Cisco Cisco WAP351 Wireless-N Dual Radio Access Point with 5-Port Switch Manual De Mantenimiento

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Single Point Setup
Single Point Setup Overview
Cisco WAP131 and WAP351 Administration Guide
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11
Operation of a Device Dropped From a Single Point Setup
When a WAP device that was previously a member of a cluster becomes 
disconnected from the cluster, the following guidelines apply:
The loss of contact with the cluster prevents the WAP device from receiving 
the latest operational configuration settings. The disconnection results in a 
halt to proper seamless wireless service across the production network.
The WAP device continues to function with the wireless parameters that it 
last received from the cluster.
The wireless clients associated with the non-clustered WAP device 
continue to associate with the device with no interruption of the wireless 
connection. In other words, the loss of contact with the cluster does not 
necessarily prevent the wireless clients associated with that WAP device 
from continued access to network resources.
If the loss of contact with the cluster is due to a physical or logical 
disconnection with the LAN infrastructure, the network services out to the 
wireless clients may be impacted depending on the nature of the failure.
Configuration Parameters Propagated and Not Propagated to 
Single Point Setup Access Points
The following tables summarize the configurations that are shared and 
propagated among all clustered WAP devices: 
Common Configuration Settings and Parameters that are Propagated in 
Single Point Setup
Captive Portal
Password Complexity
Client QoS
User Accounts
Email Alert
QoS
HTTP/HTTPS Service (Except 
SSL Certificate Configuration)
Radio Settings Including TSPEC Settings 
(Some exceptions)
Log Settings
Rogue AP Detection
MAC Filtering
Scheduler
Management Access Control
SNMP General and SNMPv3