Cisco Cisco Aironet 1530i Outdoor Access Point Installationsanleitung

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Caution
When you reset a primed universal AP, via either software or hardware methods, the AP 
becomes unprimed. For more information, see 
Manual Priming
You can manually prime a universal access point using the Cisco AirProvision mobile application.
During priming, the smartphone running Cisco AirProvision and the universal AP need to be on the 
same WLAN with the smartphone connected to that universal AP’s SSID. 
Note
For manual priming to work, ensure that the smartphone running Cisco AirProvision and the 
universal AP need to be on the same WLAN. The smartphone should be in the same subnet as 
the management interface of the AP, such that you should be able to ping the AP from the 
smartphone.
Cisco AirProvision uses the geographical location of the smartphone on which it is running, to decide 
on the regulatory domain for priming the AP. Cisco AirProvision uses both the GPS coordinates from 
the smartphone’s GPS unit, and the Mobile Country Code advertised by cellular phone network 
towers, to properly determine the location of the smartphone. AirProvision’s communication with the 
universal AP happens on a secure channel.
Any universal AP that was previously primed to a different country and regulatory domain, will 
require manual priming to correct its country configuration. 
For new installations involving universal APs, you need to manually prime at least one universal AP 
in the radio frequency (RF) neighborhood. After an AP has been successfully manually primed, then 
other universal APs in the RF neighborhood can get primed via 
. However, if 
automatic priming fails, you need to manually prime the AP.
Note
Automatic priming does not work for Autonomous mode APs. Each autonomous mode AP 
needs to be manually primed.
To get started with priming your universal AP, see 
.