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Question1: Refer to the scenario.A customer has an Aruba ClearPass cluster. The customer has AOS-CX switches that implement 802.1X authentication to ClearPass Policy Manager (CPPM).Switches are using local port-access policies.The customer wants to start tunneling wired clients that pass user authentication only to an Aruba gateway cluster. The gateway cluster should assign these clients to the "eth-internet" role. The gateway should also handle assigning clients to their VLAN, which is VLAN 20.The plan for the enforcement policy and profiles is shown below:The gateway cluster has two gateways with these IP addresses:* Gateway 1o VLAN 4085 (system IP) = 10.20.4.21o VLAN 20 (users) = 10.20.20.1o VLAN 4094 (WAN) = 198.51.100.14* Gateway 2o VLAN 4085 (system IP) = 10.20.4.22o VLAN 20 (users) = 10.20.20.2o VLAN 4094 (WAN) = 198.51.100.12* VRRP on VLAN 20 = 10.20.20.254The customer requires high availability for the tunnels between the switches and the gateway cluster. If one gateway falls, the other gateway should take over its tunnels. Also, the switch should be able to discover the gateway cluster regardless of whether one of the gateways is in the cluster.Assume that you have configured the correct UBT zone and port-access role settings. However, the solution is not working.What else should you make sure to do?
Question2: You need to install a certificate on a standalone Aruba Mobility Controller (MC). The MC will need to use the certificate for the Web UI and for implementing RadSec with Aruba ClearPass Policy Manager. You have been given a certificate with these settings:Subject: CN=mc41.site94.example.com* No SANs* Issuer: CN=ca41.example.comEKUs: Server Authentication, Client AuthenticationWhat issue does this certificate have for the purposes for which the certificate is intended?
Question3: Refer to the scenario.A customer has an AOS10 architecture that is managed by Aruba Central. Aruba infrastructure devices authenticate clients to an Aruba ClearPass cluster.In Aruba Central, you are examining network traffic flows on a wireless IoT device that is categorized as"Raspberry Pi" clients. You see SSH traffic. You then check several more wireless IoT clients and see that they are sending SSH also.You want an easy way to communicate the information that an IoT client has used SSH to Aruba ClearPass Policy Manager (CPPM).What step should you take?
Question4: When would you implement BPDU protection on an AOS-CX switch port versus BPDU filtering?
Question5: Refer to the scenario.This customer is enforcing 802.1X on AOS-CX switches to Aruba ClearPass Policy Manager (CPPM). The customer wants switches to download role settings from CPPM. The "reception-domain" role must have these settings:- Assigns clients to VLAN 14 on switch 1, VLAN 24 on switch 2, and so on.- Filters client traffic as follows:- Clients are permitted full access to 10.1.5.0/24 and the Internet- Clients are denied access to 10.1.0.0/16The switch topology is shown here:How should you configure the VLAN setting for the reception role?
Question6: You are designing an Aruba ClearPass Policy Manager (CPPM) solution for a customer. You learn that the customer has a Palo Alto firewall that filters traffic between clients in the campus and the data center.Which integration can you suggest?
Question7: A customer has an AOS 10 architecture, which includes Aruba APs. Admins have recently enabled WIDS at the high level. They also enabled alerts and email notifications for several events, as shown in the exhibit.Admins are complaining that they are getting so many emails that they have to ignore them, so they are going to turn off all notifications.What is one step you could recommend trying first?
Question8: Refer to the scenario.A customer requires these rights for clients in the "medical-mobile" AOS firewall role on Aruba Mobility Controllers (MCs):Permitted to receive IP addresses with DHCP* Permitted access to DNS services from 10.8.9.7 and no other server* Permitted access to all subnets in the 10.1.0.0/16 range except denied access to 10.1.12.0/22* Denied access to other 10.0.0.0/8 subnets* Permitted access to the Internet* Denied access to the WLAN for a period of time if they send any SSH traffic* Denied access to the WLAN for a period of time if they send any Telnet traffic* Denied access to all high-risk websitesExternal devices should not be permitted to initiate sessions with "medical-mobile" clients, only send return traffic.The line below shows the effective configuration for the role.There are multiple issues with this configuration. What is one change you must make to meet the scenario requirements? (In the options, rules in a policy are referenced from top to bottom. For example,"medical-mobile" rule 1 is "ipv4 any any svc-dhcp permit," and rule 6 is "ipv4 any any any permit'.)
