Tag Archives: NAC to ISE

Configuring On-Boarding Using Identity Services Engine ISE 1.1MR / 1.1.1

 Configuring On Boarding Using Identity Services Engine ISE 1.1MR / 1.1.1Cisco recently updated their flagship access control solution Identity Services Engine ISE label 1.1.1 or ISE 1.1MR (Maintenance Release). See more on ISE HERE. My team has received lots of questions around on-boarding new devices with ISE. This post will focus on this feature and assumes a standard ISE design is enabled for wireless access.

On-boarding simply means brining a new device onto the network for the first time. This process includes certificate enrollment and profile provisioning without involving IT as well as little interaction with the end user. ISE 1.1MR accomplishes these goals levering an existing Certificate Authorityuser database such as Active Directory and ISE frameworkScreen Shot 2012 07 24 at 4.24.42 PM Configuring On Boarding Using Identity Services Engine ISE 1.1MR / 1.1.1

The ISE on-boarding process can vary however will be explained as having a new device connecting to a SSID specified for on-boarding new devices (can be open or secured with PEAP). Devices that connect to the on-boarding SSID will be redirected to a guest registration portal.  The user will authenticate, which will trigger the certificate enrollment and profile provisioning process. Parameters to connect to the internal secure SSID will be included with the configuration profile that is provisioned to the mobile device post authentication. From that point on, the device will use the internal SSID for network access, which may have different ISE authorization rules depending on the design. Devices that fail to complete the on-boarding process will default to ether a guest SSID or be denied access depending on the desired policy.Screen Shot 2012 07 24 at 4.26.32 PM Configuring On Boarding Using Identity Services Engine ISE 1.1MR / 1.1.1

WIRELESS: On-boarding can be designed many ways however for this post we will use two SSIDs called Provisioning_Wireless for new devices and Employee_Wireless for existing approved devices.  An accesslist limiting access to ISE, DHCP and DNS will be enabled to prevent devices from staying on the provisioning SSID.  A possible configuration for both SSIDS could be as follow

Attribute: Provisioning_Wireless / Employee_Wireless
Broadcast SSID: Enable / Enable
Layer2 Security: None / WPA+WPA2
MAC Filtering: Enable / Disabled
WPA+WPA2 Parameters: None / WPA2 Policy, AES, 802.1x
Layer 3 Security: None / None
AAA Server: ISE / ISE
Advanced: AAA Override Enabled / AAA Override Enabled
Advanced: NAC State – Radius NAC / NAC State – Radius NAC

To build this, go to WLANs > Create New > Go and fill out the profile details. Use NONE for the layer 2 settings so it’s OPEN. For AAA, set the Radius server for ISE. Under advanced, enabled Allow AAA Override and change the NAC state to Radius NAC. Go to Controller > General > Fast SSID change and enabled Fast SSID to help speed up the SSID changing.

ISE: (1) First in ISE setup Active Directory by going to Admin > External Identity Sources > Active Directory and join ISE to an AD system.

(2) Next go to Admin > External Identity Sources > Certificate Authentication Profile > ADD to define the certificate authentication profile (name it and choose Common Name for X509).

(3) Next define an Identity Source Sequence by going to Admin > Identity Source Sequences > Add.  Give it a name, enabled and select the certification profile you just created then add AD for the authentication search list.

(4) Next configure ISE to act as a Simple Certificate Enrollment proxy server (SCEP). Go to Admin > Certificates > SCEP CA Profiles > Add. After defining your SCEP server, ISE will download the RA and root CA certificates of the CA server (this can be verified uner the certificate store via SYSTEM > Certificate > Certificate Store).

For this scenario, we will configure ISE authentication to use MAB for on-boarding new devices.  It many cases, ISE will not know the MAC address in advance so it must be configured to continue the authentication process via redirection regardless.

This is done in ISE:

(1) Going to Policy > Authentication, choose your MAB wireless policy, click the carrot after allow protocols to show the user options and click the + sign for use.

(2) Select IF USERS NOT FOUNDCONTINUE. As a reminder, ISE Authentication policies are verified top down so make sure your MAB policy used for BYOD is at the top and open for all identity stores. You should lock down the 802.1x wireless to only wireless certificates.

Client provisioning is based on how ISE classifies the client machine. There are customized packages in ISE available that include a software-provisioning wizard, which configures 802.1x settings and ability to obtain digital certificates on the endpoint.

