Skillset can help you prepare! Sign up for your free Skillset account and take the first steps towards your certification.
In EAP-TTLS authentication, working with 802.1x on both the client side and the server side, all certificates are needed. True or false?
True
False
EAP-Tunneled Transport Layer Security (EAP-TTLS) is an EAP protocol that extends TLS. It was co-developed by Funk Software and Certicom and is widely supported across platforms. Microsoft did not incorporate native support for the EAP-TTLS protocol in Windows XP, Vista, or 7. Supporting TTLS on these platforms requires third-party ECP (Encryption Control Protocol) certified software. Microsoft Windows started EAP-TTLS support with Windows 8,[18] however, Windows Phone 8 does not support EAP-TTLS[19] while version 8.1 supports it.[20] The client can, but does not have to be authenticated via a CA-signed PKI certificate to the server. This greatly simplifies the setup procedure since a certificate is not needed on every client. After the server is securely authenticated to the client via its CA certificate and optionally the client to the server, the server can then use the established secure connection ("tunnel") to authenticate the client. It can use an existing and widely deployed authentication protocol and infrastructure, incorporating legacy password mechanisms and authentication databases, while the secure tunnel provides protection from eavesdropping and man-in-the-middle attack. Note that the user's name is never transmitted in unencrypted clear text, improving privacy. Two distinct versions of EAP-TTLS exist: original EAP-TTLS (a.k.a. EAP-TTLSv0) and EAP-TTLSv1. EAP-TTLSv0 is described in RFC 5281, EAP-TTLSv1 is available as an Internet draft.[21]
Train with Skillset and pass your certification exam. Faster. Guaranteed.
Study thousands of practice questions that organized by skills and ranked by difficulty.
Create a tailored training plan based on the knowledge you already possess.
Know when you’re ready for the high-stakes exam. Have the confidence that you will pass on your first attempt.