NDC comm NWH650 用户手册

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页码 61
6  InstantWave 
High Rate
 
11Mbps
 
Access Point
 
 
Roaming 
InstantWave High Rate products are equipped with seamless roaming capabilities.  
Roaming is necessary to prevent mobile Stations from being disconnected from the 
network as they move around. 
InstantWave High Rate is designed to allow wireless Stations to roam freely within 
an infrastructure domain composed of multiple APs with overlapping signal 
coverage (as in the Type-3 network configuration described in the previous 
section).  For example, roaming enables Station-1 to move from the AP-1 signal 
coverage area to the AP-2 signal coverage area without disconnecting from the 
network.  The handover is achieved transparently; the Station-1 user would not 
realize he had moved from AP-1 to AP-2. 
The requirements for a roaming environment are:  
a)  Multiple APs with overlapping signal coverage (see Multiple AP 
Installation, page 5) 
b)  The APs must be configured to have the same Domain name (see AP 
COMFig/Service, page 12)  
c)  The mobile Stations must have the same Domain name as that of the APs 
d)  *It is advisable that APs on different TCP/IP subnets be given different 
Domain names to avoid roaming confusion (see AP COMFig/Service, 
page 12) 
Note:  *If you want to move your mobile PC between different APs without 
terminating the existing networking link, you need to enable the roaming 
function on the Mobile Station.  The APs that a Mobile Station will roam to 
must also be configured with the same domain name.  If a Station detects 
that the signal quality with the current linked AP is weak, it will search for 
an AP in the same domain with a better signal quality and automatically 
establish a new connection with it.  When a Station is roaming, it will 
always use the same IP address.  The TCP/IP router will not route 
information packets to a Mobile Station if it re-associates with a AP that is 
in a different TCP/IP subnet.  In other words, if your network consists of two 
subnets connected by a router, a Mobile Station may roam to a different 
subnet with the same domain name and then fail to communicate with other 
network devices via TCP/IP.  To avoid running into such an awkward 
situation, you must assign different domain names to different TCP/IP 
subnets.