Cisco Cisco WAP351 Wireless-N Dual Radio Access Point with 5-Port Switch 관리 매뉴얼

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Wireless
WPS Setup
Cisco Small Business WAP121 and WAP321 Wireless-N Access Point with PoE
100
5
WPS maintains network security by requiring both the users of new client devices 
and WLAN administrators to have either physical access to their respective 
devices or secure remote access to these devices.
Usage Scenarios
These are typical scenarios for using WPS:
A user wishes to enroll a client station on a WPS-enabled WLAN. (The 
enrolling client device may detect the network, and prompt the user to 
enroll, although this is not necessary.) The user triggers the enrollment by 
pushing a button on the client device. The WAP device's administrator then 
pushes a button on the WAP device. During a brief exchange of WPS 
protocol messages, the WAP device supplies the new client with a new 
security configuration through Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP). 
The two devices disassociate, and then reassociate and authenticate with 
the new settings.
A user wishes to enroll a client station on a WPS-enabled WLAN by 
supplying the WAP device administrator with the PIN of the client device. 
The administrator enters this PIN in the configuration utility of the WAP 
device and triggers the device enrollment. The new enrollee and the WAP 
device exchange WPS messages, including a new security configuration, 
disassociate, reassociate, and authenticate.
A WAP device administrator purchases a new WAP device that has been 
certified by the Wi-Fi Alliance to be compliant with WPS version 2.0, and 
wishes to add the WAP device to an existing (wired or wireless) network. 
The administrator turns on the WAP device, and then accesses a network 
host that supports the WPS registration protocol. The administrator enters 
the PIN of the WAP device in the configuration utility of this external 
registrar, and triggers the WPS registration process. (On a wired LAN, the 
WPS protocol messages are transported through Universal Plug and Play, 
or UPnP, protocol.) The host registers the WAP as a new network device and 
configures the WAP with new security settings.
A WAP device administrator has just added a new WAP device to an 
existing (wireless or wired) network through WPS, and wishes to grant 
network access to a new client device. The device is enrolled through 
either the PIN or Push-Button Control (PBC) methods described above, but 
this time the device enrolls with the external registrar, with the WAP device 
acting solely as a proxy.
A wireless device that does not support WPS must join the WPS-enabled 
WLAN. The administrator, who cannot use WPS in this case, instead