be applied as follows: 3.2.3.1 To detect openi ng of the chassis cov er: 1. Spanning the bottom and top chassis cover[...]

  • Page 14

    14 2. Spanning the bottom and top chassis covers and placed in the back left corner 3. Spanning the chassis scre w on the botto m left corner 4. Spanning the chassis screw on the botto m right corner 3.2.3.2 To detect access to re stricted ports 5. Spanning the serial por t Following is the T EL placement for the AP - 135 : Figure 7 : AP -135 Front[...]

  • Page 15

    15 Figure 11: AP -135 Top view Figure 12: AP - 135 Bottom View 3.2.4 Inspection/Testing of Physical Security Mechanisms Physical Security M echanism Recommended Te st Frequency Guidance Tamper-evident labels (T ELs) Once per month Examine for any sign of remo val, replacement, tearing, etc. See images above for locations of TELs Opaque module enclo[...]

  • Page 16

    16 3.3 Modes of Operat ion The module has the following FIP S approved modes of operations: • Remote AP (RAP) FIPS mode – W hen the module is configured as a Remote AP, it is intended to be deploy ed in a remote location (relative to the Mobility Controller ). T he module pro vides cryptographic processing i n the for m of IPSec for all traffic[...]

  • Page 17

    17 6. If the staging contro ller does not p rovide PoE, either ensure the presence of a P oE injector for the LAN connection bet ween the module and the co ntroller, or ensure t he presence o f a DC po wer supply appropriate to the particular model of the module. 7. Connect the module via an Ethernet cable to the sta ging contr oller ; note that th[...]

  • Page 18

    18 7. Connect the module via an Ethernet cable to the sta ging controller; no te that this should b e a direc t connection, with no intervening net work or devices; i f Po E is being supplied by an inj ector, th is represents the o nly exception. That is, nothing o ther than a P oE injector should b e present b etween the module and the sta ging co[...]

  • Page 19

    19 Section “ Pr ovisioning an Indi vidual AP ” o f Chapter “ The Basic User-Centric Net works ” o f the Aruba OS User Guide. Click “Apply and Reboot” to complete the provisioning pro cess. a. During the provisioning proce ss as Remote Mesh Portal, if Pre -shared ke y is selected to be the Re mote IP Authentication Me thod, the IKE pre-s[...]

  • Page 20

    20 represents the o nly exception. That is, nothing o ther than a P oE injector should b e present b etween the module and the sta ging controller. 8. Once t he module is co nnected to the co ntroller by the Ethernet cable, navigate to the Configuration > Wireless > AP Installation page, where you sho uld see an entr y for the AP. Select that[...]

  • Page 21

    21 3.5 Logical Interfaces The ph ysical interfaces are d ivided into logical interface s defined b y FIP S 140 -2 as described in the following table. FI PS 140-2 Logical Interface Module Physical Interfa ce Data Input Interface 10/100/1000 Ethernet P orts 802.11a/b/g/n Radio T ransceiver Data Output Interface 10/100/1000 Ethernet P orts 802.11a/b/[...]

  • Page 22

    22 4 Roles, A u thentication an d Services 4.1 Roles The module s upports the roles of Cr ypto Officer, User , and Wireless Client; no additio nal roles ( e.g., Maintenance) are suppo rted. Ad ministrative op erations car ried out by the Aruba Mobility C ontroller map to the Crypto Officer role. The Cr ypto Officer ha s t he ability to co nfigure, [...]

  • Page 23

    23 4.1.2 User Authentication Authentication for the User role depends on the module configuration. When the module is configured as a Remote Mesh Portal FIP S mode and Re mote Mesh P oint FIP S mode, the U ser role is authenticated via t he WPA2 p re-shared ke y. When the mod ule i s co nfigured as a Remote A P FIPS mode and CPSec protected AP FIP [...]

  • Page 24

    24 Authentication Mechanis m Mechanis m Strength Wireless Client WPA2-PSK (Wireless Client role) For WPA2 -PSK there are at least 95^1 6 (=4.4 x 10^31) possible combinations. In order to test a guessed key, the attac ker must complete the 4-way handshake with the AP. Pr ior to completing the 4 -way handshake, t he attacker must co mplete the 802.11[...]

