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Module 16. AP MODES and Virtual controller. Objectives. Explain the three AP operation modes Explain the differences between an RF Domain and a Virtual Controller Identify the site locations to deploy a Virtual Controller Discuss the key features of a Virtual Controller
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Module 16 AP MODES and Virtual controller
Objectives • Explain the three AP operation modes • Explain the differences between an RF Domain and a Virtual Controller • Identify the site locations to deploy a Virtual Controller • Discuss the key features of a Virtual Controller • Identify the steps to configure a Virtual Controller
Quick Start Wizard • WiNG 5.2 brought Web GUI to Independent Access Points • The Quick Start Wizard is automatically launched when you first log into the WiNG5 GUI on an access point running a default configuration • The Quick Start Wizard may also be manually launched from the Configuration tab but only if the default configuration has not been modified • The Wizard can be cancelled at any time, leaving the configuration in its default state.
Select AP Mode • Standalone • MLCP is stopped, no adoption possible • Just a standalone fat AP, no adoption, no collaboration, no distributed architecture • Controller Managed • Adopted and managed by controller (Real or Virtual) • APs have local services • Independent APs have site survivability • Virtual Controller • AP can adopt up to 24 other APs of the same type and act as a controller • Good for small single-site deployments • Supported only on AP6511, AP7131 and AP6532 • Supports most of WiNG5 feature set with some minor limitations
Managing other APs Virtual Controller Internet Single Location
Virtual Controller - Overview RF Domain • Site survivable AP’s can now function as a controller for a site (single rf-domain). • Scales to 24 access points of same model • No cross-platform support • Functions similar to “real” WiNG5 Controller • Once Virtual Controller mode is selected: • AP client applets will stop and the AP will not attempt to discover a controller • AP server applets start and the AP takes on role of a controller for other clients, responding to discovery requests • Virtual Controller is responsible for • firmware updates • configuration management • statistics collection • troubleshooting • Virtual Controller and RF-Domain manager are not the same thing Profile Configuration Parameters Policies WLANs Device Access Point
Common UI Screens • The Dashboard is similar to that of the RFS WiNG 5 interface
Configuration • Cannot support multiple RF-Domains - there can be only one!
When do you position a Virtual Controller? 1 Company may only have a single location 2 Businesses may be owned by one parent company, but managed individually 3 Sites with up to 24 Independent Access Points
Explain the three AP operation modes • Explain the differences between an RF Domain and a Virtual Controller • Identify the site locations to deploy a Virtual Controller • Discuss the key features of a Virtual Controller • Identify the steps to configure a Virtual Controller • Module Summary