Cisco Cisco Aironet 1310 Access Point Bridge Notas de publicación

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Release Notes for Cisco Aironet Access Points for Cisco IOS Release 12.3(8)JEA1
OL-12427-01
  Important Notes
Some Devices Disassociate When Multiple BSSIDs Are Added or Deleted
Devices on your wireless LAN that are configured to associate to a specific access point based on the 
access point MAC address (such as client devices, repeaters, hot standby units, or workgroup bridges) 
might lose their association when you add or delete a multiple BSSID. When you add or delete a multiple 
BSSID, check the association status of devices configured to associate to a specific access point. If 
necessary, reconfigure the disassociated device to use the BSSID’s new MAC address.
Enabling MBSSIDs Without VLANs Disables Radio Interface
If you use the mbssid configuration interface command to enable multiple BSSIDs on a specific radio 
interface but VLANs are not configured on the access point, the access point disables the radio interface. 
To re-enable the radio, you must shut down the radio, disable multiple BSSIDs, and re-enable the radio. 
This example shows the commands you use to re-enable the radio:
AP1134(config)# interface d1
AP1134(config-if)# shut
AP1134(config-if)# no mbssid
AP1134(config-if)# no shut
After you re-enable the radio, you can enable VLANs on the access point and enable multiple BSSIDs.
Cannot Set Channel on DFS-Enabled Radios in Some Regulatory Domains
Access points with 5-GHz radios configured at the factory for use in Europe, Singapore, Korea, Japan, 
Taiwan, and Israel now comply with regulations that require radio devices to use Dynamic Frequency 
Selection (DFS) to detect radar signals and avoid interfering with them. You cannot manually set the 
channel on DFS-enabled radios configured for these regulatory domains. 
Cisco 7920 Phones Require Firmware Version 1.09 or Later When Multiple 
BSSIDs Are Enabled
When multiple BSSIDs are configured on the access point, Cisco 7920 wireless IP phones must run 
firmware version 1.09 or later.
AIR-RM21A/AIR-RM22A Radio Modules Usually Set to Max Transmit Power
AIR-RM21A and AIR-RM22A radio modules measure transmit power in decibels per milliwatt (dBm), 
but earlier versions of 802.11a radios in Cisco Aironet access points measure power in milliwatts (mW). 
Because power settings in mW do not translate directly to settings in dBm, the access point usually uses 
the default power setting of maximum when you install a new AIR-RM21A or AIR-RM22A radio 
module.
 lists 802.11a transmit power settings in mW and the power settings that the access point assigns 
to a new radio module.