RRM Commands

config 802.11-a

To enable or disable the 4.9-GHz and 5.8-GHz public safety channels on an access point, use the config 802.11-a command.

config { 802.11-a49 | 802.11-a58} { enable | disable} cisco_ap

Syntax Description

802.11-a49

Specifies the 4.9-GHz public safety channel.

802.11-a58

Specifies the 5.8-GHz public safety channel.

enable

Enables the use of this frequency on the designated access point.

disable

Disables the use of this frequency on the designated access point.

cisco_ap

Name of the access point to which the command applies.

Command Default

The default 4.9-GHz and 5.8-GHz public safety channels on an access point is disabled.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable the 4.9-GHz public safety channel on ap_24 access point:


(Cisco Controller) > config 802.11-a

config 802.11-a antenna extAntGain

To configure the external antenna gain for the 4.9-GHz and 5.8-GHz public safety channels on an access point, use the config 802.11-a antenna extAntGain commands.

config { 802.11-a49 | 802.11-a58} antenna extAntGain ant_gain cisco_ap { global | channel_no}

Syntax Description

802.11-a49

Specifies the 4.9-GHz public safety channel.

802.11-a58

Specifies the 5.8-GHz public safety channel.

ant_gain

Value in .5-dBi units (for instance, 2.5 dBi = 5).

cisco_ap

Name of the access point to which the command applies.

global

Specifies the antenna gain value to all channels.

channel_no

Antenna gain value for a specific channel.

Command Default

Channel properties are disabled.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

Before you enter the config 802.11-a antenna extAntGain command, disable the 802.11 Cisco radio with the config 802.11-a disable command.

After you configure the external antenna gain, use the config 802.11-a enable command to reenable the 802.11 Cisco radio.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure an 802.11-a49 external antenna gain of 10 dBi for AP1:

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11-a antenna extAntGain 10 AP1

config 802.11-a channel ap

To configure the channel properties for the 4.9-GHz and 5.8-GHz public safety channels on an access point, use the config 802.11-a channel ap command.

config { 802.11-a49 | 802.11-a58} channel ap cisco_ap { global | channel_no}

Syntax Description

802.11-a49

Specifies the 4.9-GHz public safety channel.

802.11-a58

Specifies the 5.8-GHz public safety channel.

cisco_ap

Name of the access point to which the command applies.

global

Enables the Dynamic Channel Assignment (DCA) on all 4.9-GHz and 5.8-GHz subband radios.

channel_no

Custom channel for a specific mesh access point. The range is 1 through 26, inclusive, for a 4.9-GHz band and 149 through 165, inclusive, for a 5.8-GHz band.

Command Default

Channel properties are disabled.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to set the channel properties:

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11-a channel ap

config 802.11-a txpower ap

To configure the transmission power properties for the 4.9-GHz and 5.8-GHz public safety channels on an access point, use the config 802.11-a txpower ap command.

config { 802.11-a49 | 802.11-a58} txpower ap cisco_ap { global | power_level}

Syntax Description

802.11-a49

Specifies the 4.9-GHz public safety channel.

802.11-a58

Specifies the 5.8-GHz public safety channel.

txpower

Configures transmission power properties.

ap

Configures access point channel settings.

cisco_ap

Name of the access point to which the command applies.

global

Applies the transmission power value to all channels.

power_level

Transmission power value to the designated mesh access point. The range is from 1 to 5.

Command Default

The default transmission power properties for the 4.9-GHz and 5.8-GHz public safety channels on an access point is disabled.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure an 802.11-a49 transmission power level of 4 for AP1:


(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11-a txpower ap 4 AP1

config 802.11-abgn

To configure dual-band radio parameters on an access point, use the config 802.11-abgn command.

config 802.11-abgn { cleanair { enable | disable} { cisco_ap band band} | { enable | disable} { cisco_ap}}

Syntax Description

cleanair

Configures CleanAir on the dual-band radio.

enable

Enables CleanAir for both 2.4-GHz and 5-GHz radios.

disable

Disables CleanAir for both 2.4-GHz and 5-GHz radios.

cisco_ap

Name of the access point to which the command applies.

band

Configures the radio band.

band

Radio band that can be 2.4-GHz or 5-GHz.

enable

Enables the dual-band radio on an access point.

disable

Disables the dual-band radio on an access point.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

