Routing Information Protocol (Rip); Manual Date And Time Settings; Dynamic Dns; Auto Negotiation - Extreme Networks Altitude 4700 Series Product Reference Manual

Software version 4.1
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Introduction
For detailed information on configuring the Access Point for Hotspot support, see
Hotspot Support" on page

Routing Information Protocol (RIP)

RIP is an interior gateway protocol that specifies how routers exchange routing-table information. The
parent Router screen also allows the administrator to select the type of RIP and the type of RIP
authentication used.
For detailed information on configuring RIP functionality as part of the Access Point's Router
functionality, see
"Setting the RIP Configuration" on page

Manual Date and Time Settings

As an alternative to defining an NTP server to provide Access Point system time, the Access Point can
now have its date and time set manually. A new Manual Date/Time Setting screen can be used to set
the time using a Year-Month-Day HH:MM:SS format.
For detailed information on manually setting the Access Point's system time, see
Time Protocol (NTP)" on page

Dynamic DNS

The Access Point supports the Dynamic DNS service. Dynamic DNS (or DynDNS) is a feature offered by
www.dyndns.com allowing the mapping of domain names to dynamically assigned IP addresses. When
the dynamically assigned IP address of a client changes, the new IP address is sent to the DynDNS
service and traffic for the specified domain(s) is routed to the new IP address. For information on
configuring Dynamic DNS, see

Auto Negotiation

Auto negotiation enables the Access Point to automatically exchange information about data
transmission speed and duplex capabilities. Auto negotiation is helpful when using the Access Point in
an environment where different devices are connected and disconnected on a regular basis. For
information on configuring the auto negotiation feature, see
page 123
or
"Configuring WAN Settings" on page

Adaptive AP

An adaptive AP (AAP) is an Access Point that can adopt like an Altitude 4600 Access Point (L3). The
management of an AAP is conducted by a controller, once the Access Point connects to an Extreme
Networks controller and receives its AAP configuration.
An AAP provides:
local 802.11 traffic termination
local encryption/decryption
local traffic bridging
the tunneling of centralized traffic to the wireless controller
36
160.
110.
"Configuring Dynamic DNS" on page
135.
187.
145.
"Configuring the LAN Interface" on
Altitude 4700 Series Access Point Product Reference Guide
"Configuring WLAN
"Configuring Network

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