User's Guide

Table Of Contents
Configuring the Wireless AP
hwc_apstartup.fm
Configuring Wireless AP settings
9034530-02, March 2010
124 HiPath Wireless Controller, Access Points and Convergence Software V7.11, User Guide
When a Wireless AP is configured to the sensor role, its configuration data is
preserved on the HiPath Wireless Controller. The configuration data can only
be modified when the Wireless AP is switched back to the access point role.
In addition, if a Wireless AP is assigned to the sensor role, no additional
Wireless AP tabs are visible.
Note: Only the Wireless AP 2610/2620 and the Wireless 802.11n AP can be
configured as a sensor.
For more information on the sensor role, see Section 4.9, “Configuring an AP
as a sensor”, on page 215.
Country – This option is only available with certain licenses.
Advanced settings on the AP Properties tab
The Advanced dialog on the AP Properties tab display settings that rarely need
to be configured. For example:
Poll Timeout – The poll timeout value is measured in seconds. This value
establishes how long a Wireless AP will wait before re-establishing the link
with the HiPath Wireless Controller if it (Wireless AP) does not get an answer
to its polling. The default value is 10 seconds.
•LLDP – LLDP is a protocol that allows a network device to broadcast its
information on a local network to other network devices. This information is
transmitted according to the protocol’s TLVs (Type-Length-Value) elements
in a LLDP packet.
Wireless APs advertise a combination of standard LLDP protocol elements
and specific HiPath information. For more information on the LLDP elements
the Wireless APs broadcast, see the HiPath Wireless Controller, Access
Points and Convergence Software Technical Reference Guide.
When LLDP is enabled for a Wireless AP, you must define the following:
Time to Live – This value, measured in seconds, specifies how long the
receiving device should consider the previous sent information packet to be
accurate.
The Time to Live value is sent in each LLDP packet. The receiving LLDP
device retains the information from the LLDP packet for the duration of the
Time to Live value. If no other LLDP packets arrive after that period, the
information is considered stale and then discarded.
Note: The Time to Live value cannot be directly edited. The Time to Live
value is calculated as four times the Announcement Interval value.