Only Cisco CleanAir-enabled access point radios can be configured for Cisco CleanAir.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable Cisco CleanAir on an access point:

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11-abgn cleanair enable AP3600 band 5

config 802.11a 11acsupport

To configure 802.11ac 5-GHz parameters, use the config 802.11a 11acsupport

config 802.11a 11acsupport { enable | disable | mcs tx mcs_index ss spatial_stream { enable | disable}}

Syntax Description

enable

Enables 802.11ac 5-GHz mode.

disable

Disables 802.11ac 5-GHz mode.

mcs tx

Configures 802.11ac 5-GHz Modulation and Coding Scheme (MCS) rates at which data can be transmitted between the access point and the client.

tx

Configures 802.11ac 5-GHz MCS transmit rates.

mcs_index

MCS index value of 8 or 9. MCS data rates with index 8 or 9 are specific to 802.11ac. When you enable an MCS data rate with index 9, the data rate with MCS index 8 is automatically enabled.

ss

Configures the 802.11ac 5-GHz MCS spatial stream (SS).

spatial_stream

Spatial stream within which you can enable or disable an MCS data rate.

Signals transmitted by the various antennae are multiplexed by using different spaces within the same spectral channel. These spaces are known as spatial streams. Three spatial streams are available within which you can enable or disable a MCS rate. The range is from 1 to 3.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

Disabling the 802.11n/ac mode applies only to access radios. Backhaul radios always have 802.11n/ac mode enabled if they are 802.11n capable.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the MCS index for spatial stream 3:

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11a 11acsupport mcs tx 9 ss 3

config 802.11b 11gSupport

To enable or disable the Cisco wireless LAN solution 802.11g network, use the config 802.11b 11gSupport command.

config 802.11b 11gSupport { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

enable

Enables the 802.11g network.

disable

Disables the 802.11g network.

Command Default

The default network for Cisco wireless LAN solution 802.11g is enabled.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

Before you enter the config 802.11b 11gSupport {enable | disable} command, disable the 802.11 Cisco radio with the config 802.11 disable command.

After you configure the support for the 802.11g network, use the config 802.11 enable command to enable the 802.11 radio.


Note

To disable an 802.11a, 802.11b and/or 802.11g network for an individual wireless LAN, use the config wlan radio command.


Examples

The following example shows how to enable the 802.11g network:


(Cisco Controller) > config 802.11b 11gSupport enable
Changing the 11gSupport will cause all the APs to reboot when you enable 802.11b network.
Are you sure you want to continue? (y/n) n
11gSupport not changed!

config 802.11b preamble

To change the 802.11b preamble as defined in subclause 18.2.2.2 to long (slower, but more reliable) or short (faster, but less reliable), use the config 802.11b preamble command.

config 802.11b preamble { long | short}

Syntax Description

long

Specifies the long 802.11b preamble.

short

Specifies the short 802.11b preamble.

Command Default

The default 802.11b preamble value is short.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines


Note

You must reboot the Cisco Wireless LAN Controller (reset system) with save to implement this command.


This parameter must be set to long to optimize this Cisco wireless LAN controller for some clients, including SpectraLink NetLink telephones.

This command can be used any time that the CLI interface is active.

Examples

The following example shows how to change the 802.11b preamble to short:

  (Cisco Controller) >config 802.11b preamble short
  (Cisco Controller) >(reset system with save)

config 802.11h channelswitch

To configure an 802.11h channel switch announcement, use the config 802.11h channelswitch command.

config 802.11h channelswitch { enable { loud | quiet} | disable}

Syntax Description

enable

Enables the 802.11h channel switch announcement.

disable

Disables the 802.11h channel switch announcement.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification

7.6

  • This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.
  • The loud and quiet parameters were introduced.

Examples

The following example shows how to disable an 802.11h switch announcement:


(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11h channelswitch disable

config 802.11h powerconstraint

To configure the 802.11h power constraint value, use the config 802.11h powerconstraint command.

config 802.11h powerconstraint value

Syntax Description

value

802.11h power constraint value.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification

7.6

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the 802.11h power constraint to 5:


(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11h powerconstraint 5

config 802.11h setchannel

To configure a new channel using 802.11h channel announcement, use the config 802.11h setchannel command.

config 802.11h setchannel cisco_ap

Syntax Description

cisco_ap

Cisco lightweight access point name.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification

7.6

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure a new channel using the 802.11h channel:


