Cisco Cisco Aironet 1200 Access Point Notas de publicación

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Release Notes for Cisco Aironet 350, 1100, 1130AG, 1200 and 1230AG Series Access Points for Cisco IOS Release 12.3(4)JA2
OL-10198-01
Troubleshooting
The disclosure of these vulnerabilities is being coordinated by the National Infrastructure Security 
Coordination Centre (NISCC), based in the United Kingdom. NISCC is working with multiple 
vendors whose products are potentially affected. Its posting can be found at the following URL:
http://www.niscc.gov.uk/niscc/docs/re-20050412-00303.pdf?lang=en.
CSCsa57777—The no speed command now removes the data rates that you specify from the 
configuration.
If You Need More Information
If you need information about a specific caveat that does not appear in these release notes, you can use 
the Cisco Bug Toolkit to find select caveats of any severity. Click this URL to browse to the Bug Toolkit:
(If you request a defect that cannot be displayed, the defect number might not exist, the defect might not 
yet have a customer-visible description, or the defect might be marked Cisco Confidential.) 
Troubleshooting
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/support/index.html
. Click Tools and Resources, and choose the resource 
that best suits your troubleshooting needs.
Documentation Updates
This section lists changes, errors, and omissions from user documentation for access points.
Omissions
Access point quick start guides do not yet describe these features:
Changes to the default configuration—In the default configuration for this release, there is no 
default SSID and the radio interface is disabled by default. You must create an SSID and enable the 
radio interface before the access point allows wireless associations from other devices.
Default IP address behavior—When you connect a 350, 1130AG, 1310, or 1200 series access point 
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 
window, you can browse to the default IP address and configure a static address. If after five minutes 
the access point is not reconfigured, it discards the 10.0.0.1 address and reverts to requesting an 
address from the DHCP server. If it does not receive an address, it sends requests indefinitely. If you 
miss the five-minute window for browsing to the access point at 10.0.0.1, you can power-cycle the 
access point to repeat the process.