Cisco Cisco Aironet 1200 Access Point Notas de publicación

Descargar
Página de 24
 
11
Release Notes for Cisco Aironet Access Points for Cisco IOS Release 12.3(7)JA
OL-8056-01
  Important Notes
Trunking Fails on Access Point in Workgroup Bridge Mode
When an access point is configured as a workgroup bridge, trunking on its Ethernet port fails for clients 
belonging to VLANs other than the Native VLAN. this can be corrected by one of two workarounds:
Configure Ethernet clients to belong to the Native VLAN
Configure the access point with the workgroup-bridge client-vlan <vlan-id> command, Where 
vlan-id is the VLAN assigned to wired clients on the Ethernet side.
Clients Using WPA/WPA2 and Power Save May Fail to Authenticate
Certain clients using WPA/WPA2 key management and power save may take many attempts to 
authenticate or, in some cases, fail to authenticate. Any SSID defined to use authentication 
key-management wpa, coupled with clients using power save mode and authenticating using 
WPA/WPA2 may experience this problem.
A hidden configure level command, dot11 wpa handshake timeout, can be used to increase the timeout 
between sending the WPA key packets from the default value (100 ms) to a value between 101 and 200 
ms. The command stores its value in the configuration across device reloads. 
Default Username and Password Are Cisco
When you open the access point interface, you must enter a username and password. The default 
username for administrator login is Cisco, and the default password is Cisco. Both the username and 
password are case sensitive.
Some Client Devices Cannot Associate When QoS Is Configured
Some wireless client devices, including Dell Axim handhelds and Hewlett-Packard iPaq HX4700 
handhelds, cannot associate to an access point when the access point is configured for QoS. To allow 
these clients to associate, disable QoS on the access point. You can use the QoS Policies page on the 
access point GUI to disable QoS, or enter this command on the CLI:
ap(config-if)#no dot11 qos mode
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.