808 Appendix F:Glossary
NN47250-500 (Version 03.01)
802.11b/g radio A radio that can receive and transmit signals at IEEE 802.11b and 802.11g data rates.
Nortel 802.11b/g radios allow associations from 802.11b clients as well as 802.11g clients by default, for
networks that have a mixture of both client types. However, association by any 802.11b clients restricts the
maximum data transmit rate for all clients. To allow the radios to operate at the higher 802.11g data rates, you
can set 802.11b/g radios to reject association attempts by 802.11b clients.
802.11g A supplement to the IEEE 802.11 wireless LAN (WLAN) specification, describing transmission
through the Physical layer (PHY) based on orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM), at a
frequency of 2.4 GHz and data rates of up to 54 Mbps.
802.11i A draft supplement to the IEEE 802.11 wireless LAN (WLAN) specification, for enhanced security
through the use of stronger encryption protocols such as the Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) and AES
Counter Mode with Cipher Block Chaining Message Authentication Code Protocol (AES-CCMP). These
protocols provide replay protection, cryptographically keyed integrity checks, and key derivation based on the
IEEE 802.1X port authentication standard. See also AES; CCMP; TKIP; WPA.
AAA Authentication, authorization, and accounting. A framework for configuring services that provide a
secure network connection and a record of user activity, by identifying who the user is, what the user can
access, and what services and resources the user is consuming. In a Nortel WLAN 2300 system, the
WLAN—Security Switch (WSS) can use a RADIUS server or its own local database for AAA services.
access control entry See ACE.
access control list See security ACL.
Access Point (AP) A small hardware unit that functions as a wireless AP in a Nortel WLAN 2300
system. Using one or more radio transmitters, an AP transmits and receives information as radio frequency
(RF) signals to and from a wireless user (client). The AP transmits and receives information over a 10/
100BASE-T Ethernet connection to and from a WLAN—Security Switch (WSS). The switch also supplies
electrical power to the access point by means of Power over Ethernet (PoE). An optional dual-homed
connection to a second WSS provides redundancy. An AP communicates with a WSS by means of the Nortel
Access Point Access (NAPA) protocol.
access point (AP) A hardware unit that acts as a communication hub by linking wireless mobile IEEE
802.11 stations such as PCs to a wired backbone network. A Nortel WLAN 2300 system has Access Point
(AP). See also ad hoc network; infrastructure network; Access Point (AP).
ACE A rule in a security access control list (ACL) that grants or denies a set of network access rights based
on one or more criteria. ACEs use criteria such as a protocol and a source or destination IP address to
determine whether to permit or deny packets that match the criteria. ACEs are processed in the order in which
they appear in the security ACL. See also security ACL.
ACL See security ACL.
ad hoc network One of two IEEE 802.11 network frameworks. In an ad hoc network, a set of wireless
stations communicate directly with one another without using an AP or any connection to a wired network.
With an ad hoc network, also known as a peer-to-peer network or independent basic service set (IBSS), you
can set up a wireless network in which a wireless infrastructure does not exist or is not required for services (in
a classroom, for example), or through which access to the wired network is prevented (for consultants at a
client site, for example). Compare infrastructure network.
Advanced Encryption Standard See AES.