Question9: Refer to the scenario.A customer requires these rights for clients in the "medical-mobile" AOS firewall role on Aruba Mobility Controllers (MCs):Permitted to r* eceive IP addresses with DHCP* Permitted access to DNS services from 10.8.9.7 and no other server* Permitted access to all subnets in the 10.1.0.0/16 range except denied access to 10.1.12.0/22* Denied access to other 10.0.0.0/8 subnets* Permitted access to the Internet* Denied access to the WLAN for a period of time if they send any SSH traffic* Denied access to the WLAN for a period of time if they send any Telnet traffic* Denied access to all high-risk websitesExternal devices should not be permitted to initiate sessions with "medical-mobile" clients, only send return traffic.The exhibits below show the configuration for the role.There are multiple issues with this configuration. What is one change you must make to meet the scenario requirements? (In the options, rules in a policy are referenced from top to bottom. For example,"medical-mobile" rule 1 is "ipv4 any any svc-dhcp permit," and rule 8 is "ipv4 any any any permit".)
Question10: Refer to the exhibit.Which security issue is possibly indicated by this traffic capture?
Question11: Refer to the scenario.# Introduction to the customerYou are helping a company add Aruba ClearPass to their network, which uses Aruba network infrastructure devices.The company currently has a Windows domain and Windows CA. The Window CA issues certificates to domain computers, domain users, and servers such as domain controllers. An example of a certificate issued by the Windows CA is shown here.The company is in the process of adding Microsoft Endpoint Manager (Intune) to manage its mobile clients.The customer is maintaining the on-prem AD for now and uses Azure AD Connect to sync with Azure AD.# Requirements for issuing certificates to mobile clientsThe company wants to use ClearPass Onboard to deploy certificates automatically to mobile clients enrolled in Intune. During this process, Onboard should communicate with Azure AD to validate the clients. High availability should also be provided for this scenario; in other words, clients should be able to get certificates from Subscriber 2 if Subscriber 1 is down.The Intune admins intend to create certificate profiles that include a UPN SAN with the UPN of the user who enrolled the device.# Requirements for authenticating clientsThe customer requires all types of clients to connect and authenticate on the same corporate SSID.The company wants CPPM to use these authentication methods:* EAP-TLS to authenticate users on mobile clients registered in Intune* TEAR, with EAP-TLS as the inner method to authenticate Windows domain computers and the users on them To succeed, EAP-TLS (standalone or as a TEAP method) clients must meet these requirements:Their certificate is valid and is not revoked, as validated by OCSPThe client's username matches an account in AD# Requirements for assigning clients to rolesAfter authentication, the customer wants the CPPM to assign clients to ClearPass roles based on the following rules:* Clients with certificates issued by Onboard are assigned the "mobile-onboarded" role* Clients that have passed TEAP Method 1 are assigned the "domain-computer" role Clients in the AD group "Medical" are assigned the "medical-staff" role Clients in the AD group "Reception" are assigned to the "reception-staff" role The customer requires CPPM to assign authenticated clients to AOS firewall roles as follows:* Assign medical staff on mobile-onboarded clients to the "medical-mobile" firewall role* Assign other mobile-onboarded clients to the "mobile-other" firewall role* Assign medical staff on domain computers to the "medical-domain" firewall role* All reception staff on domain computers to the "reception-domain" firewall role* All domain computers with no valid user logged in to the "computer-only" firewall role* Deny other clients access# Other requirementsCommunications between ClearPass servers and on-prem AD domain controllers must be encrypted.# Network topologyFor the network infrastructure, this customer has Aruba APs and Aruba gateways, which are managed by Central. APs use tunneled WLANs, which tunnel traffic to the gateway cluster. The customer also has AOS-CX switches that are not managed by Central at this point.# ClearPass cluster IP addressing and hostnamesA customer's ClearPass cluster has these IP addresses:* Publisher = 10.47.47.5* Subscriber 1 = 10.47.47.6* Subscriber 2 = 10.47.47.7* Virtual IP with Subscriber 1 and Subscriber 2 = 10.47.47.8The customer's DNS server has these entries* cp.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.5* cps1.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.6* cps2.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.7* radius.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.8* onboard.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.8You cannot see flow attributes for wireless clients.What should you check?
