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01 - Examine Endpoint Data

The document discusses profiling endpoints in Cisco ISE. It examines the endpoint data collected since enabling profiling on the ISE server. It looks at the attributes identified for two specific endpoints - a virtual WLC and a Windows 7 guest PC, counting over 70 attributes for the guest PC.

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Nguyen Le
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views1 page

01 - Examine Endpoint Data

The document discusses profiling endpoints in Cisco ISE. It examines the endpoint data collected since enabling profiling on the ISE server. It looks at the attributes identified for two specific endpoints - a virtual WLC and a Windows 7 guest PC, counting over 70 attributes for the guest PC.

Uploaded by

Nguyen Le
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as TXT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Hello.

In this video, we will examine the endpoint data collected since enabling
profiling on Cisco ISE. We will start from the ISE admin portal by navigating to
Context Visibility and then Endpoints. Here is a list of endpoints that have been
learned since enabling profiling on the server. As a reminder, I can sort this list
on any column heading in either ascending or descending order.
As you can see by the endpoint profile, the first endpoint in the list is the
virtual WLC in the lab. I will click on its MAC address to see more details about
that endpoint. I'm interested in what attributes have been identified or assigned
to this endpoint. So from here, I'll click on the Attributes tab. In the General
Attributes section, I can see the endpoint policy assigned and also that the
identity group assignment has been based on profiling.
If I scroll down the page to see more under Other Attributes, I can see that the
endpoint source was an SNMP query probe. After scrolling all the way to the bottom
of the page, I have counted a total of 21 attributes listed under General
Attributes for this endpoint. Clicking the Endpoints tab takes me back to the list
of endpoints.
Now, I'll go to the guest PC in the lab by opening up the lab topology map and then
clicking the icon for the guest PC. To save some time, I've already logged on to
the guest PC as admin. And I've already opened the Windows 7 Network and Sharing
Center page.
Currently, the NIC shows as disconnected. I'll click on Change Adapter Settings.
And I can see that the NIC has been disabled. I'll right-click and enable the NIC
now. After a few moments, it shows that it is now connected to the demo.local
network.
Right-clicking again but now selecting Status opens another dialog box. If I click
on Details here, I can see that the NIC has been assigned an IP address of
10.1.50.201. Now, I'll close all of these dialog boxes and return to the ISE admin
portal on my admin PC. I'm still on the list of endpoints, so I'll refresh the list
to ensure that the entry for the guest PC is up to date.
It shows as the third entry in the list. I will click on this entry and then view
the attributes for this Windows 7 PC. I'll go through them slowly, and you can
pause the video if you want to look closer at any particular attribute. But there
are more than 70 attributes listed for this endpoint.

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