Table 15. Wireless Settings - D-Link DWL-8500AP - AirPremier AG Wireless Switching 108 Dualband Access Point Administrator's Manual

Unified access point (ap)
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D-Link Unified Access Point Administrator's Guide
NOTE: For the DWL-8500AP, radio interface settings apply to both Radio Interface
Table 15
page.

Table 15. Wireless Settings

Field
802.11d Regulatory
Domain Support
IEEE 802.11h
Support
Station Isolation
Radio Interface
MAC Address
NOTE: After you configure the wireless settings, you must click Update to apply the
56
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1 and Radio Interface 2.
describes the fields and configuration options available on the Wireless Settings
Description
Enabling support for IEEE 802.11d (World Mode) on the access point
causes the AP to broadcast its operational country code as a part of its
beacons and probe responses. This allows client stations to operate in any
country without reconfiguration.
To enable 802.11d regulatory domain support, click Enabled.
To disable 802.11d regulatory domain support, click Disabled.
The Administration UI shows whether IEEE 802.11h regulatory domain
control is in effect on the AP. IEEE 802.11h cannot be modified. For more
information, see
IEEE 802.11h is a standard that provides two services required to satisfy
certain regulatory domains for the 5 GHz band. These two services are
Transmit Power Control (TPC) and Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS).
Note: The 802.11h mode is automatically enabled if the AP is configured
to work in any country that requires 802.11h as a minimum standard.
To enable station isolation, select the option directly beside it.
When Station Isolation is disabled, wireless clients can communicate
with one another normally by sending traffic through the access point.
When Station Isolation is enabled, the access point blocks
communication between wireless clients. The access point still allows
data traffic between its wireless clients and wired devices on the
network, but not among wireless clients.
The mode following the radio interface defines the IEEE wireless
networking standard of the radio.
Indicates the Media Access Control (MAC) addresses for the interface.
For the DWL-8500AP, this page shows the
Interface One and Radio Interface Two.
A MAC address is a permanent, unique hardware address for any device
that represents an interface to the network. The MAC address is assigned
by the manufacturer. You cannot change the MAC address. It is provided
here for informational purposes as a unique identifier for an interface.
changes and to save the settings. Changing some access point settings might
cause the AP to stop and restart system processes. If this happens, wireless
clients will temporarily lose connectivity. We recommend that you change
access point settings when WLAN traffic is low.
"Using the 802.11h Wireless Mode"
on page 57.
MAC
addresses for Radio

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