238
C
HAPTER
10: C
ONFIGURING
MAP A
CCESS
P
OINTS
Data rate enforcement is useful if you want to completely prevent clients
from transmitting at disabled data rates. For example, you can disable
slower data rates so that clients transmitting at these rates do not
consume bandwidth on the channel at the expense of clients transmitting
at faster rates.
Data rate enforcement is disabled by default. To enable data rate
enforcement for a radio profile, use the following command:
set radio-profile
profile-name
rate-enforcement mode
{
enable
|
disable
}
For example, the following command enables data rate enforcement for
radio profile
rp1.
WX#
set radio-profile rp1 rate-enforcement mode enable
The following command sets a 802.11g mandatory rate for service profile
sp1
to 54 Mbps and disables rates 1.0 Mbps and 2.0 Mbps:
WX#
set service-profile sp1 transmit-rates 11g mandatory 54.0
disabled 1.0,2.0
The following command maps radio profile
rp1
to service profile
sp1
.
WX#
set radio-profile rp1 service-profile sp1
After these commands are entered, if a client transmitting with a data
rate of 1.0 Mbps or 2.0 Mbps attempts to associate with a MAP managed
by service profile
sp1
, that client is not allowed to associate with the
MAP.
Disabling Idle-Client Probing
By default, a MAP radio sends keepalive messages (idle-client probes)
every 10 seconds to each client that has an active session on the radio, to
verify that the client is still active. The probes are unicast null-data frames.
Normally, a client that is still active sends an Ack in reply to an idle-client
probe.
If a client does not send any data or respond to any idle-client probes
before the user idle timeout expires (see “Changing the User Idle
Timeout” on page 239), MSS changes the client’s session to the
Disassociated state.
Summary of Contents for 3CRWX120695A
Page 138: ...138 CHAPTER 6 CONFIGURING AND MANAGING IP INTERFACES AND SERVICES ...
Page 272: ...272 CHAPTER 11 CONFIGURING RF LOAD BALANCING FOR MAPS ...
Page 310: ...310 CHAPTER 13 CONFIGURING USER ENCRYPTION ...
Page 322: ...322 CHAPTER 14 CONFIGURING RF AUTO TUNING ...
Page 350: ...350 CHAPTER 16 CONFIGURING QUALITY OF SERVICE ...
Page 368: ...368 CHAPTER 17 CONFIGURING AND MANAGING SPANNING TREE PROTOCOL ...
Page 412: ...412 CHAPTER 19 CONFIGURING AND MANAGING SECURITY ACLS ...
Page 518: ...518 CHAPTER 21 CONFIGURING AAA FOR NETWORK USERS ...
Page 530: ...530 CHAPTER 22 CONFIGURING COMMUNICATION WITH RADIUS ...
Page 542: ...542 CHAPTER 23 MANAGING 802 1X ON THE WX SWITCH ...
Page 598: ...598 CHAPTER 26 ROGUE DETECTION AND COUNTERMEASURES ...
Page 706: ...706 GLOSSARY ...