Ruckus has announced their option will be coming Q3 (as I recall) and is 
supposed to allow grouping of APs and be able to "fence" the Apple TVs into 
these groups.

The only option I have successfully used is blocking multicast at the AP level. 
 Problem being the client would then have to be on the same AP in order to see 
the Apple TV.

Bob Williamson
Network Administrator
Annie Wright Schools | 827 N Tacoma Ave, Tacoma, WA 98403 | 
www.aw.org<http://www.aw.org/>
D: 253.272.2216 | F: 253.572.3616 | [email protected]

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From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jason Cook
Sent: Thursday, May 30, 2013 12:27 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Controlling Bonjour Zones

Thanks Mark,

Yeah we are in the same boat with only a handful of actual uses at the moment, 
but this will just grow and we are keen to build a scalable solution from the 
start. For the moment I guess it's do what you can and wait. As you say most 
users do seem to understand these days that some Apple features aren't as 
simple on campus as they are at home.

With what you/Bruce have commented on with Aruba, I'm sure something is in line 
for Cisco already. Catching up with them soon, so I guess I'll find out then

--
Jason Cook
Technology Services
The University of Adelaide, AUSTRALIA 5005
Ph    : +61 8 8313 4800

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mark Duling
Sent: Wednesday, 29 May 2013 4:03 AM
To: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Controlling Bonjour Zones

Airplay support is a work in progress and there is no location control.  I 
don't know if the RFC will bear fruit, but I think individual vendors will try 
to come up with their own solutions to gain a competitive advantage.  Aruba has 
announced some location-based advertisement thing but it is vaporware at this 
point I think.  For those who want building based or other network segregation 
models anyway that may be fine, but for those that don't re-architecting a 
network for airplay zone control isn't very attractive.

In our case there aren't that many AppleTVs on campus, and we aren't officially 
supporting it anyway, so it isn't an issue now.  People understand that it is 
experimental but appreciate that it works nonetheless.  The fact that it is 
usable and reliable is a great thing, and we'll look forward to see what 
developments for zoning come down the pike.


On Sun, May 26, 2013 at 7:02 PM, Jason Cook 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi,

We have Cisco wireless and are currently dev'ing up the bonjour gateway service 
release in 7.4. I know other vendors have similar workaround features and am 
interested see how people have gone with it, keen to hear from users of other 
vendors as well.

So far it all seems to work as advertised, was pretty easy setup with good 
control over what services you advertise. However I find there to be a lack of 
location control, and would like to know if anyone has implemented ways to 
control the location where the advertisements go.

For something like this we'd like to restrict the advertisements to location by 
building/level/room/AP, it will help it scale better for users devices when 
scrolling through the list of available devices to connect to like an Apple TV. 
Users in building 1 don't need to see an Apple TV in a meeting room in building 
2. Using separate SSID's is also not really a scalable solution... though does 
work of course with a dedicated subnet and multicast enabled.

We currently don't have building based networks, which would be one way to 
control advertisements. This is something we are planning, but are a while off 
yet, also the ability to go more granular than just buildings would be useful.

I've started a conversation with our local Cisco office, but am interested see 
what others may have done or believe could be useful for this.

Regards

Jason

--
Jason Cook
Technology Services
The University of Adelaide, AUSTRALIA 5005
Ph    : +61 8 8313 4800<tel:%2B61%208%208313%204800>
e-mail: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

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