Question12: You are reviewing an endpoint entry in ClearPass Policy Manager (CPPM) Endpoints Repository.What is a good sign that someone has been trying to gain unauthorized access to the network?
Question13: Refer to the scenario.A hospital has an AOS10 architecture that is managed by Aruba Central. The customer has deployed a pair of Aruba 9000 Series gateways with Security licenses at each clinic. The gateways implement IDS/IPS in IDS mode.The Security Dashboard shows these several recent events with the same signature, as shown below:Which step could give you valuable context about the incident?
Question14: A customer has an AOS 10-based mobility solution, which authenticates clients to Aruba ClearPass Policy Manager (CPPM). The customer has some wireless devices that support WPA2 in personal mode only.How can you meet these devices' needs but improve security?
Question15: Which element helps to lay the foundation for solid network security forensics?
Question16: Refer to the scenario.A customer is migrating from on-prem AD to Azure AD as its sole domain solution. The customer also manages both wired and wireless devices with Microsoft Endpoint Manager (Intune).The customer wants to improve security for the network edge. You are helping the customer design a ClearPass deployment for this purpose. Aruba network devices will authenticate wireless and wired clients to an Aruba ClearPass Policy Manager (CPPM) cluster (which uses version 6.10).The customer has several requirements for authentication. The clients should only pass EAP-TLS authentication if a query to Azure AD shows that they have accounts in Azure AD. To further refine the clients' privileges, ClearPass also should use information collected by Intune to make access control decisions.The customer wants you to configure CPPM to collect information from Intune on demand during the authentication process.What should you tell the Intune admins about the certificates issued to clients?
Question17: Refer to the scenario.# Introduction to the customerYou are helping a company add Aruba ClearPass to their network, which uses Aruba network infrastructure devices.The company currently has a Windows domain and Windows CA. The Window CA issues certificates to domain computers, domain users, and servers such as domain controllers. An example of a certificate issued by the Windows CA is shown here.The company is in the process of adding Microsoft Endpoint Manager (Intune) to manage its mobile clients.The customer is maintaining the on-prem AD for now and uses Azure AD Connect to sync with Azure AD.# Requirements for issuing certificates to mobile clientsThe company wants to use ClearPass Onboard to deploy certificates automatically to mobile clients enrolled in Intune. During this process, Onboard should communicate with Azure AD to validate the clients. High availability should also be provided for this scenario; in other words, clients should be able to get certificates from Subscriber 2 if Subscriber 1 is down.The Intune admins intend to create certificate profiles that include a UPN SAN with the UPN of the user who enrolled the device.# Requirements for authenticating clientsThe customer requires all types of clients to connect and authenticate on the same corporate SSID.The company wants CPPM to use these authentication methods:* EAP-TLS to authenticate users on mobile clients registered in Intune* TEAR, with EAP-TLS as the inner method to authenticate Windows domain computers and the users on them To succeed, EAP-TLS (standalone or as a TEAP method) clients must meet these requirements:Their certificate is valid and is not revoked, as validated by OCSPThe client's username matches an account in AD# Requirements for assigning clients to rolesAfter authentication, the customer wants the CPPM to assign clients to ClearPass roles based on the following rules:* Clients with certificates issued by Onboard are assigned the "mobile-onboarded" role* Clients that have passed TEAP Method 1 are assigned the "domain-computer" role Clients in the AD group "Medical" are assigned the "medical-staff" role Clients in the AD group "Reception" are assigned to the "reception-staff" role The customer requires CPPM to assign authenticated clients to AOS firewall roles as follows:* Assign medical staff on mobile-onboarded clients to the "medical-mobile" firewall role* Assign other mobile-onboarded clients to the "mobile-other" firewall role* Assign medical staff on domain computers to the "medical-domain" firewall role* All reception staff on domain computers to the "reception-domain" firewall role* All domain computers with no valid user logged in to the "computer-only" firewall role* Deny other clients access# Other requirementsCommunications between ClearPass servers and on-prem AD domain controllers must be encrypted.# Network topologyFor the network infrastructure, this customer has Aruba APs and Aruba gateways, which are managed by Central. APs use tunneled WLANs, which tunnel traffic to the gateway cluster. The customer also has AOS-CX switches that are not managed by Central at this point.# ClearPass cluster IP addressing and hostnamesA customer's ClearPass cluster has these IP addresses:* Publisher = 10.47.47.5* Subscriber 1 = 10.47.47.6* Subscriber 2 = 10.47.47.7* Virtual IP with Subscriber 1 and Subscriber 2 = 10.47.47.8The customer's DNS server has these entries* cp.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.5* cps1.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.6* cps2.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.7* radius.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.8* onboard.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.8The customer has now decided that it needs CPPM to assign certain mobile-onboarded devices to a"nurse-call" AOS user role. These are mobile-onboarded devices that are communicating with IP address10.1.18.12 using port 4343.What are the prerequisites for fulfilling this requirement?
