Appendix C Wireless LANs

(and vice versa) at 11 Mbps or lower depending on range. IEEE 802.11g has several intermediate rate steps between the maximum and minimum data rates. The IEEE 802.11g data rate and modulation are as follows:

Table 270 IEEE 802.11g

DATA RATE (MBPS)

MODULATION

1

DBPSK (Differential Binary Phase Shift Keyed)

 

 

2

DQPSK (Differential Quadrature Phase Shift Keying)

 

 

5.5 / 11

CCK (Complementary Code Keying)

 

 

6/9/12/18/24/36/48/54

OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing)

 

 

Wireless Security Overview

Wireless security is vital to your network to protect wireless communication between wireless clients, access points and the wired network.

Wireless security methods available on the ZyWALL are data encryption, wireless client authentication, restricting access by device MAC address and hiding the ZyWALL identity.

The following figure shows the relative effectiveness of these wireless security methods available on your ZyWALL.

Table 271 Wireless Security Levels

SECURITY

SECURITY TYPE

LEVEL

 

Least

Unique SSID (Default)

Secure

 

Unique SSID with Hide SSID Enabled

 

 

 

 

MAC Address Filtering

 

 

 

WEP Encryption

 

 

 

IEEE802.1x EAP with RADIUS Server

 

Authentication

 

 

 

Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA)

Most Secure

 

WPA2

 

 

Note: You must enable the same wireless security settings on the ZyWALL and on all wireless clients that you want to associate with it.

IEEE 802.1x

In June 2001, the IEEE 802.1x standard was designed to extend the features of IEEE 802.11 to support extended authentication as well as providing additional

808

 

ZyWALL USG 20/20W User’s Guide