User Manual Part 1
Table Of Contents
- Check Point Safe@Office User Guide 8.0
- Copyright & Trademarks
- Contents
- About This Guide
- Introduction
- About Your Check Point Safe@Office Appliance
- Safe@Office 500 Product Family
- Product Features
- Wireless Features
- Optional Security Services
- Software Requirements
- Getting to Know Your Safe@Office 500 Appliance
- Getting to Know Your Safe@Office 500W Appliance
- Getting to Know Your Safe@Office 500 ADSL Appliance
- Getting to Know Your Safe@Office 500W ADSL Appliance
- Contacting Technical Support
- Safe@Office Security
- Installing and Setting Up Safe@Office
- Getting Started
- Configuring the Internet Connection
- Managing Your Network
- Using Bridges
- Configuring High Availability
- Using Traffic Shaper
- Working with Wireless Networks
- Viewing Reports
- Viewing Logs
- Setting Your Security Policy
Overview
Chapter 10: Working with Wireless Networks 265
company resources. You could configure Traffic Shaper bandwidth management to give
stations in the Guest network a low priority, and by enabling Secure HotSpot on this
network, you could define terms of use that the guest users must accept before accessing
the Internet. In contrast, the Employee VAP would use the more secure WPA2-Enterprise
(802.11i) encryption standard and allow employees to access company resources such as
the intranet.
You can configure up to three VAPs, in addition to the primary WLAN. For information
on configuring VAPs, see Configuring VAPs on page 294.
Wireless Distribution System Links
The Safe@Office appliance enables you to extend the primary WLAN's coverage area, by
creating a Wireless Distribution System (WDS). A WDS is a system of access points that
communicate with each other wirelessly via WDS links, without any need for a wired
backbone. For example, if your business has expanded across two buildings, and a single
access point no longer provides sufficient coverage, you can add another access point that
acts as a repeater. If it is impractical or costly to run wires between the access points, you
can connect them by configuring a WDS that includes both access points.
WDS is usually used together with bridge mode to connect the networks behind the access
points. For example, if you have two network segments, each of which is served by a
different access point, you can bridge the two network segments over WDS links. The
network segments will communicate with each other wirelessly via their access points and
act as a single network. For information on bridge mode, see Using Bridges on page 217.
WDS links are considered a type of VLAN (se
e
Configuring VLANs on page 174).
Therefore, they can have s
eparate security policies, IP network segments, and Traffic
Shaper settings.