I agree wholeheartedly, the Aruba ARM works quite nicely, recently the
neighboring hospital turned up its radios, and ARM switched us out
without missing a beat. We reviewed Merus's devices and liked the
approach, but were less than wowed with the completeness of the feature
set. 

 

In the end we choose Aruba for four reasons:

Price - pretty self explanatory

Performance/deployment - (this was identical in most and in many of our
use cases better than Meru)

Feature Set - Aruba has obviously spent many hours actually listening to
and implementing user centric changes, I don't know of a more feature
rich wireless solution

Support - Aruba has in many occasions been proactive, where I have
posted a question to this forum and others to actually go out of their
way to contact me to help me fix a problem, in some instances where the
problem wasn't even Aruba's at all...

 

We haven't looked back.

 

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ken Connell
Sent: Wednesday, July 29, 2009 9:15 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Single Channel vs Multi-Channel Architecture

 

I don't have much experience with a single channel deployment, but
without even getting into vendor preferences or specifics I can't see
how a single channel can gain any perfomance in such an unpreditctable
and dynamically changing environment as far as other devices, and
wireless networks that will come and go probably a daily basis with
little or no control. 
The channel you decide on today, may not be the best suited channel
tomorrow, and if you then need to make a change at that point, then
you've jsut come full circle and are right back where you started. 
In my opinion it just makes sense to go with an automated RF type
deployment (Aruba ARM for us) and be able to sleep at night ;)

Ken Connell
Intermediate Network Engineer
Computer & Communication Services
Ryerson University
350 Victoria St
RM AB50
Toronto, Ont
M5B 2K3
416-979-5000 x6709

________________________________

From: Ryan Holland 
Date: Wed, 29 Jul 2009 09:04:34 -0400
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Single Channel vs Multi-Channel Architecture

...interesting thread...

 

When we were making our decision 3+ years ago, we discounted Meru
primarily on scalability information in their RFP response. So
unfortunately, we did not get a chance to bring them in for a demo. I am
still quite skeptical about a single-channel architecture but believe I
understand why it is promoted: to assist devices in roaming by creating
a seemingly single BSSID. However, once we see more devices supporting
standards such as 802.11k and 802.11r, such efforts, to me, are negated.
Again, however, I have not had the opportunity to play with this gear,
so [disclaimer].

 

We have been deploying Aruba for sometime and have learned a great deal
about their technology, so I will caution the trusting of intelligent
radio management solutions. Instead, I would suggest one utilize this
technology while maintaining a tight supervision of it. Using Aruba with
whom I am most experienced, their adaptive radio management (ARM) is
quite powerful, as it allows for dynamic remodeling for channel and
power based on the environment. This means that as other building
tenants bring in their own wireless systems, our network can modify its
channel configuration accordingly. Also, in the event of an AP failure,
adjacent APs will likely perceive a lower aggregate signal strength of
neighboring APs, boost their power, and thus help alleviate the loss of
coverage from said failed AP.

 

The reason I cautioned earlier is that many administrators simply "turn
on ARM" and leave it. Doing so is assuming the defaults are applicable
for all environments, which I would argue is not true for most
educational institutions. Examples: the range of chosen transmit power
is likely too expansive; the noise threshold at which an AP would change
channels may be too low, especially for "research areas" like  Illinois
mentioned; the target coverage index may be too low for densely deployed
installations or too high for sparsely deployed installations. Aruba is
great in that administrators can configure different ARM profiles for
all these different circumstances and use them suitably. But again, to
just turn it on and expect it to "work" can lead to false assumptions.

 

I would also add that there are still a lot of those that state static
channel/power assignments is the best way to go. While I would agree
that is true assuming the environment is identical at installation as it
was during survey, it is incredibly likely that the environment will
change and therefore negate the initial survey. Because our environments
are largely unpredictable, I find a dynamic solution to be preferable.
Now, if we had complete control over RF across campus, my opinion may be
different.

 

(Oh, and because people seem to be concerned with these sorts of
numbers: ~5,000 APs, ~40 controllers).


==========
Ryan Holland
Network Engineer, Wireless
CIO - Infrastructure

The Ohio State University
614-292-9906   [email protected]

 

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