11-07-2018 09:17 AM
Greetings,
I am trying to set up BYOD, but without certs. I have it working, but wanted to find out if there is a way to skip the install part on the registration process. I found this link, but it doesn't seem to work on 2.3
I know if you get to this point and close out and reconnect, you get onto the network without installing software or certs, but I want to not have to explain that to everyone.
Thanks,
Solved! Go to Solution.
11-07-2018 10:53 AM
11-07-2018 09:21 AM
11-07-2018 09:24 AM
yes, I allowed java and per the instructions I see the first page sample error out, but if I try on a phone, it still steps through all 4 steps.
11-07-2018 09:26 AM
11-07-2018 09:51 AM
ok, I think this is not what I was thinking. I got it to bypass step one and two, but all the scripts are changing is the top of step 3 now says step 1, not displaying step one.
Basically I want to step through 1>2>4 skipping step 3 install.
11-07-2018 10:10 AM
11-07-2018 10:34 AM
As you can see, I see it flip through step 1 and 2, but still shows step 3. The scripts changes it to step 1 on the top.
11-07-2018 10:40 AM
11-07-2018 10:44 AM - edited 11-07-2018 10:45 AM
Yeah, that's basically how i'm setup, but that still calls the BYOD portal and that is stepping through all 4 steps.
I can close out and reconnect and it will hit the registered rule and let them on. I may just have to change the text on step 3 to say close and reconnect, but would like to bypass it. From what i'm seeing it may not be possible.
11-07-2018 10:53 AM
11-07-2018 10:56 AM
personally, if it can exit after 2 is submitted, that should be fine also. They may need to reconnect though to stop the registration portal. I think the cert install causes the reconnect.
11-07-2018 01:54 PM
Hi @Dustin Anderson - what is BYOD "without certs" ? I thought this was the whole point of BYOD. Now you got me thinking there's a cool new way? :)
11-07-2018 02:01 PM
11-07-2018 02:21 PM
Interesting - still requires Plus license though :-( But good to know
Would it be fair to say that it's a convenient way to allow devices via 802.1X to access the network instead of using PEAP and the issue of AD password expiration causing lockouts? Since BYOD/MAC doesn't offer much in the way of security, then the main advantage can only be convenience.
I just think if you're paying for the Plus license you may as well go the whole hog. The first thing that comes to mind is that someone will clone a MAC address and get onto the network without any effort.
11-07-2018 02:47 PM
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