I've seen issues with that chipset - if the Intel manager is installed
and the Cisco extensions are enabled/installed e.g. CCX, I see the exact
same problem. On windows computers, disabling the Cisco extensions
within the Intel WiFi Manager does appear to resolve the problem. 
 
Jeff

>>> On Thursday, September 25, 2014 at 5:38 AM, in message
<[email protected]>, Trent
Hurt <[email protected]> wrote:

Fyi

Forwarding this from another list in case anyone encounters this

Sent from my iPhone

Begin forwarded message:



From: Robin Breathe <[email protected]>
Date: September 25, 2014 at 8:26:13 AM EDT
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: Issues with recent Intel chipsets with 5GHz 802.11n
Greenfield?
Reply-To: Wireless Issues in the JANET community
<[email protected]>



Afternoon all, 

We've recently identified an problem with the Intel Dual-Band
Wireless-AC 7260 chipset (and likely other recent Intel Centrino
chipsets), as found in a range of recent laptops, including the Dell
Latitude E7740, leading to difficulty associating to our eduroam SSID
followed by sporadic and recurring dropouts (
https://communities.intel.com/community/tech/wireless ) or all-out
failure to associate and/or complete authentication. It seems we're not
alone as Portsmouth also have a support page on the topic
(http://ithelp.port.ac.uk/questions/385/Known+issues+connecting+to+the+wireless+network+(Eduroam))
where they appear to haven given up on getting devices with the 7260 to
connect to eduroam at all, and others on the Intel forums seem to be
having similar problems extending even to Linux clients. The latest
Windows drivers (17.1.0) on Windows 7 at least appear to make no
difference.

Troubleshooting at our site, where we have a significant deployment of
Aerohive APs offering eduroam over both 2.4G (802.11g/n clients only)
and 5G (802.11n clients only) radios (gently band-steering to 5G), we
have so far identified two workarounds. The first – truly vile – was to
disable VHT/HT modes in the driver and so force 2.4G/802.11g operation
in our environment. The second is simply unfortunate and involves
configuring the driver to prefer the 2.4G band. The nature of both
workarounds leads me to hypothesise that the root cause of issues with
the latest Intel chipsets may be that their current drivers are not be
coping with 802.11n Greenfield; having the client prefer 2.4G simply
sidesteps the issue as its not in Greenfield mode.

Has anyone else experienced these or similar problems with the latest
batch of Intel chipsets (with or without 802.11n Greenfield), or have
any alternate hypotheses as to the root cause of this behaviour? Has
anyone else identified a superior workaround (short of disabling
Greenfield mode)?

Regards,
Robin
-- 
Robin Breathe
Chief Technology Officer, OBIS, Oxford Brookes University – 01865
483685 

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