Cisco Cisco WAP571E Wireless-AC N Premium Dual Radio Outdoor Access Point Manual De Mantenimiento

Descargar
Página de 192
Wireless
Rogue AP Detection
Cisco WAP571/E Administration Guide
82
5
NOTE
You can use the 
 page to configure security on the AP.
WPA—Whether WPA security is on or off for the rogue AP.
Band—The IEEE 802.11 mode being used on the rogue AP. (For example, 
IEEE 802.11a, IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g.)
The number shown indicates the mode:
-
2.4 indicates IEEE 802.11b, 802.11g, or 802.11n mode (or a combination 
of the modes).
-
5 indicates IEEE 802.11a, 802.11n, or 802.11ac mode (or a combination 
of the modes).
Channel—The channel on which the rogue AP is currently broadcasting.
The channel defines the portion of the radio spectrum that the radio uses 
for transmitting and receiving.
NOTE
You can use the 
 page to set the channel.
NOTE
When AP is operating in DFS channel, scanning is prohibited. Hence No 
Rogue APs will be detected.
Rate—The rate in megabits per second at which the rogue AP is currently 
transmitting.
The current rate is always one of the rates shown in Supported Rates.
The reported rate is the speed of the last packet transmitted from the AP to 
the client. This value can vary within the advertised rate set based on the 
signal quality between the AP and client and the rate at which broadcast or 
multicast frames are sent. When the AP sends a broadcast frame to a STA 
using the default rates, then the field will report 1 Mbps for 2.4Ghz radios 
and 6 Mbps for 5Ghz radios. Clients that are idle are most likely to report the 
low default rates.
Signal—The strength of the radio signal emitting from the rogue AP. If you 
hover the mouse pointer over the bars, a number representing the strength 
in decibels (dB) appears.
Beacons—The total number of beacons received from the rogue AP since it 
was first discovered.
Last Beacon—The date and time of the last beacon received from the 
rogue AP.