7
Command Line Interface
IAPP Commands
The command described in this section enables the protocol signaling required to
ensure the successful handover of wireless clients roaming between different
802.11f-compliant access points. In other words, the 802.11f protocol can ensure
successful roaming between access points in a multi-vendor environment.
iapp
This command enables the protocol signaling required to hand over wireless clients
roaming between different 802.11f-compliant access points. Use the no form to
disable 802.11f signaling.
Syntax
iapp
no iapp
Default
Enabled
Command Mode
Global Configuration
Command Usage
The current 802.11 standard does not specify the signaling required between
access points in order to support clients roaming from one access point to
another. In particular, this can create a problem for clients roaming between
access points from different vendors. This command is used to enable or
disable 802.11f handover signaling between different access points, especially
in a multi-vendor environment.
Example
AP(config)#iapp
AP(config)#
VLAN Commands
The wireless bridge can enable the support of VLAN-tagged traffic passing between
the wireless interface and the wired network.
When VLAN support is enabled, the wireless bridge tags traffic passing to the wired
network with the assigned native VLAN ID (a number between 1 and 64). Traffic
received from the wired network must also be tagged with the same VLAN ID.
Received traffic that has an unknown VLAN ID or no VLAN tag is dropped.
When VLAN support is disabled, the wireless bridge does not tag traffic passing to
the wired network and ignores the VLAN tags on any received frames.
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