Installation guide

Network Setup
4-30
8. Refer to the Advanced field for the following information:
WPA2-CCMP WPA2 is a newer 802.11i standard that provides even stronger
wireless security than Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) and WEP.
CCMP is the security standard used by the Advanced Encryption
Standard (AES). AES serves the same function TKIP does for WPA-
TKIP. CCMP computes a Message Integrity Check (MIC) using the
proven Cipher Block Chaining (CBC) technique. Changing just one
bit in a message produces a totally different result. For detailed
information on configuring CCMP for the WLAN, see Configuring
WPA/WPA2 using TKIP and CCMP on page 4-52.
Accounting Mode If using a Syslog server to conduct accounting for the switch, select
the Syslog option from the Accounting Mode drop-down menu.
Once selected, a Syslog Config button is enabled on the bottom
of the Network > Wireless LANs > Edit screen. Use this sub screen
to provide the Syslog Server IP address and port for the Syslog
Server performing the accounting function.
If either Hotspot, MAC Authentication or 802.1x EAP have been
selected from within the Authentication field, a Radius Config
button is enabled (on the bottom of the screen) allowing the user
to define a Primary and Secondary Radius Accounting Server IP
address, port, shared secret password and timeout and retry.
Define these accounting settings as required for the switch.
The default Accounting Mode setting is Off.
Answer Broadcast
ESS
Select this checkbox to allow the WLAN to respond to probes for
broadcast ESS.
Use Voice
Prioritization
Select the Use Voice Prioritization option if Voice is used on the
WLAN. This gives priority to voice packets and voice management
packets and is supported only on certain legacy Motorola VOIP
phones.
Enable SVP Enabling SVP (Spectralink Voice Prioritization) allows the switch to
identify and prioritize traffic from Spectralink/Polycomm phones.
Secure Beacon Select this option to exclude the SSID of this WLAN within Beacon
frames. This option still allows MU to MU communication within
the WLAN.
QoS Weight Defines the Quality of Service weight for the WLAN. WLAN QoS
will be applied based on the QoS weight value with higher values
assigned priority. The range for QoS. weight values is between 1
and 10 with 1 being the default value.
MU to MU Traffic Allows frames from one MU (where the destination MAC is of
another MU) are switched to a second MU. Use the drop-down
menu to select one of the following options:
Drop Packets – Restricts MU to MU communication
based on the WLAN’s configuration
Allow Packets – Allows MU to MU communication based
on the WLAN’s configuration
MU Idle Time Set the MUs idle time limit in seconds.