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thomas
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee

 

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How to Use These Checklists

 

These checklists serve as guides to help you understand the various requirements, components, technologies, and organizational efforts required for a successful design and deployment of the Cisco Identity Services Engine (ISE). Answering the following organizational and operational questions will help you understand some of the security requirements, business processes, and group dynamics that will impact the integration and deployment of segmentation in your network.

 
For an offline/printed copy of this document, simply choose Options > Printer Friendly Page. You may then Print or Print to PDF or copy and paste to Word or any other document format you like.

 

Planning Checklists

Business Objectives

Ultimately, all security policies directly reflect the business' need to minimize the risks and threats to daily business operations and brand. Many of these are preventative measures and some may required by regulations. Identifying these business-critical needs can help you to quickly establish your priorities and policies for Who, What, and Where your network is secured.

  • What laws or regulations subject your business to audits that are impacted by network security?
  • Have you recently had network security incidents that impacted your business operations affected brand reputation?
  • What keeps your chief information security officer awake at night?
  • What and where are your most critical assets that need protection on the network?
  • What do you feel are the weakest links in your network security today?

 

Organizational

After establishing the your business objectives for network security, you will need to understand everyone involved for implementation. While the underlying protocols and mechanisms that ISE uses to control access to the network work at Layers 2 & 3, you would be surprised how many deployment difficulties occur at "Layer 8". This is due to how ISE unifies access across wired, wireless and VPN networks and performs asset visibility, compliance and threat control requiring the collaboration of many network and IT departments.

 

  • Who are the organizational stakeholders required for a successful deployment and operations? For example: desktop services, network engineering, network security, domain administrators, certificate administrators, desktop support, and so on.
  • Are different departments or teams required to configure and maintain different parts of the access control system from the endpoints and agents to network devices to policy enforcement to user or asset databases to security applications?
  • Are these groups driven by a common CxO vision, or do they work independently?
  • Which group(s) are responsible for policy creation and enforcement?
  • What is the quorum of policy decision-makers for policy changes?

 

 

Security Policy Creation and Maintenance

Please describe your existing and desired network access policies. Include the authorization and handling of:

  • Managed users including unique requirements for different groups and roles
  • Unmanaged users: guests, contractors, extranets, labs, and so on
  • Policies for various network access methods like wired, wireless, VPN, and virtual desktops
  • Different locations: sites, buildings, floors, and so on
  • Agentless devices: IP phones, printers, and so on
  • Will network access authorizations be based on endpoint or user identity, endpoint posture, or both?
  • What technologies will you use for enforcing network access controls: VLANs, ACLs, or software-defined segmentation?

 

Scale

  • How many total locations are in your deployment?
  • How many concurrent endpoints do you expect to see on the network at any time?
  • How many ISE nodes will be needed? What would be the best locations within your network to place the various ISE nodes?
  • Will you first test all required scenarios in a lab proof of concept (PoC) or limited production pilot?
  • Will you first monitor and identity users and endpoints to gain visibility and capability or configuration information before applying enforcement?
  • Do you have high-risk areas that you will enforce first?
  • What is your plan to expand beyond the pilot to your entire organization?

 

Public Key Infrastructure (PKI)

  • Have you already deployed an enterprise PKI or certificate authority (CA)?  With which vendor?
  • If not, do you expect to install and manage one or purchase individual certificates from a public CA vendor?
  • How much will it cost annually per server certificate?
  • Each ISE node will require an individual certificate based on the full-qualified domain (FQDN) name of the node.
  • What is the process for obtaining a digital certificate within your organization?
  • Self-signed certificates are not recommended for production deployments. If you are unable to use public or enterprise CA-signed certificates, does your organization fully understand the long-term usability, support, migration, and scaling issues?

 

Directory Services

  • Will you use usernames and passwords or certificates to identify users and devices?
  • Will you integrate with existing identity stores like Microsoft Active Directory? Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP)? RSA SecurID tokens?
  • Do you have multiple identity domains or forests to authenticate against? How many?
  • Will your existing identity store clusters scale to support the load from network authentication?

 

Network Access Devices (NADs)

  • Which edges of your network do you want to authenticate with ISE? Wired? Wireless? VPN?
  • Do the relevant NADs have the software recommended for the TrustSec solution? Refer to http://cisco.com/go/trustsec for the latest recommended network devices and respective software versions.
  • Does your existing hardware support the recommended software versions and the required TrustSec features?

 

Managed Endpoints

  • Do you know how many managed network endpoints are present on your network today?
  • Do you already use 802.1X supplicants from Cisco or Microsoft? Wired or wireless or both?
  • Will the desired 802.1X supplicant require a software purchase, upgrade, or OS service pack?
  • Which authentication types are required or preferred?
  • What additional security software is required for an endpoint to be compliant?
  • Do you have enough security software licenses (AV, HIPS, and so on) for all required endpoints?

 

Assets

  • Do you have a method for automatically identifying and authorizing agentless endpoints on your network? MAC Authentication Bypass (MAB) or 802.1X or endpoint profiling?
  • Have you identified the total number of agentless devices and device types in your network?
  • What is your method of identifying, classifying, and authorizing agentless endpoints?
  • What are the expected operational costs of manual MAB or endpoint registration system?

