Enforce NAP on the Client Side
The last step is to configure the client to work with NAP. In fact, you must enforce the use of NAP on clients. You can accomplish this task through the NAP Client console, Group Policy, or Netsh (which has the new context for NAP configuration). Because you can’t configure domain or OU Group Policy Objects (GPOs) to include NAP settings from Windows 2003, using Group Policy requires you to edit GPOs from Vista or Server 2008’s Group Policy Management Console (GPMC). Use the Administrative Tools’ Services console to start the Network Access Protection Agent service, changing this service’s startup type to Automatic (which you can also use Group Policy to accomplish).

On Vista, start the Microsoft Management Console (MMC) and add the NAP Client Configuration snap-in. Alternatively, select Run from the Start menu, and enter

napclcfg.msc

Select the Enforcement Clients node in the left task pane, double-click DHCP Quarantine Enforcement client on the right side, select Enable this enforcement client, and click OK. From now on, the client should be able to use NAP.

To use Netsh to configure NAP on a client, go to the command line and enter

Netsh nap client set enforcement ID = 79617

If you want to use XP SP2, you must install the NAP client software for XP Beta 3, which makes the OS NAP capable.

Run a NAP Test
To test NAP on a client, configure a Vista client and join it to your domain. Obtain an IP address from the DHCP server, with the firewall in the default active state. Ensure that you have a regular IP address, from the scope that you created in earlier steps, with regular scope options. To verify that you have all the necessary DHCP information (e.g., DNS servers, gateway, WINS servers), go to the command line and enter

ipconfig /all

Figure 9 shows the output.

Next, manually disable the Vista firewall. In a few seconds, the DHCP enforcement client will perform autoremediation to correct the client’s system state, thus reenabling the firewall. To demonstrate a quarantined client, go to Server 2008’s NAP console and configure Windows Security Health Validator to require an antivirus application to be installed and updated. If you don’t have an antivirus solution on the Vista client, run ipconfig /release followed by ipconfig /renew to quarantine your client and receive a taskbar quarantine notification message. Run ipconfig /all again, and note that your computer is configured with the options you specified in DHCP’s Network Access Protection class. As Figure 10 shows, all you have is an IP address and subnet mask—no Internet access, and no access to other hosts on the network.

An Effective Solution
Maintaining computers’ health is one of the most time-consuming challenges that any network administrator faces. This complex task is made even more difficult if you must maintain system health for users who connect from home systems, partner computers and laptops that aren’t under control of administrators, or computers that aren’t managed through a corporate patching system (e.g., Windows Server Update Services—WSUS, Microsoft Systems Management Server—SMS). NAP is an effective solution for controlling network computers’ security health.

End of Article

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