Related to that, we experienced an issue at my previous job where the CTO
could not get his iPhone or Macbook on our internal wireless network.  Being
the CTO, of course this was a priority!  (He's a friend of mine, so it
wasn't a hard sell.)  After looking at various issues, we turned off AEs and
bang, he could connect.  I don't see the issue with my iPhone 4, but you
just never know how a particular client/driver combination will interact
with vendor specific IEs.

Jason Boyers - CCIE #26024 (Wireless)
Technical Instructor - IPexpert
[email protected]


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kristján
Ólafur Eðvarðsson
Sent: Thursday, January 27, 2011 12:05 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [CCIE Wireless] 1. Re: lab 3 question 3.7 - aironet extensions.
(Stefan Angerer)

To add why you want to disable aironet extensions.


It is reccomended in hotspot environments and environments with
mixed vendors and some perhaps with old wireless cards, OS or drivers.
Aironet extensions may have negative impact for some clients to connect.

A little real-life story. Probably happened to many here:

I recently had a customer case where the guest wireless was not working
on an open network. They wouldn´t finish dhcp negotiation. All other clients
worked fine.
This was the first issue in many month but after investigating
the clients pc had driver since 2005 and could not be updated at the time.
I also noticed that on the guest WLAN (Wireless Controller) had aironet
extensions enabled.
Immediately after I disabled Aironet extensions on that particular SSID
those
clients worked fine.

regards. Kristjan



----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Sun, 23 Jan 2011 20:47:02 +0000
From: Stefan Angerer <[email protected]>
To: "Kara Muessig (kmuessig)" <[email protected]>,
        "[email protected]"
        <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [CCIE Wireless] lab 3 question 3.7 - aironet extensions.
Message-ID: <4D91831EDC64C8438174B1FBB0013726646C71E8@srvgraz07>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"

Kara,

CCO says this:

[...]
In addition to these, Aironet extensions carry more information that include
these:

?         Load that the AP currently handles

?         Number of hops from the Wired network

?         Device type, which helps identify the product under the Cisco
system for management

?         Device name

?         Number of associated clients

?         Radio type, a feature used to determine certain characteristics
about the radio, such as datarate, radio type (1310, 1200, 352 or 342),
security type (WEP/802.1x), etc.
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/wireless/ps430/products_qanda_item091
86a008009483e.shtml

regards
Stefan

Von: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] Im Auftrag von Kara
Muessig (kmuessig)
Gesendet: Sonntag, 23. J?nner 2011 20:15
An: [email protected]
Betreff: [CCIE Wireless] lab 3 question 3.7 - aironet extensions.

Hi all,

Can anybody explain why you would want to disable aironet extensions to
ensure that clients cannot get the name of the AP?   According to the IOS
config guide aironet extensions are responsible for world mode, MIC and
limiting power on associated clients, so I'm not sure how that fits in the
solutions guide.   I would think no cdp enable would take care of ensuring
clients cannot get the name of the AP.

Any help is appreciated.

Thanks,

[http://www.cisco.com/web/europe/images/email/signature/horizontal04.jpg]

Kara Muessig
CONSULTING SYSTEMS ENGINEER.SALES
Wireless South Team
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Phone: 512-791-2870


Cisco.com<http://www.cisco.com>

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