 

Cisco Identity Services Engine (ISE)

  • Will you need to migrate from an existing Access Control System (ACS) or Network Admission Control (NAC) appliance deployment?
  • How many ISE nodes will you need to scale the deployment based on your organization size, network availability requirements, revalidation frequency, and protocol choice? Consult the TrustSec Design and Implementation Guide for how to calculate this.
  • Will any load-balancing hardware or software be necessary for handling high numbers of concurrent authorizations?

 

Guest Services

  • What is your security policy for guests, visitors, or even employees who cannot authenticate via 802.1X or MAB?
  • Will you need to migrate from an existing guest portal such as the Cisco NAC Guest Server?
  • Who will be allowed to sponsor the guest accounts? Lobby staff, any employees, or self-registration?
  • What are the different guest service profiles you will allow sponsors to provision? Time-of-day or time-from-first-login?
  • What information will you require your guests to provide in exchange for network access?
  • How will you audit sponsors, provisioned accounts, and account usage?

 

Monitoring, Reporting, and Troubleshooting

  • What is your existing monitoring and reporting application or toolset?
  • What are your long-term storage requirements for all of these new logs and events?

 

Communications

It is best to clearly communicate a change in your network access policy so noncompliant users are not surprised by new security and software requirements, access restrictions, or URL redirections.

  • Do you have clear authority from management to block, limit, and redirect noncompliant endpoints and users?
  • Have you raised awareness (need, benefit) for this network access change to all stakeholders and users?
  • Are the responsible groups ready for a unified response to noncompliant users?
  • Will these network security changes be communicated via multiple channels, including email, intranet, remediation site(s), and support desks?

 

Support Desk

  • Is the support staff trained for any new security technology, process, and policy?
  • How will the support staff troubleshoot support calls related to ISE-based RADIUS authentications?
  • Is any internal tool or application development required for ISE-related support?

 

 

 

 

Deployment Checklists

Based on your answers to the questions in the Planning Checklist above, complete the following Deployment Checklist forms. These tables will be valuable references to field engineers to expedite initial configurations in Cisco ISE and network devices.

 

 

Network Services

Document all the basic network services and the hosts that provide them in your network. This will aid you in the creation of access control list (ACL) exceptions and ISE service configuration.

 

Role

DNS Names

Network  Address(es)

Protocol

Details

CA Server(s)        
DNS Server(s)     UDP:53  
DHCP Server(s)        
NTP Server(s)     UDP:123  
FTP Servers     TCP:21 username:password
Proxy Servers (to Internet)     HTTP/S:# username:password
TFTP/PXE Boot Servers     UDP:69 username:password
Syslog Servers     UDP:514 username:password
Identity Store: Active Directory       username:password
Identity Store: LDAP        
Identity Store: OTP        
ISE Admin Node     HTTP (TCP:80)
HTTPS (TCP:443)

CLI:  admin: cisco

Web:  admin: cisco

RADIUS Key:

ISE Policy Service Node     HTTP (TCP:80)
HTTPS (TCP:443)
RADIUS (UDP:1812)
RADIUS (UDP:1813)
CoA: 1700 & 3799

CLI:  admin: cisco

Web:  admin: cisco

RADIUS Key:

 

 

 

Digital Certificates

 

Create and use CA-signed certificates for your TrustSec infrastructure to minimize long-term problems due to untrusted, self-signed certificates.

 

Component

FQDN

Org Unit

Org

City

State

Country

(2 letter)

Key Size
(max)

Cert
Format

Certificate Authority                
ISE Admin #1                
ISE Admin #2                
ISE PSN #1                
ISE PSN #2                

 

 

Network Devices

Use the Network Devices List to document each type of network access device in your network by model, supervisor (if appropriate), and software version. It is highly recommended that you upgrade all switches to the latest validated software version in the ISE Compatibility Guides and TrustSec Platform Support Matrix to avoid feature and behavioral inconsistencies.  Each network device IP address must be added to ISE unless you use wildcard entries.

 

Model

Cisco IOS® Software Version

Management IP Address

Management DNS Name

       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       

 

 

Security Policy

Describe your major network access scenarios and how you will use contextual, network-based attributes to enforce secure access. Consider scenarios such as user versus endpoint authentication, managed endpoint posture, unmanaged endpoint identification, role-based identification and segmentation (employees, contractors, guests, and so on), or location-based differentiation. These unique authorization states will map directly to your final ISE authorization rules and policies. Below are some pseudo-policy examples.

 

Scenario Name

Conditions (Who, What, When, Where, How)

Authorization

Result

Corporate Workstation

Active Directory Domain Computers

Workstation_Access

Phones Profiled IP Phones Voice_Network
Printers Profiled Printers Printer_Network
Employee AD Employees Employee_Access
BYOD AD Employees & Registered Device Internet_Only
Guest Guest SSID & Sponsored Guest Internet_Only
Default - Guest_Redirect

 

 

Enforcement States

Identify the specific RADIUS authorization attributes for each unique authorization states you identified in your Authorization Poliicy. This will help you understand the subtle differences between each enforcement state and identify the number of unique ACLs or Scaleable Group Tags that you must create.

