Free Article titled - Cisco CCNP BSCI 642-901 Tutorial: Clear Text OSPF Neighbor Authentication Get Free Content For Your Website

Free Articles on Certification and many other topics
Another free Certification article for you by Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933
Titled: Cisco CCNP BSCI 642-901 Tutorial: Clear Text OSPF Neighbor Authentication
Get the Certification category RSS Feed Certification RSS Feed

Print This Article Instant Copy Text

Please support the Sponsors of uPublish.info

Cisco CCNP BSCI 642-901 Tutorial: Clear Text OSPF Neighbor Authentication

By: Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933
Posted on: 2007-01-31
Downloads: 138

Article Summary: To pass the 642-901 BSCI exam, you have to know how to configure OSPF neighbor authentication. Learn how to configure clear-text authentication from Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933.

An OSPF adjacency can be authenticated with MD5 (Message Digest 5) or with a clear-text password. I’m not much on clear-text passwords, and hopefully you aren’t either! Whether you’re working in the real world or the certification exam room, though, it’s always a good idea to know more than one way to do things. Let’s take a look at how to configure clear-text authentication of an OSPF neighbor relationship.

The commands we’ll use are “ip ospf authentication-key” and “ip ospf authentication”. In this example, we have preexisting adjacencies between three routers in an OSPF NBMA network. The hub router (R1) has an adjacency with two spoke routers, R2 and R3.

The password is set by the interface-level command ip ospf authentication-key. While Cisco routers will usually tell you when you’re about to try to do something that you can’t do, this password is a rare exception to the rule. Let’s set a password of passbscitest and then check the router config.

R1(config-if)#ip ospf authentication-key ?

<0-7> Encryption type (0 for not yet encrypted, 7 for proprietary)

LINE The OSPF password (key)


R1(config-if)#ip ospf authentication-key passbscitest


R1#show config


interface Serial0

ip address 172.12.123.1 255.255.255.0

encapsulation frame-relay

ip ospf authentication-key passbsci


I entered a 12-character password, but only the first eight are showing in the router configuration. The router failed to warn us that this particular password has a limit of eight characters. As of IOS 12.4, the router now warns the admin about this, but there are plenty of routers out there that aren’t running that recent a release!

Clear-text authentication is enabled with the ip ospf authentication command. IOS Help shows there is no specific command for clear-text authentication. (Null and clear-text authentication are not the same thing.)

R1(config)#int serial0

R1(config-if)#ip ospf authentication ?

message-digest Use message-digest authentication

null Use no authentication




To set clear-text authentication, just use the basic command with no options.

R1(config-if)#ip ospf authentication


About two minutes after entering that configuration, the preexisting adjacencies go down:

R1#

00:25:38: %OSPF-5-ADJCHG: Process 1, Nbr 172.12.123.2 on Serial0 from FULL to DOWN, Neighbor Down: Dead timer expired

R1#

00:25:58: %OSPF-5-ADJCHG: Process 1, Nbr 172.12.123.3 on Serial0 from FULL to DOWN, Neighbor Down: Dead timer expired

R1#


Until we configure the spoke routers with the same config, the adjacencies will stay down – so let’s get those spokes configured!

R2(config)#interface serial0

R2(config-if)#ip ospf authentication-key passbsci

R2(config-if)#ip ospf authentication


R3(config)#interface serial0

R3(config-if)#ip ospf authentication-key passbsci

R3(config-if)#ip ospf authentication


On R1, show ip ospf neighbor verifies that the adjacencies are back up.


R1#show ip ospf neighbor


Neighbor ID Pri State Dead Time Address Interface

172.12.123.3 0 FULL/DROTHER 00:01:58 172.12.123.3 Serial0

172.12.123.2 0 FULL/DROTHER 00:01:37 172.12.123.2 Serial0


Now that you know how to configure OSPF neighbor authentication in clear text, you need to learn how to use MD5 authentication, and that just happens to be the subject of my next CCNP BSCI 642-901 exam tutorial! See you then!

Article Source: http://www.upublish.info

About the Author:
Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933
Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933, is the owner of The Bryant Advantage, home of free CCNP and CCNA tutorials, The Ultimate CCNA Study Package, and Ultimate CCNP Study Packages. You can also join his RSS feed and visit his blog, which is updated several times daily with new Cisco certification articles, free tutorials, and daily CCNA / CCNP exam questions! Details are on the website. For a FREE copy of his latest e-books, “How To Pass The CCNA” and “How To Pass The CCNP”, just visit the website! You can also get FREE CCNA and CCNP exam questions every day! Get your Microsoft Vista certification with The Bryant Advantage!

Free Articles on Certification and many other topics
Free Articles on Certification and many other topics - Add this category to your RSS Reader

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Certification Articles Via RSS!


Above are more free articles on Certification
U Publish Articles

© 2005-2008 uPublish.info All Rights Reserved.
Use of our service is protected by our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service
U Publish - Source for Free Articles - Free Reprint Articles - Free Article Publishing