Cisco Cisco Aironet 1310 Access Point Bridge 發佈版本通知
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Release Notes for Cisco Aironet Access Points and Bridges for Cisco IOS Release 12.4(21a)JA1
OL-20668-01
Important Notes
Depending on your specific requirements, you can take the following action:
•
If you need to transmit the multicast data with the greatest reliability and if there is no need for great
multicast bandwidth, then configure a single basic rate, one that is low enough to reach the edges of
the wireless cells.
multicast bandwidth, then configure a single basic rate, one that is low enough to reach the edges of
the wireless cells.
•
If you need to transmit the multicast data at a certain data rate in order to achieve a certain
throughput, then configure that rate as the highest basic rate. You can also set a lower basic rate for
coverage of non-multicast clients.
throughput, then configure that rate as the highest basic rate. You can also set a lower basic rate for
coverage of non-multicast clients.
LWAPP to Autonomous Conversion Requires Two Reboots
When you convert an 1142 access point from LWAPP mode to autonomous mode, you might need to
reboot the unit twice to complete the conversion.
reboot the unit twice to complete the conversion.
Interpreting the Show Controller Dot11Radio Active Power Level Output
A portion of the output of the show controller dot11radio CLI command displays the active power
levels by rate as shown in the example below:
levels by rate as shown in the example below:
1.0 to 11.0 , 20 dBm, changed due to regulatory maximum
6.0 to m15. , 17 dBm, changed due to regulatory maximum
m0.-4 to m15.-4, 14 dBm, changed due to regulatory maximum
The -4 in the third line indicates 40-MHz.
Enabling a Crash File for 1250 Series Access Points
A 1250 series access point that is running a Cisco IOS Release prior to (insert Krypton release number
here) does not generate a crash log when it crashes. The crash log is disabled so that a crash does not
corrupt the flash file system.
here) does not generate a crash log when it crashes. The crash log is disabled so that a crash does not
corrupt the flash file system.
New 1250 series access points shipped from the factory contain a new bootloader image that fixes the
flash file system after it is corrupted during a crash (without losing files). This new bootloader
automatically sets a new CRASH_LOG environment variable to “yes,” which enables a crash log to be
generated following a crash. Therefore, no user configuration is needed to enable a crash log on new
1250 series access points shipped from the factory.
flash file system after it is corrupted during a crash (without losing files). This new bootloader
automatically sets a new CRASH_LOG environment variable to “yes,” which enables a crash log to be
generated following a crash. Therefore, no user configuration is needed to enable a crash log on new
1250 series access points shipped from the factory.
To enable 1250 series access points in the field to generate a crash log following a crash, install Cisco
IOS Release 12.4(10b)JA or later and enter this case-sensitive bootloader CLI command on the access
point: set CRASH_LOG yes. When you set this CLI, the access point does not immediately generate a
crash log. The log is generated after a crash occurs. After the crash log is generated, enter this command
to disable the CRASH_LOG environment variable to minimize the risk of corrupting the flash file
system: set CRASH_LOG no.
IOS Release 12.4(10b)JA or later and enter this case-sensitive bootloader CLI command on the access
point: set CRASH_LOG yes. When you set this CLI, the access point does not immediately generate a
crash log. The log is generated after a crash occurs. After the crash log is generated, enter this command
to disable the CRASH_LOG environment variable to minimize the risk of corrupting the flash file
system: set CRASH_LOG no.
Low Throughput Seen on 1140 and 1250 Series Access Points with 16 BSSIDs
Configured
Configured
If your network uses 16 BSSIDs with 1- and 2-Mbps data rates, 1140 and 1250 series access points might
experience very low throughput due to high management traffic.
experience very low throughput due to high management traffic.