Cisco Cisco Aironet 1040 Series Access Point Notas de publicación
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Release Notes for Cisco Aironet Access Points and Bridges for Cisco IOS Releases 12.4(25d)JA and 12.3(8)JEE
OL-23880-01
Important Notes
The following items are not supported for AP1040 and AP1260 bridging:
•
The distance CLI command; long-range links over 1 Km currently are not supported, so the distance
command is not supported.
command is not supported.
•
Outdoor MIMO bridging using external antennas has not been fully tested and is not fully supported
with this release.
with this release.
Access Points are Transmitting Multicast and Management Frames
Access points running recent Cisco IOS versions are transmitting multicast and management frames at
the highest configured basic rate, and is a situation that could causes reliability problems.
the highest configured basic rate, and is a situation that could causes reliability problems.
Access points running LWAPP or autonomous IOS should transmit multicast and management frames at
the lowest configured basic rate. This is necessary in order to provide for good coverage at the cell's
edge, especially for unacknowledged multicast transmissions where multicast wireless transmissions
may fail to be received.
the lowest configured basic rate. This is necessary in order to provide for good coverage at the cell's
edge, especially for unacknowledged multicast transmissions where multicast wireless transmissions
may fail to be received.
Since multicast frames are not retransmitted at the MAC layer, stations at the edge of the cell may fail
to receive them successfully. If reliable reception is a goal, then multicasts should be transmitted at a
low data rate. If support for high data rate multicasts is required, then it may be useful to shrink the cell
size and to disable all lower data rates.
to receive them successfully. If reliable reception is a goal, then multicasts should be transmitted at a
low data rate. If support for high data rate multicasts is required, then it may be useful to shrink the cell
size and to disable all lower data rates.
Depending on your specific requirements, you can take the following action:
•
If you need to transmit the multicast data with the greatest reliability and if there is no need for great
multicast bandwidth, then configure a single basic rate, one that is low enough to reach the edges of
the wireless cells.
multicast bandwidth, then configure a single basic rate, one that is low enough to reach the edges of
the wireless cells.
•
If you need to transmit the multicast data at a certain data rate in order to achieve a certain
throughput, then configure that rate as the highest basic rate. You can also set a lower basic rate for
coverage of non-multicast clients.
throughput, then configure that rate as the highest basic rate. You can also set a lower basic rate for
coverage of non-multicast clients.
Low Throughput Seen on 1260 Series Access Points with 16 BSSIDs Configured
If your network uses 16 BSSIDs with 1- and 2-Mbps data rates, 1260 series access points might
experience very low throughput due to high management traffic.
experience very low throughput due to high management traffic.
802.11n HT Rates Apply Only to No Encryption or WPA2/AES Encryption
The 802.11n HT rates apply only to no encryption or WPA2/AES encryption. They do not apply to WEP
or WPA encryption. If WEP or TKIP encryption is used, the 1250 series access points and any 802.11n
Draft 2.0 clients will not transmit at the HT rates. Legacy rates (802.11a/b/g) will be used for any clients
using WEP or TKIP encryption.
or WPA encryption. If WEP or TKIP encryption is used, the 1250 series access points and any 802.11n
Draft 2.0 clients will not transmit at the HT rates. Legacy rates (802.11a/b/g) will be used for any clients
using WEP or TKIP encryption.
Layer 3 Not Supported with NAC for MBSSID
Layer 3 is not supported with NAC for MBSSID in this release.