Users Guide

Table Of Contents
439| Virtual APs Dell Networking W-Series ArubaOS 6.5.x| User Guide
a. Click the RADIUS Authentication Server Group drop-down list and select the MAC server group to
associate with your AAA profile.
b. Click Apply.
Configuring an AAAProfile in the CLI
(host)(config) #aaa authentication dot1x <profile>
(host)(config) #aaa profile <profile>
High-Throughput Virtual APs
With the implementation of the IEEE 802.11ac standard, very-high-throughput can be configured to operate
on the 5 GHz frequency band. High-throughput (802.11n) can be configured on both the 5 GHz and 2.4 GHz
frequency bands. High-throughput is enabled by default, and can be enabled or disabled in the 802.11a and
802.11g radio profiles. For details, see 802.11a and 802.11g RF Management Profiles on page 544
Two different profiles define settings specific to high-throughput APs. The High-throughput radio profile
defines settings for 40 MHz tolerance, is associated to an AP through its 802.11a or 802.11g radio profile. The
High-throughput SSID profile configures the high-throughput SSID settings for 802.11n, and is associated to
an AP through its virtual AP profile
Stations are not allowed to use high-throughput with TKIP standalone encryption, although TKIP can be
provided in mixed-mode BSSIDs that support high-throughput. High-throughput is disabled on a BSSID if the
encryption mode is standalone TKIP or WEP.
De-aggregation of MAC Service Data Units (A-MSDUs) is supported on the W-7000 Series and W-7220 controllers
with a maximum frame transmission size of 4k bytes; however, this feature is always enabled and is not
configurable. Aggregation is not currently supported.
Configuring the High-Throughput Radio Profile
You can configure high-throughput radio profile settings using the WebUI or CLI interfaces
In the WebUI
1. Navigate to Advanced Services > All Profile Management.
2. In the Profiles list, expand the RF Management menu, then select High-throughput radio.
3. Select an existing profile from the Profile Details pane, or enter create a new profile by entering a new
name into the entry blank, then clicking Add.
The configuration settings in this profile are divided into two tabs, Basic and Advanced. The Basic tab
displays only those configuration settings that often need to be adjusted to suit a specific network. The
Advanced tab shows all configuration settings, including settings that do not need frequent adjustment or
should be kept at their default values. If you change a setting on one tab then click and display the other
tab without saving your configuration, that setting will revert to its previous value.