Management Mode - ZyXEL Communications NWA5121-N User Manual

802.11 a/b/g/n/ac unified access point
Hide thumbs Also See for NWA5121-N:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Table 2 WAC Series Comparison Table
FEATURES
Number of Wireless Radios
Monitor Mode & Rogue APs Detection
Layer-2 Isolation
External Antennas
Internal Antenna
Maximum number of log messages
You can set the NWA/WAC to operate in either standalone AP or managed AP mode. When the
NWA/WAC is in standalone AP mode, it can serve as a normal AP, as an RF monitor to search for
rouge APs to help eliminate network threats (if it supports monitor mode and rogue APs detection),
or even as a root AP or a wireless repeater to establish wireless links with other APs in a WDS
(Wireless Distribution System). A WDS is a wireless connection between two or more APs.
Your NWA/WAC's business-class reliability, SMB features, and centralized wireless management
make it ideally suited for advanced service delivery in mission-critical networks. It uses Multiple
BSSID and VLAN to provide simultaneous independent virtual APs. Additionally, innovations in
roaming technology and QoS features eliminate voice call disruptions.
The NWA/WAC controls network access with Media Access Control (MAC) address filtering, and
rogue Access Point (AP) detection. It also provides a high level of network traffic security,
supporting IEEE 802.1x, Wi-Fi Protected Access 2 and Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) data
encryption.
Your NWA/WAC is easy to install, configure and use. The embedded Web-based configurator
enables simple, straightforward management and maintenance. See the Quick Start Guide for how
to make hardware connections.

1.1.1 Management Mode

The NWA/WAC is a unified AP and can work either in standalone AP mode or in managed AP mode.
If the NWA/WAC and a ZyXEL AP controller, such as the NXC2500 or NXC5500, are in the same
subnet, it will be managed by the controller automatically.
An AP controller uses Control And Provisioning of Wireless Access Points (CAPWAP, see RFC 5415)
to discover and configure multiple managed APs.
To set the NWA/WAC to be managed by an AP controller in a different subnet or change between
management modes, use the AC (AP Controller) Discovery screen (see
Table 3 NWA/WAC Management Mode Comparison
MANAGEMENT MODE
Standalone AP
Managed AP
When the NWA/WAC is in standalone AP mode and connects to a DHCP server, it uses the IP
address assigned by the DHCP server. Otherwise, the NWA/WAC uses the default static
management IP address (192.168.1.2). You can use the AC Discovery screen to have the NWA/
WAC work as a managed AP.
Chapter 1 Introduction
WAC6502D-E
WAC6502D-S
2
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
512 event logs or 1024 debug logs
DEFAULT IP ADDRESS
Dynamic or
Static (192.168.1.2)
Dynamic
NWA5000 / WAC6500 Series User's Guide
12
WAC6503D-S
2
2
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No
Yes
Yes
Section 5.4 on page
UPLOAD FIRMWARE VIA
Web Configurator or FTP
CAPWAP or FTP
WAC6553D-E
2
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
63).

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents