Reference:Configuration/ETH/WLAN: Difference between revisions
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|valign=top nowrap=true|'''RSSI Threshold:''' | |valign=top nowrap=true|'''RSSI Threshold:''' | ||
| RSSI Threshold when to start roaming. Valid range is between -80 dbM and -60 dBm. Note that this option only effects the idle mode. During call mode, the handset scans periodically for better RSSI, and roams on | | RSSI Threshold when to start roaming. Valid range is between -80 dbM and -60 dBm. Note that this option only effects the idle mode. During call mode, the handset scans periodically for better RSSI, and roams on 6 dBm difference. This is an advanced option, which one may never have to use. | ||
It make sense to increase the threshold in office bulding with lots of walls and corners where the signal strength decreases very fast due to fast movements around corners. in this case -65dBm could be used. | It make sense to increase the threshold in office bulding with lots of walls and corners where the signal strength decreases very fast due to fast movements around corners. in this case -65dBm could be used. | ||
Decreasing the threshold is very unlikely. | Decreasing the threshold is very unlikely. | ||
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Revision as of 17:42, 9 November 2007
WLAN
SSID: | The SSID for the WLAN. |
Security
Cipher: | The The encryption type mode the WLAN. (Old WEP Styles in 64 and 128 bit versions, obsoleted Cisco CKIP, WPA - TKIP and WPA2-AES-CCMP). |
WEP Key index: | The WEP key index (1-4) used when transmitting data. |
WEP Key: | WEP key for the WLAN. |
Security Mode
Association Mode: | The association mode the WLAN (None, WPA or WPA2). |
Authentication Mode: | The authentication mode the WLAN (EAP - without dynamic key exchange, LEAP - with and without dymanic key exchage, and PEAP-MSCHAPv2 with dymanic key exchange). |
Passphrase: | The passphrase used for WPA-PSK. |
User: | The user name used for EAP (PEAP, LEAP) authentication. |
Password: | The password used for EAP (PEAP, LEAP) authentication. |
Supported WLAN Configurations
Cipher | Auth | Assoc | Security | |
None | None | None | None | |
WEP or WEP128 | None | None | WEP-Key and WEP-Index | |
WEP or WEP128 | EAP-MD5 | None | WEP-Key and WEP-Index, User and Password | |
WEP or WEP128 | LEAP | None | WEP-Key and WEP-Index, User and Password | |
TKIP | LEAP | None | User and Password | |
TKIP | None | WPA or WPA2 | Passphrase | |
TKIP | PEAP-MSCHAPv2 | WPA or WPA2 | User and Password | |
AES-CCMP | None | WPA2 | Passphrase | |
AES-CCMP | PEAP-MSCHAPv2 | WPA2 | User and Password |
Power Management
Power Save: | Power save options for WLAN. | ||
Power management in idle mode: | Power management | Power management in call mode: | Power management. |
Regulatory Domain
Domain: | Regulatory domain. |
Roaming
RSSI Threshold: | RSSI Threshold when to start roaming. Valid range is between -80 dbM and -60 dBm. Note that this option only effects the idle mode. During call mode, the handset scans periodically for better RSSI, and roams on 6 dBm difference. This is an advanced option, which one may never have to use.
It make sense to increase the threshold in office bulding with lots of walls and corners where the signal strength decreases very fast due to fast movements around corners. in this case -65dBm could be used. Decreasing the threshold is very unlikely. |
Channel Mask: | Channel bitmask. Provide here a HEX number for channels that should be scanned by handset. Is used to increase roaming performance. If, for example, the WLAN infrastructure only uses channels 1,6 and 11, the channel mask 0x421 could be used.
However, this is an advanced option, which one may never have to use. Examples: 0x1FFF = 1111111111111 scan all 13 Channels 0x7FF = 0011111111111 scan all 11 Channels 0x421 = 0010000100001 scan only 11,6,1 0x1020 = 1000000100000 scan only 13 and 6 |