(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11h setchannel ap02

config 802.11 11nsupport

To enable 802.11n support on the network, use the config 802.11 11nsupport command.

config 802.11{ a | b} 11nsupport { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network settings.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network settings.

enable

Enables the 802.11n support.

disable

Disables the 802.11n support.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification

7.6

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable the 802.11n support on an 802.11a network:


(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11a 11nsupport enable

config 802.11 11nsupport a-mpdu tx priority

To specify the aggregation method used for 802.11n packets, use the config 802.11 11nsupport a-mpdu tx priority command.

config 802.11{ a | b} 11nsupport a-mpdu tx priority { 0-7 | all} { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

0-7

Specifies the aggregated MAC protocol data unit priority level between 0 through 7.

all

Configures all of the priority levels at once.

enable

Specifies the traffic associated with the priority level uses A-MPDU transmission.

disable

Specifies the traffic associated with the priority level uses A-MSDU transmission.

Command Default

Priority 0 is enabled.

Usage Guidelines

Aggregation is the process of grouping packet data frames together rather than transmitting them separately. Two aggregation methods are available: Aggregated MAC Protocol Data Unit (A-MPDU) and Aggregated MAC Service Data Unit (A-MSDU). A-MPDU is performed in the software whereas A-MSDU is performed in the hardware.

Aggregated MAC Protocol Data Unit priority levels assigned per traffic type are as follows:

  • 1—Background

  • 2—Spare

  • 0—Best effort

  • 3—Excellent effort

  • 4—Controlled load

  • 5—Video, less than 100-ms latency and jitter

  • 6—Voice, less than 10-ms latency and jitter

  • 7—Network control

  • all—Configure all of the priority levels at once.


    Note

    Configure the priority levels to match the aggregation method used by the clients.


Command History

Release Modification

7.6

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure all the priority levels at once so that the traffic associated with the priority level uses A-MSDU transmission:


(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11a 11nsupport a-mpdu tx priority all enable

config 802.11 11nsupport a-mpdu tx scheduler

To configure the 802.11n-5 GHz A-MPDU transmit aggregation scheduler, use the config 802.11 11nsupport a-mpdu tx scheduler command.

config 802.11{ a | b} 11nsupport a-mpdu tx scheduler { enable | disable | timeout rt timeout-value}

Syntax Description

enable

Enables the 802.11n-5 GHz A-MPDU transmit aggregation scheduler.

disable

Disables the 802.11n-5 GHz A-MPDU transmit aggregation scheduler.

timeout rt

Configures the A-MPDU transmit aggregation scheduler realtime traffic timeout.

timeout-value

Timeout value in milliseconds. The valid range is between 1 millisecond to 1000 milliseconds.

Command Default

None

Usage Guidelines

Ensure that the 802.11 network is disabled before you enter this command.

Command History

Release Modification

7.6

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the A-MPDU transmit aggregation scheduler realtime traffic timeout of 100 milliseconds:


(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11 11nsupport a-mpdu tx scheduler timeout rt 100

config 802.11 11nsupport antenna

To configure an access point to use a specific antenna, use the config 802.11 11nsupport antenna command.

config 802.11{ a | b} 11nsupport antenna cisco_ap { A | B | C | D} { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a/n network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g/n network.

cisco_ap

Access point.

A/B/C/D

Specifies an antenna port.

enable

Enables the configuration.

disable

Disables the configuration.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification

7.6

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure transmission to a single antenna for legacy orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing:


(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11 11nsupport antenna AP1 C enable

config 802.11 11nsupport guard-interval

To configure the guard interval, use the config 802.11 11nsupport guard-interval command.

config 802.11 { a | b} 11nsupport guard-interval { any | long}

Syntax Description

any

Enables either a short or a long guard interval.

long

Enables only a long guard interval.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification

7.6

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure a long guard interval:


(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11 11nsupport guard-interval long

config 802.11 11nsupport mcs tx

To specify the modulation and coding scheme (MCS) rates at which data can be transmitted between the access point and the client, use the config 802.11 11nsupport mcs tx command.

config 802.11{ a | b} 11nsupport mcs tx { 0-15} { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

11nsupport

Specifies support for 802.11n devices.

mcs tx

Specifies the modulation and coding scheme data rates as follows:

  • 0 (7 Mbps)

  • 1 (14 Mbps)

  • 2 (21 Mbps)

  • 3 (29 Mbps)