Question18: A customer requires a secure solution for connecting remote users to the corporate main site. You are designing a client-to-site virtual private network (VPN) based on Aruba VIA and Aruba Mobility Controllers acting as VPN Concentrators (VPNCs). Remote users will first use the VIA client to contact the VPNCs and obtain connection settings.The users should only be allowed to receive the settings if they are the customer's "RemoteEmployees" AD group. After receiving the settings, the VIA clients will automatically establish VPN connections, authenticating to CPPM with certificates.What should you do to help ensure that only authorized users obtain VIA connection settings?
Question19: Refer to the scenario.# Introduction to the customerYou are helping a company add Aruba ClearPass to their network, which uses Aruba network infrastructure devices.The company currently has a Windows domain and Windows CA. The Window CA issues certificates to domain computers, domain users, and servers such as domain controllers. An example of a certificate issued by the Windows CA is shown here.The company is in the process of adding Microsoft Endpoint Manager (Intune) to manage its mobile clients.The customer is maintaining the on-prem AD for now and uses Azure AD Connect to sync with Azure AD.# Requirements for issuing certificates to mobile clientsThe company wants to use ClearPass Onboard to deploy certificates automatically to mobile clients enrolled in Intune. During this process, Onboard should communicate with Azure AD to validate the clients. High availability should also be provided for this scenario; in other words, clients should be able to get certificates from Subscriber 2 if Subscriber 1 is down.The Intune admins intend to create certificate profiles that include a UPN SAN with the UPN of the user who enrolled the device.# Requirements for authenticating clientsThe customer requires all types of clients to connect and authenticate on the same corporate SSID.The company wants CPPM to use these authentication methods:* EAP-TLS to authenticate users on mobile clients registered in Intune* TEAR, with EAP-TLS as the inner method to authenticate Windows domain computers and the users on them To succeed, EAP-TLS (standalone or as a TEAP method) clients must meet these requirements:Their certificate is valid and is not revoked, as validated by OCSPThe client's username matches an account in AD# Requirements for assigning clients to rolesAfter authentication, the customer wants the CPPM to assign clients to ClearPass roles based on the following rules:* Clients with certificates issued by Onboard are assigned the "mobile-onboarded" role* Clients that have passed TEAP Method 1 are assigned the "domain-computer" role Clients in the AD group "Medical" are assigned the "medical-staff" role Clients in the AD group "Reception" are assigned to the "reception-staff" role The customer requires CPPM to assign authenticated clients to AOS firewall roles as follows:* Assign medical staff on mobile-onboarded clients to the "medical-mobile" firewall role* Assign other mobile-onboarded clients to the "mobile-other" firewall role* Assign medical staff on domain computers to the "medical-domain" firewall role* All reception staff on domain computers to the "reception-domain" firewall role* All domain computers with no valid user logged in to the "computer-only" firewall role* Deny other clients access# Other requirementsCommunications between ClearPass servers and on-prem AD domain controllers must be encrypted.# Network topologyFor the network infrastructure, this customer has Aruba APs and Aruba gateways, which are managed by Central. APs use tunneled WLANs, which tunnel traffic to the gateway cluster. The customer also has AOS-CX switches that are not managed by Central at this point.# ClearPass cluster IP addressing and hostnamesA customer's ClearPass cluster has these IP addresses:* Publisher = 10.47.47.5* Subscriber 1 = 10.47.47.6* Subscriber 2 = 10.47.47.7* Virtual IP with Subscriber 1 and Subscriber 2 = 10.47.47.8The customer's DNS server has these entries* cp.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.5* cps1.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.6* cps2.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.7* radius.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.8* onboard.acnsxtest.com = 10.47.47.8You have imported the root certificate for the Windows CA to the ClearPass CA Trust list.Which usages should you add to it based on the scenario requirements?
