NPS is the new IAS.

NAP is something different (but includes NPS as part of the infrastructure)

http://technet2.microsoft.com/WindowsServer2008/en/library/b1a177e6-fd36-4396-9fe7-314460d83c3f1033.mspx

HTH

Cheers
Ken

From: Jon Harris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, 23 July 2008 6:42 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: ASA question...how to auth to AD

If you do this from a Windows 2008 server then it is not IAS any more it is NAP 
(Network Access Protection) but I have found more on NPS (sorry forgot what 
that one means).  Under 2003 IAS works great for this at least it does for a 
PIX.  As soond as I finish bringing up my new DC with NAP/NPS on it I can tell 
you how well 2008 does.

Jon
On Tue, Jul 22, 2008 at 5:29 PM, Todd Lemmiksoo <[EMAIL 
PROTECTED]<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:
thanks, I will lookup IAS in TechNet.

Todd

________________________________
From: Michael B. Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>]
Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2008 5:20 PM

To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: ASA question...how to auth to AD

You would generally use IAS as an intermediary - the Windows version of RADIUS. 
(This was true on the PIX, I've never done anything with ASAs, but I doubt 
they've learned to speak Kerberos or NTLMv2.)



Regards,



Michael B. Smith

MCITP:SA,EMA/MCSE/Exchange MVP

http://TheEssentialExchange.com<http://theessentialexchange.com/>




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