Wireless Switching - Motorola RFS Series Reference Manual

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1-8 Motorola RF Switch Systen Reference

1.2.2 Wireless Switching

The switch includes the following wireless switching features:
Adaptive AP
Physical Layer Features
Rate Limiting
Proxy-ARP
HotSpot / IP Redirect
IDM (Identity Driven Management)
Voice Prioritization
Self Healing
Wireless Capacity
AP and MU Load Balancing
Wireless Roaming
Power Save Polling
QoS
Wireless Layer 2 Switching
Automatic Channel Selection
WMM-Unscheduled APSD
Multiple VLANs per WLAN
1.2.2.1 Adaptive AP
An adaptive AP (AAP) is an AP-5131 or AP-7131 Access Point adopted by a wireless switch. The management
of an AAP is conducted by the switch, once the Access Point connects to the switch and receives its AAP
configuration.
An AAP provides:
• local 802.11 traffic termination
• local encryption/decryption
• local traffic bridging
• tunneling of centralized traffic to the wireless switch
The connection between the AAP and the switch can be secured using IPSec depending on whether a secure
WAN link from a remote site to the central site already exists.
The switch can be discovered using one of the following mechanisms:
• DHCP
• Switch fully qualified domain name (FQDN)
• Static IP addresses
The benefits of an AAP deployment include:

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