  • 4 (43 Mbps)

  • 5 (58 Mbps)

  • 6 (65 Mbps)

  • 7 (72 Mbps)

  • 8 (14 Mbps)

  • 9 (29 Mbps)

  • 10 (43 Mbps)

  • 11 (58 Mbps)

  • 12 (87 Mbps)

  • 13 (116 Mbps)

  • 14 (130 Mbps)

  • 15 (144 Mbps)

enable

Enables this configuration.

disable

Disables this configuration.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification

7.6

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to specify MCS rates:


(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11a 11nsupport mcs tx 5 enable

config 802.11 11nsupport rifs

To configure the Reduced Interframe Space (RIFS) between data frames and its acknowledgment, use the config 802.11 11nsupport rifs command.

config 802.11{ a | b} 11nsupport rifs { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

enable

Enables RIFS for the 802.11 network.

disable

Disables RIFS for the 802.11 network.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification

7.6

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

This example shows how to enable RIFS:


(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11a 11nsupport rifs enable

config 802.11 antenna diversity

To configure the diversity option for 802.11 antennas, use the config 802.11 antenna diversity command.

config 802.11{ a | b} antenna diversity { enable | sideA | sideB} cisco_ap

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

enable

Enables the diversity.

sideA

Specifies the diversity between the internal antennas and an external antenna connected to the Cisco lightweight access point left port.

sideB

Specifies the diversity between the internal antennas and an external antenna connected to the Cisco lightweight access point right port.

cisco_ap

Cisco lightweight access point name.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable antenna diversity for AP01 on an 802.11b network:

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11a antenna diversity enable AP01

The following example shows how to enable diversity for AP01 on an 802.11a network, using an external antenna connected to the Cisco lightweight access point left port (sideA):

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11a antenna diversity sideA AP01

config 802.11 antenna extAntGain

To configure external antenna gain for an 802.11 network, use the config 802.11 antenna extAntGain command.

config 802.11{ a | b} antenna extAntGain antenna_gain cisco_ap

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

antenna_gain

Antenna gain in 0.5 dBm units (for example, 2.5 dBm = 5).

cisco_ap

Cisco lightweight access point name.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

Before you enter the config 802.11 antenna extAntGain command, disable the 802.11 Cisco radio with the config 802.11 disable command.

After you configure the external antenna gain, use the config 802.11 enable command to enable the 802.11 Cisco radio.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure an 802.11a external antenna gain of 0.5 dBm for AP1 :

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11 antenna extAntGain 1 AP1

config 802.11 antenna mode

To configure the Cisco lightweight access point to use one internal antenna for an 802.11 sectorized 180-degree coverage pattern or both internal antennas for an 802.11 360-degree omnidirectional pattern, use the config 802.11 antenna mode command.

config 802.11{ a | b} antenna mode { omni | sectorA | sectorB} cisco_ap

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

omni

Specifies to use both internal antennas.

sectorA

Specifies to use only the side A internal antenna.

sectorB

Specifies to use only the side B internal antenna.

cisco_ap

Cisco lightweight access point name.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure access point AP01 antennas for a 360-degree omnidirectional pattern on an 802.11b network:

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11 antenna mode omni AP01

config 802.11 antenna selection

To select the internal or external antenna selection for a Cisco lightweight access point on an 802.11 network, use the config 802.11 antenna selection command.

config 802.11{ a | b} antenna selection { internal | external} cisco_ap

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

internal

Specifies the internal antenna.

external

Specifies the external antenna.

cisco_ap

Cisco lightweight access point name.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure access point AP02 on an 802.11b network to use the internal antenna:

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11a antenna selection internal AP02

config 802.11 channel

To configure an 802.11 network or a single access point for automatic or manual channel selection, use the config 802.11 channel command.

config 802.11{ a | b} channel { global [ auto | once | off | restart]} | ap { ap_name [ global | channel]}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

global

Specifies the 802.11a operating channel that is automatically set by RRM and overrides the existing configuration setting.

auto

(Optional) Specifies that the channel is automatically set by Radio Resource Management (RRM) for the 802.11a radio.

once

(Optional) Specifies that the channel is automatically set once by RRM.

off

(Optional) Specifies that the automatic channel selection by RRM is disabled.

restarts

(Optional) Restarts the aggressive DCA cycle.

ap_name

Access point name.

channel

Manual channel number to be used by the access point. The supported channels depend on the specific access point used and the regulatory region.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

When configuring 802.11 channels for a single lightweight access point, enter the config 802.11 disable command to disable the 802.11 network. Enter the config 802.11 channel command to set automatic channel selection by Radio Resource Management (RRM) or manually set the channel for the 802.11 radio, and enter the config 802.11 enable command to enable the 802.11 network.