  • Page 25

    25 4.2 Services The module provides vario us services depending o n role. These are descr ib ed below. 4.2.1 Crypto Officer Services The CO role in each of FIP S modes defi ned in section 3.3 has the same services Service Description CSPs Accessed ( see secti on 6 below for complete descrip tion of CSPs) FIPS mode enable/di sable The CO selects/de [...]

  • Page 26

    26 Service Description CSPs Accessed ( see secti on 6 below for complete descrip tion of CSPs) Creation/use of secure management session bet ween module and CO The module supports use of IPSec for securing the management channel.  IKEv1/IKEv2 Preshared Secret  DH Private Ke y  DH Public Ke y  IPSec session encr yption keys  IPSec ses[...]

  • Page 27

    27 Service Description CSPs Accessed ( see secti on 6 below for complete descrip tion of CSPs)  802.11i AES-C CM key  802.11i GMK  802.11i GTK Use of WPA pre -shared key for establishment of IEEE 802.11i keys When the module is i n mesh configuration, the inter -module mesh links are secured with 802.11i. This is authe nticated with a shar[...]

  • Page 28

    28  System status – SYSLOG and module LEDs  802.11 a/b/g/n  FTP  TFTP  NTP  GRE tunneling of 802 .11 wireless user frames ( when acting as a “Local AP”)  Reboot module b y removing/replacing power  Self-test and initializatio n at power-on[...]

  • Page 29

    29 5 Cryptographic Algorith ms FIPS-approved cryptographic algorithms have bee n implemented in hard w are and firmware. The firmware suppo rts the following cryptographic imple mentations.  ArubaOS OpenSSL AP Module implements the follo wing FIPS -app roved algorithms: o AES (Cert. #18 51) o HMAC (Cert. #109 9) o RNG (Cert. #970 ) o RSA (Cert. [...]

  • Page 30

    30 6 Critical Securit y Parameters The following Critical Sec urity Parameters (CSPs) are used by the module: CSP CSP TYPE GENERATION STORAGE And ZEROIZATI ON USE Key Encryption Ke y (KEK) Triple-DES 168 -bits key Hard-coded Stored in flash, zeroized b y th e ‘ap wipe out flash’ command. Encrypts IKEv1/IKEv2 preshared keys and configuration par[...]

  • Page 31

    31 CSP CSP TYPE GENERATION STORAGE And ZEROIZATI ON USE IKEv1/IKEv2 Diffie - Hellman Private key 1024 -bit Diffie- Hellman private key Generated internall y during IKEv1/IKEv2 negotiation Stored in plaintext in volatile memory; zeroized when session is closed or system is powered off Used in establishing the session key for IPSec IKEv1/IKEv2 Diffie[...]

  • Page 32

    32 CSP CSP TYPE GENERATION STORAGE And ZEROIZATI ON USE WPA2 PSK 16 - 64 character shared secret used to authenticate mesh connections and in remote AP advanced configuration CO configured Encrypted in flash using the KEK; zeroized by updating through administrative interface, or by the ‘ap wipe out flash’ command. Used to derive the PMK for 80[...]

  • Page 33

    33 CSP CSP TYPE GENERATION STORAGE And ZEROIZATI ON USE 802.11i Gro up Master Key (GMK) 256 -bit secret used to derive GTK Generated from appro ved RNG Stored in plaintext in volatile memory; zeroized o n reboot Used to derive Group Transient Key (GTK) 802.11i Gro up Transient Ke y (GTK) 256 -bit shared secret used to derive group (multicast) encry[...]

  • Page 34

    34 7 Self T es t s The module perfor ms the follo wing Self Tests af ter being config ured into either Re mote AP mode or Remote Mesh P ortal mode. The module perfor ms both po wer-up and co nditional self -tests. In t he event an y self-test fails, the module enters an error state, lo gs the error, and reboo ts automatically. The module performs t[...]

  • Page 35

    35 Self-test results are written to the serial console. In the event of a K ATs failure, the AP logs different messages, dep ending on the error. For an ArubaOS OpenSS L AP module and ArubaOS c ryptographic m odule KAT failure: AP rebooted [DATE][TIME] : Restarting System, SW FIPS KAT failed For an AES Atheros hardware POST failure: Starting HW SHA[...]