06-18-2018 03:13 PM
Hi,
I have a quick question. Can ISE (PSN) gather IP-to-MAC address bindings using its own local ARP table if it is directly connected (L2 adjacent or same VLAN/subnet) to end-points it is scanning with NMAP, hence avoid having configuring switches and probes for profiling?
If that can happen could customers use this as an alternative design if they don’t want to configure any commands for ISE probes on switches?
I have read the below from the ISE Profiling Design Guide – not sure I have interpreted this correctly hence my question to you. Can we view the local ARP cache of a PSN node by the way?
""" START """"
"""" END '""""
Kind Regards,
Kostas
Solved! Go to Solution.
06-19-2018 05:35 AM
Per direct email response to same query...
I believe the info provided for origin al guide is still valid, although honestly I have not tested such in years. The assumption is that PSN is rarely or never L2 adjacent to the endpoints it supports. I would not rely on that assumption to avoid basic profiling.
If RADIUS is configured to ISE, then ISE will acquire MAC and IPs via Calling Station ID and Framed IP.
ARP cache alone will not acquire DHCP data.
I do not understand the need to upgrade switches to collect profile data. You may be confusing basic profile collection with Device Sensor feature, an advanced option to optimize profile data collection from switches/wireless controllers. Device Sensor is not a requirement, although it is recommended to optimize collection and reduce ISE load.
Craig
06-19-2018 05:35 AM
Per direct email response to same query...
I believe the info provided for origin al guide is still valid, although honestly I have not tested such in years. The assumption is that PSN is rarely or never L2 adjacent to the endpoints it supports. I would not rely on that assumption to avoid basic profiling.
If RADIUS is configured to ISE, then ISE will acquire MAC and IPs via Calling Station ID and Framed IP.
ARP cache alone will not acquire DHCP data.
I do not understand the need to upgrade switches to collect profile data. You may be confusing basic profile collection with Device Sensor feature, an advanced option to optimize profile data collection from switches/wireless controllers. Device Sensor is not a requirement, although it is recommended to optimize collection and reduce ISE load.
Craig
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