Note

See the Channels and Maximum Power Settings for Cisco Aironet Lightweight Access Points document for the channels supported by your access point. The power levels and available channels are defined by the country code setting and are regulated on a country-by-country basis.


Examples

The following example shows how to have RRM automatically configure the 802.11a channels for automatic channel configuration based on the availability and interference:

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11a channel global auto

The following example shows how to configure the 802.11b channels one time based on the availability and interference:

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11b channel global once

The following example shows how to turn 802.11a automatic channel configuration off:

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11a channel global off

The following example shows how to configure the 802.11b channels in access point AP01 for automatic channel configuration:

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11b AP01 channel global 

The following example shows how to configure the 802.11a channel 36 in access point AP01 as the default channel:

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11a channel AP01 36

config 802.11 channel ap

To set the operating radio channel for an access point, use the config 802.11 channel ap command.

config 802.11{ a | b} channel ap cisco_ap { global | channel_no}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

cisco_ap

Name of the Cisco access point.

global

Enables auto-RF on the designated access point.

channel_no

Default channel from 1 to 26, inclusive.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable auto-RF for access point AP01 on an 802.11b network:

(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11b channel ap AP01 global

config 802.11 chan_width

To configure the channel width for a particular access point, use the config 802.11 chan_width command.

config 802.11{ a | b} chan_width cisco_ap { 20 | 40 | 80 | 160 | best}

Syntax Description

a

Configures the 802.11a radio on slot 1 and 802.11ac radio on slot 2.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g radio.

cisco_ap

Access point.

20

Allows the radio to communicate using only 20-MHz channels.

Choose this option for legacy 802.11a radios, 20-MHz 802.11n radios, or 40-MHz 802.11n radios that you want to operate using only 20-MHz channels.

40

Allows 40-MHz 802.11n radios to communicate using two adjacent 20-MHz channels bonded together.

80

Allows 80-MHz 802.11ac radios to communicate using two adjacent 40-MHz channels bonded together.

160

Allows 160-MHz 802.11ac radios to communicate.

best

In this mode, the device selects the optimum bandwidth channel.

Command Default

The default channel width is 20.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.
8.3

This command was enhanced in this release with the inclusion of 160 MHz and best channel bandwidth modes.

Usage Guidelines

This parameter can be configured only if the primary channel is statically assigned.


Caution

We recommend that you do not configure 40-MHz channels in the 2.4-GHz radio band because severe co-channel interference can occur.


Statically configuring an access point’s radio for 20-MHz or 40-MHz mode overrides the globally configured DCA channel width setting (configured by using the config advanced 802.11 channel dca chan-width command). If you change the static configuration back to global on the access point radio, the global DCA configuration overrides the channel width configuration that the access point was previously using.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the channel width for access point AP01 on an 802.11 network using 40-MHz channels:


(Cisco Controller) >config 802.11a chan_width AP01 40

config 802.11 txPower

To configure the transmit power level for all access points or a single access point in an 802.11 network, use the config 802.11 txPower command.

config 802.11{ a | b} txPower { global { power_level | auto | max | min | once } | ap cisco_ap}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

global

Configures the 802.11 transmit power level for all lightweight access points.

auto

(Optional) Specifies the power level is automatically set by Radio Resource Management (RRM) for the 802.11 Cisco radio.

once

(Optional) Specifies the power level is automatically set once by RRM.

power_level

(Optional) Manual Transmit power level number for the access point.

ap

Configures the 802.11 transmit power level for a specified lightweight access point.

ap_name

Access point name.

Command Default

The command default (global , auto ) is for automatic configuration by RRM.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

The supported power levels depends on the specific access point used and the regulatory region. For example, the 1240 series access point supports eight levels and the 1200 series access point supports six levels. See the Channels and Maximum Power Settings for Cisco Aironet Lightweight Access Points document for the maximum transmit power limits for your access point. The power levels and available channels are defined by the country code setting and are regulated on a country-by-country basis.

