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
Important Notes
This section describes important information about the access point.
CCKM and Fast Roaming on Cisco 7921/7925 IP Phones
When a 7921 or 7925 wireless associates to an access point in a WDS with CCKM, it cannot fast roam 
because call admission control is not enabled. To work around this issue you must enable admission 
control by issuing the admit-traffic command in the access point SSID configuration as shown in the 
following example:
dot11 ssid voice
vlan 21
authentication open eap eap_methods
authentication network-eap eap_methods
authentication key-managemenet wpa cckm
admit-traffic
DFS Not Supported on Certain 1130 Series Access Points
1130 series access points with FCC Certification Number (LDK102054) do not support dynamic 
frequency selection (DFS) on channels 52 to 64 and 100 to 140 in the US and Canada. The FCC 
Certification Number (also called FCC ID number) is shown on the product label on the bottom of the 
unit. Only access points with LDK102054E on the product label can support DFS in the US and Canada.
Layer 3 Not supported with NAC for MBSSID
Layer 3 is not supported with NAC for MBSSID in this release.
DFS Enabled by Default on 5-GHz Radios in North America
In this release, Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) is automatically enabled on 5-GHz radios 
configured for use in North America. The 5-GHz radios use DFS to detect radar signals and avoid 
interfering with them. Radios configured for use in Europe and Singapore also use DFS. Other regulatory 
domains do not use DFS. Refer to the 
 for detailed information.
Change to Default IP Address Behavior
Cisco IOS Releases 12.3(2)JA and later change the default behavior of access points requesting an IP 
address from a DHCP server:
When you connect a 350, 1130, 1200, 1230, 1240 series access point, or a 1300 series outdoor access 
point/ridge with a default configuration to your LAN, the access point requests an IP address from 
your DHCP server and, if it does not receive an address, continues to send requests indefinitely. 
When you connect an 1100 series access point with a default configuration to your LAN, the 1100 
series access point makes several attempts to get an IP address from the DHCP server. If it does not 
receive an address, it assigns itself the IP address 10.0.0.1 for five minutes. During this five-minute