Question20: Refer to the exhibit.A customer requires protection against ARP poisoning in VLAN 4. Below are listed all settings for VLAN 4 and the VLAN 4 associated physical interfaces on the AOS-CX access layer switch:What is one issue with this configuration?
Question21: Refer to the exhibit.Aruba ClearPass Policy Manager (CPPM) is using the settings shown in the exhibit. You reference the tag shown in the exhibit in enforcement policies related to NASes of several types, including Aruba APs, Aruba gateways, and AOS-CX switches.What should you do to ensure that clients are reclassified and receive the correct treatment based on the tag?
Question22: A customer has an AOS 10 architecture, consisting of Aruba AP and AOS-CX switches, managed by Aruba Central. The customer wants to obtain information about the clients, such as their general category and OS.What should you explain?
Question23: Refer to the scenario.A customer has an AOS10 architecture that is managed by Aruba Central. Aruba infrastructure devices authenticate clients to an Aruba ClearPass cluster.In Aruba Central, you are examining network traffic flows on a wireless IoT device that is categorized as"Raspberry Pi" clients. You see SSH traffic. You then check several more wireless IoT clients and see that they are sending SSH also.You want a fast way to find a list of all the IoT clients that have used SSH.What step can you take?
Question24: You are setting up Aruba ClearPass Policy Manager (CPPM) to enforce EAP-TLS authentication with Active Directory as the authentication source. The company wants to prevent users with disabled accounts from connecting even if those users still have valid certificates.As the first part of meeting these criteria, what should you do to enable CPPM to determine where accounts are enabled in AD or not?
Question25: Refer to the scenario.A customer is using an AOS 10 architecture with Aruba APs and Aruba gateways (two per site). Admins have implemented auto-site clustering for gateways with the default gateway mode disabled. WLANs use tunneled mode to the gateways.The WLAN security is WPA3-Enterprise with authentication to an Aruba ClearPass Policy Manager (CPPM) cluster VIP. RADIUS communications use RADIUS, not RadSec.CPPM is using the service shown in the exhibits.Which step can you take to improve operations during a possible gateway failover event?
Question26: Refer to the scenario.A customer requires these rights for clients in the "medical-mobile" AOS firewall role on Aruba Mobility Controllers (MCs):Permitted to receive IP addresses with DHCP* Permitted access to DNS services from 10.8.9.7 and no other server* Permitted access to all subnets in the 10.1.0.0/16 range except denied access to 10.1.12.0/22* Denied access to other 10.0.0.0/8 subnets* Permitted access to the Internet* Denied access to the WLAN for a period of time if they send any SSH traffic* Denied access to the WLAN for a period of time if they send any Telnet traffic* Denied access to all high-risk websitesExternal devices should not be permitted to initiate sessions with "medical-mobile" clients, only send return traffic.The exhibits below show the configuration for the role.There are multiple issues with the configuration.What is one of the changes that you must make to the policies to meet the scenario requirements? (In the options, rules in a policy are referenced from top to bottom. For example, "medical-mobile" rule 1 is "ipv4 any any svc-dhcp permit," and rule 8 is "ipv4 any any any permit'.)
Question27: A customer has an AOS 10-based solution, including Aruba APs. The customer wants to use Cloud Auth to authenticate non-802.1X capable IoT devices.What is a prerequisite for setting up the device role mappings?
Question28: A customer's admins have added RF Protect licenses and enabled WIDS for a customer's AOS 8-based solution. The customer wants to use the built-in capabilities of APs without deploying dedicated air monitors (AMs). Admins tested rogue AP detection by connecting an unauthorized wireless AP to a switch. The rogue AP was not detected even after several hours.What is one point about which you should ask?