Converting Auto Daps Into Statically Configured Aps; Creating A Network Domain - 3Com WX4400 Reference Manual

Wireless lan mobility system wireless switch manager
Hide thumbs Also See for WX4400:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

72
C
4: W
HAPTER
ORKING WITH
Converting Auto
DAPs into Statically
Configured APs
Creating a Network
Domain
N
P
ETWORK
LANS
10 If 3WXM displayed error or warning messages, select the Verification tool
bar option and go to "Verifying Configuration Changes" on page 377.
Distributed MAPs that are not configured on any WX switches in the
Mobility Domain can nonetheless be booted and managed by a switch if
the switch has a profile for Distributed MAPs, and has capacity to
manage the MAP. A MAP that is booted and managed using a
Distributed MAP profile is here called an Auto DAP.
You can convert the temporary connection of an Auto DAP to a WX
switch into a permanent, statically configured connection on the switch.
1 Select the Configuration tool bar option.
2 In the Organizer panel, select the WX switch.
3 In the Task List panel, select Convert Auto DAPs.
The Convert Auto DAPs wizard appears. The MAPs that were configured
using a Distribute MAP template are listed.
4 Select the MAPs you want to convert into statically configured MAPs.
5 Click Next.
6 Select the temporary connections you want to convert into static
connections.
7 Click Finish.
MSS Version 4.1 and higher allows functionality found in Mobility Domains
to be extended over a multiple-site installation, in a Network Domain. A
Network Domain is a group of geographically dispersed Mobility Domains
that share information over a WAN link. This shared information allows a
user configured in one Mobility Domain to establish connectivity on a WX
switch in a remote Mobility Domain. The WX switch forwards the user traffic
by creating a VLAN tunnel to a WX switch in the remote Mobility Domain.
In a Network Domain, one or more WX switches acts as a seed device. A
Network Domain seed stores information about all of the VLANs on the
Network Domain members. The Network Domain seeds share this
information among themselves, so that every seed has an identical database.
(For more information, see the "Configuring Network Domains" chapter
of the
Wireless LAN Switch and Controller Configuration
Guide.)

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents