Cisco Cisco Aironet 1522 Lightweight Outdoor Mesh Access Point 설치 가이드

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detailed installation information, see the Cisco Aironet 1520 Series Outdoor Access Point Hardware 
Installation Guide
. Configuration information can be found in the controller configuration guide of 
the controller you are using.
Fiber Option
Warning
Class 1 laser product. Statement 1008
The factory-orderable fiber option provides a fiber input and output capability. Fiber is data is 
transmitted and received over a single-strand fiber cable which is connected to the access point using 
a rugged 100BASE-BX10-U fiber small factor pluggable (SFP) module. For convenience, two fiber 
connections are available on the access point. One connection is on the bottom of the unit (shown on 
Figure 1) and the other on the left side (shown on Figure 2). Client data is passed to the network 
controller through the fiber connection via a fiber capable switch. For detailed installation information 
about the fiber option, see the Cisco Aironet 1520 Series Outdoor Mesh Access Point Hardware 
Installation Guide.
 Configuration information can be found in the controller configuration guide of 
the controller you are using.
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Network Deployment Examples
The access point is a wireless device designed for wireless client access and point-to-point bridging, 
point-to-multipoint bridging, and point-to-multipoint mesh wireless connectivity. The access point 
provides 5-GHz backhaul capability to link with another access point to reach a wired network 
connection or to provide repeater operations for other access points.
The access point plays two primary radio roles: a root access point (hereafter called a RAP) or a 
non-root access point (hereafter called a MAP), which is the default role of all access points. When the 
access point has a wired Ethernet or cable connector connection to the controller (through a switch), 
the radio role is called a RAP. In order to be considered a RAP, the access point must be configured as 
a RAP. A RAP is a parent node to any bridging or mesh network. A controller can support one or more 
RAPs, each one parenting the same or different wireless networks. There can be more than one RAP 
for the same mesh network for redundancy. RAPs and MAPs can support wireless clients on the 
2.4-GHz band.
When the access point does not have a wired Ethernet connection to the controller (through a switch), 
the radio role is called a MAP. The MAPs have a wireless connection (through the backhaul interface) 
to other MAPs and finally to a RAP which has an Ethernet connection through a switch to the 
controller. MAPs may also have a wired Ethernet connection to a local LAN and serve as a bridge 
endpoint for that LAN (using a point-to-point or point-to-multipoint bridge connection).