autoMAC: A Tool for Automating Network Moves, Adds, and Changes

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autoMAC: A Tool for Automating Network Moves, Adds, and Changes. Christopher J. Tengi Princeton University . What’s the problem?. Over 1500 hosts Over 100 IP subnets/VLANs 672 user switch ports (currently) 388 wall boxes 1072 patch points. 1072 Patch Points. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of autoMAC: A Tool for Automating Network Moves, Adds, and Changes

autoMAC: A Tool for Automating Network Moves, Adds, and Changes

Christopher J. Tengi

Princeton University

<tengi@CS.Princeton.EDU>

What’s the problem?

Over 1500 hosts Over 100 IP subnets/VLANs 672 user switch ports (currently) 388 wall boxes 1072 patch points

1072 Patch Points

Why subnets?

Why not a flat network? Broadcast domains User segregation Access Control

How we used to do it

Email host registration requests Manual host database entry Manual patch installation Switch re-configuration

So, what’s wrong with that?

Users never get it right the first time Manual host entry is prone to errors Patch panel diving is a pain Did you remember to set the port

VLAN? Did you save the switch config?

What we wanted

Automation! Less user interaction :-) Better accuracy Static switch configuration

What we did

Automate the host database Automate switch port VLAN

assignment Keep everyone in the right place

Automating the host database

Move to a web-based registration system

Use a daemon to process requests Have the daemon rebuild all the

database extracts

Automating VLAN assignment

No more manual switch configuration Any port, any VLAN, any time Use the host MAC address as the key Registration VLAN for unknown hosts

The nitty-gritty

Tools we used

Existing host database FreeRADIUS NetReg

Tools we used - Host DB

Originally only for administrators Very little field validation Input through a ‘vi’ -based interface Extracts generated manually with

‘make’

Tools we used - FreeRADIUS

Config files generated from Host DB Originally implemented for Cisco APs Our user switches could “speak”

RADIUS

Tools we used - NetReg

Web-based data input Two to choose from

Carnegie Mellon University Southwestern University

Integration: Tying it all together

Integration - Host database

Web registration form Field validation on the form Automate request processing

Integration - RADIUS server

Use MAC address to lookup VLAN Add “tunnel” A/V pairs to accept

response Unknown MAC addresses are rejected

Integration - Hardware

First, get a vendor to write code for you Why not 802.1X? Known hosts always land on the right VLAN

Locally registered Mobile IP

Unknown hosts land on the registration VLAN

Integration - NetReg Server

Listening on the registration VLAN Answers all DHCP requests Specifies itself as DNS server/gateway Answers any HTTP request

Requires a CS username/password Presents the host registration form Sends the completed form for

processing

Future Enhancements

Virus/patch scanning on the registration VLAN

Automatic isolation of newly-infected hosts

Expand registration VLAN concept to 802.11b

Conclusions

Automation is a good thing Open Source Software is invaluable Sometimes you can get what you want

Acknowledgements

Princeton CS Technical Staff Jon Finke Rob Kolstad

Availability

http://www.CS.Princeton.EDU/autoMAC/