There were some legacy WEP settings from the old WAP. I removed them but it still does not show 802.11n capabilities. Here is what I have now:
aaa authentication login allowed-eap group radius dot11 ssid MyCorp vlan 705 authentication open eap allowed-eap authentication network-eap allowed-eap authentication key-management wpa mbssid guest-mode infrastructure-ssid interface Dot11Radio0 no ip address no ip route-cache ! encryption vlan 705 mode ciphers tkip ! ssid MyCorp ! antenna gain 0 mbssid station-role root no cdp enable ! interface Dot11Radio0.705 encapsulation dot1Q 705 native no ip route-cache no cdp enable bridge-group 1 bridge-group 1 subscriber-loop-control bridge-group 1 block-unknown-source no bridge-group 1 source-learning no bridge-group 1 unicast-flooding bridge-group 1 spanning-disabled The Dot11Radio1 is configured the same way except for two additonal settings: dfs band 3 block channel dfs Jonathan > Subject: Re: [c-nsp] AIR-AP1262N-A-K9 question. > From: [email protected] > Date: Sun, 7 Aug 2011 12:54:34 +0200 > CC: [email protected] > To: [email protected] > > Dear Jonathan, > > Den 07/08/2011 kl. 01.50 skrev Jonathan Call: > > > > My company bought one of these for a new office. I plugged in the SSID and > > other authentication settings from an AIR-AP1232ag that we have in another > > office. I did not adjust the speed or gain settings. I left those as > > default. Every device I've tested with the new WAP only detects the > > 802.11ag radio and 54Mbps operational speed. This includes five different > > laptops with Intel Centrino Advanced-N 6200 AGN wireless adapters. I have > > six (3x 2.4GHz, 3 x 5GHz) dipole antennas attached. > > > > Am I missing something? I figured it would do 802.11n right out of the box. > > > What kind of encryption scheme are You using ? > 802.11n only supports non-encryption or WPA2/AES. > A common pitfall while migrating from legacy speeds to 802.11n, is an SSID > with WEP encryption. > > WMM is enabled by default (AFAIK) on the autonomous AP, so You should be > fine in that regard. > > Finally You should consider enabling 40MHz band on the 5 GHz radio. > > Channel <frequency> width 40-above > or > channel <frequency> width 40-below > > Depending on whether the extension channel shall be below or above the > control channel. > > > Regards, > > Anders > > > _______________________________________________ cisco-nsp mailing list [email protected] https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/