Examples

The following example shows how to automatically set the 802.11a radio transmit power level in all lightweight access points:


(Cisco Controller) > config 802.11a txPower auto

The following example shows how to manually set the 802.11b radio transmit power to level 5 for all lightweight access points:


(Cisco Controller) > config 802.11b txPower global 5

The following example shows how to automatically set the 802.11b radio transmit power for access point AP1:


(Cisco Controller) > config 802.11b txPower AP1 global

The following example shows how to manually set the 802.11a radio transmit power to power level 2 for access point AP1:


(Cisco Controller) > config 802.11b txPower AP1 2

config advanced 802.11 7920VSIEConfig

To configure the Cisco unified wireless IP phone 7920 VISE parameters, use the config advanced 802.11 7920VSIEConfig command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} 7920VSIEConfig { call-admission-limit limit | 
 G711-CU-Quantum quantum}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

call-admission-limit

Configures the call admission limit for the 7920s.

G711-CU-Quantum

Configures the value supplied by the infrastructure indicating the current number of channel utilization units that would be used by a single G.711-20ms call.

limit

Call admission limit (from 0 to 255). The default value is 105.

quantum

G711 quantum value. The default value is 15.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification

7.6

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

This example shows how to configure the call admission limit for 7920 VISE parameters:


(Cisco Controller) >config advanced 802.11 7920VSIEConfig call-admission-limit 4

config advanced 802.11 channel add

To add channel to the 802.11 networks auto RF channel list, use the config advanced 802.11 channel add command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel add channel_number

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

add

Adds a channel to the 802.11 network auto RF channel list.

channel_number

Channel number to add to the 802.11 network auto RF channel list.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to add a channel to the 802.11a network auto RF channel list:

(Cisco Controller) >config advanced 802.11 channel add 132

config advanced 802.11 channel cleanair-event

To configure CleanAir event driven Radio Resource Management (RRM) parameters for all 802.11 Cisco lightweight access points, use the config advanced 802.11 channel cleanair-event command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel cleanair-event { enable | disable | sensitivity [ low | medium | high] | custom threshold threshold_value}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

enable

Enables the CleanAir event-driven RRM parameters.

disable

Disables the CleanAir event-driven RRM parameters.

sensitivity

Sets the sensitivity for CleanAir event-driven RRM.

low

(Optional) Specifies low sensitivity.

medium

(Optional) Specifies medium sensitivity

high

(Optional) Specifies high sensitivity

custom

Specifies custom sensitivity.

threshold

Specifies the EDRRM AQ threshold value.

threshold_value

Number of custom threshold.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable the CleanAir event-driven RRM parameters:

(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 channel cleanair-event enable

The following example shows how to configure high sensitivity for CleanAir event-driven RRM:

(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 channel cleanair-event sensitivity high

config advanced 802.11 channel dca anchor-time

To specify the time of day when the Dynamic Channel Assignment (DCA) algorithm is to start, use the config advanced 802.11 channel dca anchor-time command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel dca anchor-time value

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

value

Hour of the time between 0 and 23. These values represent the hour from 12:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the time of delay when the DCA algorithm starts:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 channel dca anchor-time 17

config advanced 802.11 channel dca chan-width-11n

To configure the Dynamic Channel Assignment (DCA) channel width for all 802.11n radios in the 5-GHz band, use the config advanced 802.11 channel dca chan-width-11n command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel dca chan-width-11n { 20 | 40 | 80}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

20

Sets the channel width for 802.11n radios to 20 MHz.

40

Sets the channel width for 802.11n radios to 40 MHz.

80

Sets the channel width for 802.11ac radios to 80-MHz.

Command Default

The default channel width is 20.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

If you choose 40, be sure to set at least two adjacent channels in the config advanced 802.11 channel {add | delete} channel_number command (for example, a primary channel of 36 and an extension channel of 40). If you set only one channel, that channel is not used for the 40-MHz channel width.

To override the globally configured DCA channel width setting, you can statically configure an access point’s radio for 20- or 40-MHz mode using the config 802.11 chan_width command. If you then change the static configuration to global on the access point radio, the global DCA configuration overrides the channel width configuration that the access point was previously using.

