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Duo Administration - Endpoints

Last Updated: October 31st, 2024

Contents

Duo's Endpoints analysis shows at a glance the security status of operating systems, browsers, and plugins used when connecting to your Duo protected applications and services.

Overview

In Duo, Endpoints are both the laptops, desktops, tablets, mobile phones, and other devices where your end users access Duo-protected applications and services, as well as 2FA Devices, which are the enrolled mobile devices and computers where users approve Duo authentication requests. Duo Premier and Advantage plan customers see information about the security status of your endpoints accessing your applications and approving application access by navigating to DevicesEndpoints in the Duo Admin Panel.

When users log in to protected apps with the web-based Duo Universal Prompt or traditional Duo Prompt, Duo gathers mobile device and computer operating system platform and versions, browser types and versions, and Java and Flash plugin versions if detected in the browser. Duo Premier and Advantage customers can view the Trusted Endpoints management status of a given endpoint from the Endpoints page and deny access to individual managed endpoints from that endpoint's details page.

Authentications from applications that do not show a web-based Duo prompt, like Duo Authentication for Windows Logon, do not populate the list of endpoints.

Information for a given endpoint is purged after 30 days of inactivity.

Endpoints Tab

Filtering

You can filter the Endpoints list by operating system and version, browser type and version, installed plugins, and Trusted Endpoint status. For example, checking the boxes next to "Windows ", "10", "Firefox", and "Java" on the left side of the Devices page then displays all PCs running Windows 10 that accessed your application using Firefox with the Java plugin enabled. Checking the Out of date filter option for browsers or plugins shows you all browsers and plugins not at the latest generally available version.

The "Trusted Endpoint" column shows the device's trust status: "Yes" if the endpoint passed Duo's managed system check, or "No" if it did not. "Unknown" status in the Trusted Endpoint column usually indicates that the endpoint hasn't been used to access the application that has the Trusted Endpoints policy yet.

Endpoint Details

Clicking on an endpoint's operating system takes you to that endpoint's details page. You can view which users have authenticated to Duo using that endpoint, as well as the operating system, browser, plugin, trusted endpoint, device health, and Duo Desktop authentication enrollment information.

Endpoint Details

When the endpoint browsers and plugins are up to date, the various details are green. Information shown in red indicates a less secure status.

Endpoint Details With Alerts

Click the out-of-date link to see the current version of the affected software.

Endpoint Out of Date Remediation Information

Clicking on the username shown in the Endpoints table, or on the user tile on the endpoint's details page, takes you to the properties page for that user. Scroll down to the Phones and Endpoints tables to see platform, version, security warnings, trusted endpoint status, and other information about access and authentication endpoint devices associated with that user.

User Endpoints

Access Control

Plan required: Duo Premier or Duo Advantage.

Use the Operating Systems, Browsers, Plugins, Duo Desktop, and Trusted Endpoints policy settings to restrict access and authentication from certain operating systems and versions, inform your users when their web browser or select plugins are out of date, verify the endpoint's security posture, and optionally block access to applications protected with Duo from unmanaged or insecure devices or devices with outdated software. Users authenticating via the Duo Prompt see notifications about any non-compliant properties of their endpoint. If you choose to block access to users based on endpoint policy settings, users are unable to complete authentication to access your applications.

Self-remediation notifications and access controls are available for the following:

See the Policy & Control documentation for more information.

Deny Access to Endpoints

Role required: Owner, Administrator, User Manager, Security Analyst, or Help Desk.

Plan required: Duo Premier or Duo Advantage.

You can selectively block access to applications that have a Trusted Endpoints policy from individual managed endponts. This is useful, for example, when a user loses their laptop and you want to make sure that it can't be used to log into applications unless it's recovered.

In order to deny access to an individual endpoint, the Duo application should be configured via policy to block access from untrusted endpoints with the "Require endpoints to be trusted" setting.

To deny access to an endpoint:

  1. Log in to the Duo Admin Panel.

  2. Navigate to DevicesEndpoints in the left sidebar and locate the trusted endpoint you want to block. Filter the list of devices by typing in the username associated with the endpoint to block in the filter box above the table.

    You can also go to the Users page to locate the user account associated with the endpoint(s) to block. Click on the username to view their details page, and scroll down to the "Endpoints" section. Click on the endpoint to access its details page.

  3. When viewing the trusted endpoint's details, scroll down to the "Settings" section.

  4. Change the endpoint's status to Deny Endpoint Access and click Save Changes.

    Endpoint Status Control

The endpoint's allow/deny status shows up at the top of the endpoint's details page.

Endpoint with Deny Status

To permit access from that trusted endpoint again, revisit the details page for the endpoint and change the endpoint's status back to Allow Endpoint Access, and then click Save Changes.

Registered Devices

Role required: Owner or Administrator. Plan required: Duo Premier or Duo Advantage.

Use the Registered Devices table to view and manage presently registered devices and their associated users. Information collected during the registration process from a device with the Trusted Platform Module (TPM) or Secure Enclave is formatted and displayed on this table.

Device registration requires the following:

  • Active two-factor authentication through browser-based applications using the Universal Prompt.
    • Device registration does not occur if the user bypasses two-factor authentication for any reason, such as access from a network permitted by the authorized networks policy setting, if the user has an existing remembered devices session, or bypass status set at the individual or group level.
  • Windows and Linux access devices with Trusted Platform Module (TPM) 2.0 or Mac access devices with Secure Enclave.
  • Duo Desktop 6.0.0/6.0.0.0 or later installed on Windows and macOS clients and Duo Desktop 3.0.0 or later installed on Linux clients.
  • Enabling the Duo Desktop policy's Device registration option.

You can selectively de-register devices. This helps resolve conflicts between a given device and outdated or incorrect registered device information.

To de-register individual registered devices:

  1. Log in to the Duo Admin Panel.

  2. Navigate to DevicesDuo Desktop Registered Devices in the left sidebar. You will be able to view a table containing the devices registered by Duo Desktop. You can also use the search function to find devices by specifying any part of the device identifier or its description, as well as the username of any user registered with that device. If you haven’t enabled device registration in your Duo Desktop policy controls, this table will be empty.

    Registered Devices
  3. To de-register a device, select the device from the table and click De-Register device & users. This removes the device as well as all of its users that had registered with Duo Desktop using that device.

  4. Click De-register to confirm.

If a user logs in to a Duo-protected resource again from that endpoint, it will perform a new device registration (subject to the configured Duo Desktop device registration policy options).

Shared Device Authentication

Shared device authentication eliminates repetitive Duo Desktop authentication setup for users without individual workstations. When enabled, designated users perform interactive authentication enrollment with Duo Desktop once from a trusted endpoint. Subsequent Duo Desktop authentication enrollments from additional computers happen silently.

In the Duo Admin Panel, navigate to DevicesDuo Desktop Shared Device Authentication to configure a user group and Trusted Endpoints integration for shared device authentication. See Shared Device Authentication for more information.

Shared Device Authentication

Troubleshooting

Need some help? Try searching our Knowledge Base articles or Community discussions. For further assistance, contact Support.