To download wizard packages in ISE, go to Policy Elements > Results > Client Provisioning > Resources > Add. Common mobile devices such as iOS typically have these settings enabled natively so a wizard is not needed.

To configure client provisioning in ISE:

(1) Go to Policy Elements > Results > Client Provisioning > Resources > Add.

(2) Create a native suppliant profile by giving it a name, selecting the Wireless Checkbox, your on-boarding SSID, WPA2 for security, TLS for allow protocals and key size 2048.

(3) Next go to Policy > Client > Provisioning to build your provisioning resources. Create one for native devices and select the mobile profile you just created for the results (example RULE = IOS, Identiy Group = Any, Operating systems MAC IOS ALL and your new mobile profile for results).

(4) Create another that is similar however use Android for the operating systems. Create a third for generic MacOsX devices and use the downloaded wizard. You may also want to create a separate one for Wired and Wireless. The same goes for two more to cover wireless and wired Windows devices. Here is an example of my Client PolicesScreen Shot 2012 08 23 at 12.17.38 AM Configuring On Boarding Using Identity Services Engine ISE 1.1MR / 1.1.1

The final steps are verifying profiling for wireless is working as well as your authorization profiles are setup for redirection, employee and guest access (see previous postings for these configs). These can vary depending on how you want to restrict devices that pass and fail your polices.

Written by Joseph Muniz and Aamir Lakhani

Reviewed by Aman Diwakar and Brian Trulove

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Filed under Bring Your Own Device BYOD, Network Admission Control

How To Migrate To Cisco Identity Services Engine (ISE): NAC to ISE /ACS to ISE

Borat1 300x300 How To Migrate To Cisco Identity Services Engine (ISE): NAC to ISE /ACS to ISE
Today you may have Cisco NAC appliance or ACS and have heard great things about Cisco’s latest access control technology known as Identity Services Engine (ISE). What are you options to migrate to ISE? Here are some things you should know.

NOTE: These tips apply to how things are August 2011.

OVERVIEW:
ISE provides all the functionality of legacy NAC appliance, NAC Profiler and NAC Guest server. ISE provides all the functionality of ACS except device administration. This makes all existing customers running these services except ACS device administration (TACACS /RADIUS) an upgrade candidate. Many customers are keeping ACS for device management and purchasing new ISE solutions.

SOFTWARE
ISE is a free software upgrade for customers who have NAC appliance or NAC profiler. This is for both for the base and advance licenses.

ISE is a 50% software discount for customers who have ACS or NAC guest server. The 50% discount is a migration part for the base license only. The advance features license will not be impacted by this discount.

HARDWARE
ISE is supported on current generation NAC appliance hardware (3315, 3355,3395) and ACS (1121) hardware.

ISE is not support on any previous generation hardware (3310,3350, 3390, 1120, 3140, etc.). There are hardware/vmware migration discounts for customers moving from these platforms to the latest appliance or VMware systems.

ISE is available in appliance and VMware. There are VMware bundle options to increase discount when purchasing multiple VMware instances.

ISE hardware is discounted if the customer owns older NAC appliance (3310,3350 or 3390) or ACS appliance (1120).

Example 1:
Customer has a NAC manager appliance, 2000 user Cisco NAC Server appliance, Cisco Profiler appliance and Cisco Guest server. All hardware is the newer model IBM appliances (3315,3355 or 3395). The customer can get ISE software at no cost. They can download ISE .ISO for free from cisco.com and reimage the appliances to the latest ISE software. They can order a license from a Cisco partner at no cost as long as they have an active Smartnet contract and the supported hardware. The customer only needs one license since license management is centralized regardless of the number of existing appliances.

Example 2:
Customer has a NAC manager appliance, 2000 user NAC Server, Cisco Profiler and Cisco Guest server. All hardware is older HP servers (3310,3350 or 3390). The customer can download ISE .ISO for free from cisco.com and order a license at no cost. The hardware will not support ISE. This customer will have to migrate to the latest ISE appliance or vmware system for each NAC appliance server. The cost of the hardware will be discounted.

Example 3:
Customer has Cisco ACS supporting 2000 users and wants to migrate to ISE. They will need to purchase the 50% discounted ISE base and full advance licenses. They will need to migrate to ISE via VMware or Appliance if they don’t own an ACS 1121 appliance.

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