Examples

The following example shows how to add a channel to the 802.11a network auto channel list:


(Cisco Controller) >config advanced 802.11a channel dca chan-width-11n 40

Examples

The following example shows how to set the channel width for the 802.11ac radio as 80-MHz:


(Cisco Controller) >config advanced 802.11a channel dca chan-width-11n 80

config advanced 802.11 channel dca interval

To specify how often the Dynamic Channel Assignment (DCA) is allowed to run, use the config advanced 802.11 channel dca interval command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel dca interval value

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

value

Valid values are 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, or 24 hours. 0 is 10 minutes (600 seconds).

Command Default

The default DCA channel interval is 10 (10 minutes).

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

If your controller supports only OfficeExtend access points, we recommend that you set the DCA interval to 6 hours for optimal performance. For deployments with a combination of OfficeExtend access points and local access points, the range of 10 minutes to 24 hours can be used.

Examples

The following example shows how often the DCA algorithm is allowed to run:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 channel dca interval 8

config advanced 802.11 channel dca min-metric

To configure the 5-GHz minimum RSSI energy metric for DCA, use the config advanced 802.11 channel dca min-metric command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel dca RSSI_value

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

RSSI_value

Minimum received signal strength indicator (RSSI) that is required for the DCA to trigger a channel change. The range is from –100 to –60 dBm.

Command Default

The default minimum RSSI energy metric for DCA is –95 dBm.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the minimum 5-GHz RSSI energy metric for DCA:

(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a channel dca min-metric –80

In the above example, the RRM must detect an interference energy of at least -80 dBm in RSSI for the DCA to trigger a channel change.

config advanced 802.11 channel dca sensitivity

To specify how sensitive the Dynamic Channel Assignment (DCA) algorithm is to environmental changes (for example, signal, load, noise, and interference) when determining whether or not to change channels, use the config advanced 802.11 channel dca sensitivity command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel dcasensitivity { low | medium | high}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

low

Specifies the DCA algorithm is not particularly sensitive to environmental changes. See the “Usage Guidelines” section for more information.

medium

Specifies the DCA algorithm is moderately sensitive to environmental changes. See the “Usage Guidelines” section for more information.

high

Specifies the DCA algorithm is highly sensitive to environmental changes. See the “Usage Guidelines” section for more information.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

The DCA sensitivity thresholds vary by radio band as shown in the table below.

To aid in troubleshooting, the output of this command shows an error code for any failed calls. This table explains the possible error codes for failed calls.

Table 1. DCA Sensitivity Thresholds

Sensitivity

2.4-GHz DCA Sensitivity Threshold

5-GHz DCA Sensitivity Threshold

High

5 dB

5 dB

Medium

15 dB

20 dB

Low

30 dB

35 dB

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the value of DCA algorithm’s sensitivity to low:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 channel dca sensitivity low

config advanced 802.11 channel foreign

To have Radio Resource Management (RRM) consider or ignore foreign 802.11a interference avoidance in making channel selection updates for all 802.11a Cisco lightweight access points, use the config advanced 802.11 channel foreign command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel foreign { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

enable

Enables the foreign access point 802.11a interference avoidance in the channel assignment.

disable

Disables the foreign access point 802.11a interference avoidance in the channel assignment.

Command Default

The default value for the foreign access point 802.11a interference avoidance in the channel assignment is enabled.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to have RRM consider foreign 802.11a interference when making channel selection updates for all 802.11a Cisco lightweight access points:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a channel foreign enable

config advanced 802.11 channel load

To have Radio Resource Management (RRM) consider or ignore the traffic load in making channel selection updates for all 802.11a Cisco lightweight access points, use the config advanced 802.11 channel load command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel load { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

enable

Enables the Cisco lightweight access point 802.11a load avoidance in the channel assignment.

disable

Disables the Cisco lightweight access point 802.11a load avoidance in the channel assignment.

Command Default

The default value for Cisco lightweight access point 802.11a load avoidance in the channel assignment is disabled.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to have RRM consider the traffic load when making channel selection updates for all 802.11a Cisco lightweight access points:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 channel load enable

config advanced 802.11 channel noise

To have Radio Resource Management (RRM) consider or ignore non-802.11a noise in making channel selection updates for all 802.11a Cisco lightweight access points, use the config advanced 802.11 channel noise command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel noise { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

enable

Enables non-802.11a noise avoidance in the channel assignment. or ignore.

disable

Disables the non-802.11a noise avoidance in the channel assignment.

