DIRECTORY-AS-A-SERVICE (DAAS)
OpenLDAP WiFi Authentication and RADIUS Support
As WiFi networks become more ubiquitous, IT admins are searching for ways that OpenLDAP can backend their WiFi authentication through RADIUS support.
Easily one of the more influential advancements to the network, WiFi enables wireless network communications to systems and mobile devices. Of course, while it adds to convenience and efficiency, WiFi needs to be heavily managed to ensure security. This can be done with RADIUS-as-a-Service.
As WiFi networks become more ubiquitous, IT admins are searching for ways that OpenLDAP can backend their WiFi authentication through RADIUS support.
Connecting the WiFi infrastructure to the core directory service should be a top priority for organizations desiring to increase WiFi security.
Apple Open Directory or OpenLDAP? There are many factors to consider, most especially the shift to a cloud-based environment and web applications.
Connecting your WiFi infrastructure to Apple Open Directory through RADIUS integration? With third-party apps you can do that, and reduce IT workload.
In a heterogenous and cloud-based environment, JumpCloud's Directory-as-a-Service surpasses Apple Open Directory in multiple functions.
In a heterogenous environment, JumpCloud’s cloud-based directory service can be an alternative to Apple Open Directory (OD).
RADIUS-as-a-Service solutions are taking the heavy lifting out of advanced access control for WiFi. Read on to find out how.
For WiFi authentication, ntegrating RADIUS and LDAP functionality with a directory service is typically time-consuming. Not so with DaaS.
RADIUS protocol is a key component for securing an organization's WiFi. The downside is the maintenance. Now, there's a solution: Cloud-based RADIUS.
A SaaS-based FreeRADIUS solution solves the problems IT admins face when setting up and managing a RADIUS server: taking it out of IT's hands.
WiFi authentication requires a great deal of IT management, and while the increased security is worth the effort, there is another way.
Wouldn’t it be nice if we could have cloud hosted WiFi infrastructure so that there was literally nothing on-premises? Consider Radius-as-a-Service.