OK, for those of you who play with the Cisco ASA product you might have heard of DAP (Dynamic Access Policies). DAP is used to build policy rules on the fly to provide a customer user experience for VPN sessions (SSLVPN and Clientless or webportal VPN in particular) and is something that has been needed for awhile to compete with the Juniper Neoteris product. DAP has some issues with configuration and setup that can be a challenge, the primary challenge being the Microsoft AD integration.
It turns out that trying to figure out the Login DN parameters can be difficult and also the format for the LDAP attributes. I recommend using LDP to help you figure out the LDAP attributes you can match on and also as a useful tool to walk the LDAP structure of AD. The other missing information is that the testing tool does NOT test against the LDAP authentication server to see if the parameters you are providing actually exist. All it does is TRUST what you are providing as the if that was supplied back from the LDAP server and uses that to test your DAP policy. So you can happily test away thinking your DAP policy will work when it will fail because you are using the wrong LDAP attribut to match in the first place! Very frustrating.
Key commands to know:
debug dap trace
debug ldap 255
Also, for some reason the ASDM DAP testing tool puts commands in the ASA that are cumilative and you have to remove them via the command line. So if you do use the DAP testing tool remember to go in and remove the old parameters you gave it. Otherwise you will have a list a mile long and all of them will be getting checked even though you might only have one or two in the ASDM GUI window.
Oh, and make sure you are running 8.0.3.12, that fixes a SSH issue on the platform that is pretty important.
- Ed
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
EUROPEAN IPv6 DAY - 30 May 2008
Well, it seems our European counterparts are starting to take IPv6 seriously. They are planning an advancement meeting in Belgium to get things moving along.
The IPv6 task force website has good information if you are getting started in the IPv6 arena.
I am sure everyone saw that 6 of the 13 root level servers are running IPv6 AAAA records now - you don't even need IPv4 to do name services for IPv6 anymore, you can go completely native IPv6 for everything.
It is moving slowing but it is definitely moving along.
- Ed
The IPv6 task force website has good information if you are getting started in the IPv6 arena.
I am sure everyone saw that 6 of the 13 root level servers are running IPv6 AAAA records now - you don't even need IPv4 to do name services for IPv6 anymore, you can go completely native IPv6 for everything.
It is moving slowing but it is definitely moving along.
- Ed
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