 

RADIUS Attributes

Authorization Profiles

Workstation_Access

VLAN: Data

dACL: ACL-WORKSTATIONS

Session Timeout: 86400 (24 hours)

Voice_Network

Voice VLAN Permission: Yes

Session Timeout: 86400 (24 hours)

Printer_Network

VLAN: Data

dACL: ACL-PRINT-SERVERS

Session Timeout: 86400 (24 hours)

Employee_Access

VLAN: Data

dACL: ACL-EMPLOYEE-ACCESS

Session Timeout: 28800 (8 hours)

Internet_Only

VLAN: Data

dACL: ACL-INTERNET-ONLY

Session Timeout: 28800 (8 hours)

Guest_Redirect

URL-Redirect: ACL-CENTRAL-WEBAUTH

URL-Redirect-ACL: ACL-URL-GUEST-REDIRECT

Session Timeout: 600 (10 minutes)

 

 

 

Endpoints

In the Endpoint Details table, specify how all the various network endpoints will be authenticated when TrustSec is enabled. Possible authentication methods include 802.1X, MAB, and web authentication.

 

Endpoint

Authentication Method

Notes

Windows XP SP# (native supplicant)    
Windows Vista SP# (native supplicant)    
Windows 7 (native supplicant)    
Windows 7 (AnyConnect®)    
Windows XP SP3    
Apple Mac OS X 10.7.x (native supplicant)    
Linux    
Apple iOS devices    
Android devices    
Cisco IP Phones    
Cisco Access Point    
Printers    
Guests    
PXE Boot    

 

 

Test Scenarios

Based on your desired security policy, anticipated endpoints, and enforcement states, create a list of scenarios to test in your lab or small proof of concept deployment before deploying at scale. Table 7 lists some suggested scenarios to get you started.

 

Scenario

Result (Pass/ Fail)

Comments

MAB    
Phone    
Printer    
Other    
IOT: Camera    
     
MAB+Profiling    
User Authentication to Active Directory Domain    
Single Sign-On (SSO): Username/Password    
     
Windows Machine Authentication (Wired)    
802.1X Windows Native Supplicant Machine Authentication using PEAP-MSCHAPv2    
802.1X Windows Native Supplicant Machine Authentication using EAP-TLS    
802.1X Windows Native Supplicant Machine Authentication on Docking Station    
802.1X Windows Native Supplicant Machine Authentication behind IP Phone    
802.1X Windows Native Supplicant Machine Authentication in VM on PC in Docking Station behind IP Phone    
802.1X Windows Native Supplicant Machine Authentication after Sleep/Hibernation    
     
Windows User Authentication (Wired)    
802.1X Windows Native Supplicant Username+Password (PEAP-MSCHAPv2)    
802.1X Windows Native Supplicant User Certificate (EAP-TLS)    
802.1X Windows Native Supplicant User Authentication: Not domain-joined    
802.1X Windows Native Supplicant User Authentication: Domain-joined    
802.1X Windows Native Supplicant User Authentication on Docking Station    
802.1X Windows Native Supplicant User Authentication behind IP Phone    
802.1X Windows Native Supplicant User Authentication in VM on PC in Docking Station behind IP Phone    
802.1X Windows Native Machine Authentication after Sleep/Hibernation    
Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) Login with Windows Native Supplicant    
     
Windows with AnyConnect (Wired and/or Wireless)    
802.1X AnyConnect NAM using PEAP-MSCHAPv2    
802.1X AnyConnect NAM using EAP-TLS    
802.1X AnyConnect NAM EAP Chaining Machine (EAP-FAST: Certificate)    
802.1X AnyConnect NAM EAP Chaining User (EAP-FAST: Username)    
802.1X AnyConnect NAM EAP Chaining Both (EAP-FAST: Machine Certificate + Username)    
     
Easy Connect    
802.1X + Passive-ID - Post    
802.1X + Passive-ID - Post    
Easy Connect - Post    
     
Wireless    
802.1X iOS    
802.1X Android    
802.1X Other Mobile OS    
802.1X BYOD post-onboarding using EAP-TLS    
802.1X Anonymous    
     
Guest Access (Wired and/or Wireless)    
Guest: Hotspot (with/out Passcode, AUP, etc.)    
Guest: Registration & Login    
Guest: Sponsor User Creation    
Guest: Sponsored User Login    
WebAuth: Employee login with AD    
CWA Chaining (Cert) Initial WebAuth pending    
CWA Chaining (Cert)    
CWA Chaining (Username) WebAuth pending    
CWA Chaining (Username)    
     
Posture    
EAP Chaining Both (Machine cert + username) Posture pending    
EAP Chaining Both (Machine cert + username) Posture compliant    
     
VPN    
AnyConnect SSL VPN Username+Password    
AnyConnect SSL VPN Certificate    
     

 

 

Comments
thomas
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee
Couple of options: * Print and Save as PDF * Select All content, Copy, Paste into Word or your favorite Editor The Lithium platform does not appear to offer any other options for downloading only the content as PDF, HTML or .DOCX.
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