Cisco Cisco Aironet 1200 Access Point 發佈版本通知

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Limitations and Restrictions
OL-2898-01
Limitations and Restrictions
Limitations and Restrictions
This section describes limitations and restrictions for 1200 series access points.
Removing Power During Firmware Update Can Corrupt Radio Firmware
When you update the firmware on an access point, allow the unit to finish its start-up sequence before 
removing power. If you update the firmware and remove power before the unit finishes the start-up 
sequence, the radio firmware might be corrupted, making the unit inoperable. If the radio firmware is 
corrupted, the radio indicator (the bottom of the three indicators on top of the access point) is red 
continuously, and the following error message appears when the access point starts up:
Failed to start driver for port “awc0” (errno=0x006d0002)
If the radio firmware is corrupted, try resetting the unit to factory defaults using the :resetall command 
in the CLI; see the 
“Resetting to the Default Configuration” section on page 9-42
 of the Cisco Aironet 
1200 Series Access Point Software Configuration Guide for instructions on resetting the access point. If 
the unit cannot be reset to defaults, you must return the unit to Cisco for service.
Note
The resetall command is valid for only 2 minutes immediately after the access point reboots. 
You can safely remove power after a firmware update when the configuration management pages 
reappear in the command-line or web-browser interfaces, or when the three status indicators on top of 
the unit complete the following pattern:
1.
All three indicators are steady green, meaning that the access point is beginning to update the 
firmware.
2.
The middle indicator is steady green and the top and bottom indicators are off, indicating that the 
access point is updating the radio firmware. 
When the middle indicator blinks or the top and bottom indicators blink, you can remove power.
EAP Authentication Requires Matching 802.1x Protocol Drafts
Note
This section applies to wireless networks set up to use LEAP. If you do not use LEAP on your 
wireless network, you can skip this section.
Wireless client devices use Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) to log onto a network and generate 
a dynamic, client-specific WEP key for the current logon session. If your wireless network uses WEP 
without EAP, client devices use the static WEP keys entered in the Aironet Client Utilities. 
If you use Network-EAP authentication on your wireless network, your client devices and access points 
must use the same 802.1x protocol draft. For example, if the radio firmware on the client devices that 
will associate with an access point is 4.16, the access point should be configured to use Draft 8 of the 
802.1x protocol. 
 lists firmware versions for Cisco Aironet products and the draft with which they 
comply.