Cisco Cisco Aironet 350 Mini-PCI Wireless LAN Client Adapter Guia Do Desenho

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Enterprise Mobility 4.1 Design Guide
OL-14435-01
Chapter 2      Cisco Unified Wireless Technology and Architecture
  Mobility Groups, AP Groups, and RF Groups
For further detailed information, see the following link: 
Mobility Groups, AP Groups, and RF Groups
Within the Cisco Unified Wireless Architecture, there are three important ‘group’ concepts:
  •
Mobility groups
  •
AP groups
  •
RF groups
This section describes the purpose and application of these groups within the Cisco Unified Wireless 
Architecture. For more details on operation and configuration, see the following URLs:
  •
Deploying Cisco 440X Series Wireless LAN Controllers— 
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps6366/prod_technical_reference09186a00806cfa96.html
  •
Cisco Wireless LAN Controller Configuration Guide, Release 4.1— 
Mobility Groups
A mobility group is a group of WLCs that together, act as a single virtual WLC by sharing essential end 
client, AP, and RF information. A given WLC within a mobility domain, is able to make decisions based 
on data received from other members of the entire mobility group, rather than relying solely on the 
information learned from its own directly connected APs and clients.
A mobility group forms a mesh of authenticated tunnels between member WLCs, thereby allowing any 
WLC to directly contact another WLCs within the group, as shown in 
.
1300
Not Recommended
Not Recommended
Ideal
3
1500
Not Recommended
Not recommended
Ideal
1
1.
Or 1030 for Remote offices. LWAPP Deployments Only.
2.
Can be used outdoors when deployed in weatherproof NEMA rated enclosure. Particularly for deployments above 
suspended ceilings.
3.
Standalone Deployments Only.
Table 2-3
AP Comparison (2) (continued)