Cisco Cisco Aironet 1200 Access Point Notas de publicación

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Release Notes for Cisco Aironet 1100 and 1200 Series Access Points for Cisco IOS Release 12.2(13)JA3
OL-5428-02
Important Notes
Radio MAC Address Appears in ACU
When a Cisco Aironet client device associates to an access point running IOS software, the access point 
MAC address that appears on the Status page in the Aironet Client Utility (ACU) is the MAC address 
for the access point radio. The MAC address for the access point Ethernet port is printed on the label on 
the back of the access point.
Radio MAC Address Appears in Access Point Event Log
When a client device roams from an access point (such as access point alpha) to another access point 
(access point bravo), a message appears in the event log on access point alpha stating that the client 
roamed to access point bravo. The MAC address that appears in the event message is the MAC address 
for the radio in access point bravo. The MAC address for the access point Ethernet port is printed on the 
label on the back of the access point.
Mask Field on IP Filters Page Behaves the Same As in CLI
In Cisco IOS Release 12.2(8)JA and later, the mask that you enter in the Mask field on the IP Filters page 
in the access point GUI behaves the same way as a mask that you enter in the CLI. If you enter 
255.255.255.255 as the mask, the access point accepts any IP address. If you enter 0.0.0.0, the access 
point looks for an exact match with the IP address that you entered in the IP Address field.
Repeater Access Points Running IOS Software Cannot Associate to Parent 
Access Points Not Running IOS Software
Repeater access points running Cisco IOS software cannot associate to parent access points that do not 
run IOS software (340 series access points and 350 and 1200 series access points that have not been 
converted to run IOS software).
Repeater Access Points Cannot Be Configured as WDS Access Points
Repeater access points do not support WDS. You cannot configure a repeater access point as a WDS 
access point, and if a root access point becomes a repeater in fallback mode, it cannot provide WDS.
Crossover Cable Sometimes Needed When Ethernet Speed and Duplex Set to 
Fixed on 1100 Series Access Points
If you change the speed and duplex settings from auto to fixed on an 1100 series access point’s Ethernet 
port, the auto-MDIX feature on the port is disabled. When auto-MDIX is disabled, you must determine 
whether to use a straight-through or a crossover cable to connect the access point Ethernet port to another 
device. If the Ethernet link goes down after you set the speed and duplex to fixed, try changing the 
Ethernet cable from crossover to straight-through or from straight-through to crossover.