Adaptive Ap; Rogue Ap Enhancements; Bandwidth Management Enhancements - Motorola AP-51 Series Product Reference Manual

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For information on defining the Apache certificate management configuration, see
Management on page

1.1.9 Adaptive AP

An adaptive AP (AAP) is an AP-51XX access point that can adopt like an AP300 (L3). The management
of an AAP is conducted by a switch, once the access point connects to a Motorola WS5100, RFS6000
or RFS7000 model switch 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 switch
For a information overview of the adaptive AP feature as well as how to configure it, refer to
Adaptive AP on page

1.1.10 Rogue AP Enhancements

The access point now has the option to scan for rogues over all channels on both of the access point's
11a and 11bg radio bands. The switching of radio bands is based on a timer with no user intervention
required.
For information on configuring the access point for Rogue AP support, see
Detection on page
6-55.

1.1.11 Bandwidth Management Enhancements

Use the Bandwidth Management screen to control the network bandwidth allotted to individual
WLANs. Define a weighted scheme as needed when WLAN traffic supporting a specific network
segment becomes critical. Bandwidth management is configured on a per-WLAN basis. However, a
separate tab has been created for each access point radio. With this new segregated radio approach,
bandwidth management can be configured uniquely for individual WLANs on different access point
radios.
For information on configuring bandwidth management, see
Settings on page
5-65.
4-25.
10-1.
Apache Certificate
Configuring Rogue AP
Configuring Bandwidth Management
1-5
Introduction

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