Yes after the code upgrade, all the old WLAN override settings are gone and all the APs are put into default-group and broadcasting all SSIDs. Then you need to create AP groups and move APs to appropriate  groups.

Dennis


Lee H Badman wrote:

Thanks, Hector (and Jeff and others).

 

That “restart the AP” thing is a prime beef of mine… means a routine change can only be done during an outage window, and is one more example of the disparity between the WCS UI and the Controller function.

 

We do have several WLANs that go to different APs in different combinations. After the code upgrade, all of the old WLAN Override settings are simply gone from the controllers and all APs, correct? And at that point, are all APs broadcasting all SSIDs, or none?

 

-Lee

 

Lee H. Badman

Wireless/Network Engineer

Information Technology and Services

Syracuse University

315 443-3003


From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Hector J Rios
Sent: Friday, May 29, 2009 12:14 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Cisco LWAPP- The change from WLAN Override to AP Groups- Pain?

 

Lee,

 

We are using it and we like it. We are running 5.2.130 in WCS and 5.2.178 in our controllers.

 

If you are going to have several WLANs going to different APs, you have to create multiple groups and move all your APs into their appropriate groups. AP groups come with a default group that contains all the WLANs and all APs belong to that group unless you change it. So I highly recommend that you move all your APs off of the default group. You can create and push all your groups through WCS. On gotcha that we have found is that when you move an AP into a AP group, if you use WCS, it will restart the AP, if you use a controller, it doesn’t. Don’t know why.

 

Thanks,

 

Hector Rios

Louisiana State University

 

 

 

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Lee H Badman
Sent: Friday, May 29, 2009 9:49 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] Cisco LWAPP- The change from WLAN Override to AP Groups- Pain?

 

Knowing that some have already gone down this road…

 

We are still on “stable” 4.2.code, have not jumped to 5 yet. It is our understanding that “stable” 5 code will be coming out soon, and we have several reasons to go to the 5 train (I realize 6 is also coming out, but may be too bleeding edge for us out of the gate). All of that aside, when we move out of 4.2 into 5, we will thankfully put WLAN Override behind us. But is a feature we use extensively out of necessity, and so we’ll most certainly need to use “AP Groups” in the more current code.

 

I’m wondering what the pain was in transitioning from WLAN Override to AP Groups on a large scale during the code upgrade, and if there were any particular issues of note during the process.

 

Thanks-

 

Lee

 

Lee H. Badman

Wireless/Network Engineer

Information Technology and Services

Syracuse University

315 443-3003

 

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