Professional Access Point Administrator Guide
Required Component
Client Security Settings
Description
Security should be disabled on the client used to do initial configuration of the access point.
If the Security mode on the access point is set to anything other than None, wire- less clients will need to set a profile to the authentication mode used by the access point and provide a valid user name and password, certificate, or similar user iden- tity proof. Security modes are Static WEP, IEEE 802.1x, WPA/WPA2 with RADIUS server, and
For information on configuring security on the access point, see “Security” on page 101.
Understanding Dynamic and Static IP Addressing on the Professional Access Point
Professional Access Points are designed to
How Does the Access Point Obtain an IP Address at Startup?
When you deploy the access point, it looks for a network DHCP server and, if it finds one, obtains an IP Address from the DHCP server. If no DHCP server is found on the network, the access point will continue to use its default Static IP Address (192.168.1.10) until you reassign it a new static IP address and specify a static IP addressing policy or until a DHCP server is brought online.
Note
•If you configure both an Internal and Guest network and plan to use a dynamic addressing policy for both, separate DHCP servers must be running on each network.
•A DHCP server is a requirement for the Guest network.
When you run the Detection Utility, it discovers the Professional Access Points on the network and lists their IP addresses and MAC addresses. The Detection Utility also provides a link to the Web User Interface of each access point using the IP address in the URL. For more information about the Detection Utility, see “Step 3. Run the Detection Utility to find access points on the network” on page 26.
Dynamic IP Addressing
The Professional Access Point generally expects that a DHCP server is running on the network where the access point is deployed. Most business networks already have DHCP service provided through either a gateway device or a centralized server. However, if no DHCP server is present on the Internal network, the access point will use the default Static IP Address for
Similarly, wireless clients and other network devices will receive their IP addresses from the DHCP server, if there is one. If no DHCP server is present on the network, you must manually assign static IP addresses to your wireless clients and other network devices.