user manual

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Cisco Aironet 1200 Seres Access Point Software Configuration Guide
OL-2159-05
Chapter 3 Radio Configuration and Basic Settings
Radio Configuration
Use Aironet Extensions
Select yes or no to use Cisco Aironet 802.11 extensions. This setting must be set to yes (the default
setting) to enable these features:
Load balancingThe access point uses Aironet extensions to direct client devices to an access point
that provides the best connection to the network based on factors such as number of users, bit error
rates, and signal strength.
Message Integrity Check (MIC)MIC is an additional WEP security feature that prevents attacks
on encrypted packets called bit-flip attacks. The MIC, implemented on both the access point and all
associated client devices, adds a few bytes to each packet to make the packets tamper-proof.
Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP)TKIP, also known as WEP key hashing, is an additional
WEP security feature that defends against an attack on WEP in which the intruder uses an
unencrypted segment called the initialization vector (IV) in encrypted packets to calculate the WEP
key.
Repeater modeYou must set Use Aironet Extensions to yes if the access point is set up as a
repeater or if it communicates with a repeater.
The extensions also improve the access points ability to understand the capabilities of Cisco Aironet
client devices associated with the access point.
Note If you enable this feature, you must manually reboot the access point to have the settings take affect.
Classify Workgroup Bridges as Network Infrastructure
Select no to allow more than 20 Cisco Aironet Workgroup Bridges to associate to the access point. The
default setting, yes, limits the number of workgroup bridges that can associate to the access point to 20.
The Reliable multicast messages from the access point to workgroup bridges setting limits reliable
delivery of multicast messages to approximately 20 Cisco Aironet Workgroup Bridges that are
associated to the access point. The default setting, disabled, reduces the reliability of multicast delivery
to enable more workgroup bridges to associate to the access point.
Access points and bridges normally treat workgroup bridges not as client devices but as infrastructure
devices, like access points or bridges. Treating a workgroup bridge as an infrastructure device means that
the access point reliably delivers multicast packets, including Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)
packets, to the workgroup bridge.
The performance cost of reliable multicast deliveryduplication of each multicast packet sent to each
workgroup bridgelimits the number of infrastructure devices, including workgroup bridges, that can
associate to the access point. To increase beyond 20 the number of workgroup bridges that can maintain
a radio link to the access point, the access point must reduce the delivery reliability of multicast packets
to workgroup bridges. With reduced reliability, the access point cannot confirm whether multicast
packets reach the intended workgroup bridge, so workgroup bridges at the edge of the access point's
coverage area might lose IP connectivity. When you treat workgroup bridges as client devices, you
increase performance but reduce reliability.
Note This feature is best suited for use with stationary workgroup bridges. Mobile workgroup bridges might
encounter spots in the access points coverage area where they do not receive multicast packets and lose
communication with the access point even though they are still associated to it.