Command Default

The default value for non-802.11a noise avoidance in the channel assignment is disabled.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to have RRM consider non-802.11a noise when making channel selection updates for all 802.11a Cisco lightweight access points:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 channel noise enable

config advanced 802.11 channel outdoor-ap-dca

To enable or disable the controller to avoid checking the non-Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) channels, use the config advanced 802.11 channel outdoor-ap-dca command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel outdoor-ap-dca { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

enable

Enables 802.11 network DCA list option for outdoor access point.

disable

Disables 802.11 network DCA list option for outdoor access point.

Command Default

The default value for 802.11 network DCA list option for outdoor access point is disabled.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

The config advanced 802.11{a | b} channel outdoor-ap-dca {enable | disable} command is applicable only for deployments having outdoor access points such as 1522 and 1524.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable the 802.11a DCA list option for outdoor access point:

(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a channel outdoor-ap-dca enable

config advanced 802.11 channel pda-prop

To enable or disable propagation of persistent devices, use the config advanced 802.11 channel pda-prop command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel pda-prop { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

enable

Enables the 802.11 network DCA list option for the outdoor access point.

disable

Disables the 802.11 network DCA list option for the outdoor access point.

Command Default

The default 802.11 network DCA list option for the outdoor access point is disabled.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable or disable propagation of persistent devices:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 channel pda-prop enable

config advanced 802.11 channel update

To have Radio Resource Management (RRM) initiate a channel selection update for all 802.11a Cisco lightweight access points, use the config advanced 802.11 channel update command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel update

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to initiate a channel selection update for all 802.11a network access points:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a channel update

config advanced 802.11 coverage

To enable or disable coverage hole detection, use the config advanced 802.11 coverage command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} coverage { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

enable

Enables the coverage hole detection.

disable

Disables the coverage hole detection.

Command Default

The default coverage hole detection value is enabled.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

If you enable coverage hole detection, the Cisco WLC automatically determines, based on data that is received from the access points, whether any access points have clients that are potentially located in areas with poor coverage.

If both the number and percentage of failed packets exceed the values that you entered in the config advanced 802.11 coverage packet-count and config advanced 802.11 coverage fail-rate commands for a 5-second period, the client is considered to be in a pre-alarm condition. The controller uses this information to distinguish between real and false coverage holes and excludes clients with poor roaming logic. A coverage hole is detected if both the number and percentage of failed clients meet or exceed the values entered in the config advanced 802.11 coverage level global and config advanced 802.11 coverage exception global commands over a 90-second period. The Cisco WLC determines whether the coverage hole can be corrected and, if appropriate, mitigates the coverage hole by increasing the transmit power level for that specific access point.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable coverage hole detection on an 802.11a network:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a coverage enable

config advanced 802.11 coverage exception global

To specify the percentage of clients on an access point that are experiencing a low signal level but cannot roam to another access point, use the config advanced 802.11 coverage exception global command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} coverage exception global percent

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

percent

Percentage of clients. Valid values are from 0 to 100%.

Command Default

The default percentage value for clients on an access point is 25%.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

If both the number and percentage of failed packets exceed the values that you entered in the config advanced 802.11 coverage packet-count and config advanced 802.11 coverage fail-rate commands for a 5-second period, the client is considered to be in a pre-alarm condition. The controller uses this information to distinguish between real and false coverage holes and excludes clients with poor roaming logic. A coverage hole is detected if both the number and percentage of failed clients meet or exceed the values entered in theconfig advanced 802.11 coverage level global and config advanced 802.11 coverage exception global commands over a 90-second period. The controller determines whether the coverage hole can be corrected and, if appropriate, mitigates the coverage hole by increasing the transmit power level for that specific access point.

Examples

The following example shows how to specify the percentage of clients for all 802.11a access points that are experiencing a low signal level:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 coverage exception global 50

config advanced 802.11 coverage fail-rate

To specify the failure rate threshold for uplink data or voice packets, use the config advanced 802.11 coverage fail-rate command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} coverage { data | voice} fail-rate percent

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

data

Specifies the threshold for data packets.

voice

Specifies the threshold for voice packets.

percent

Failure rate as a percentage. Valid values are from 1 to 100 percent.

Command Default

The default failure rate threshold uplink coverage fail-rate value is 20%.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

If both the number and percentage of failed packets exceed the values that you entered in theconfig advanced 802.11 coverage packet-count and config advanced 802.11 coverage fail-rate commands for a 5-second period, the client is considered to be in a pre-alarm condition. The controller uses this information to distinguish between real and false coverage holes and excludes clients with poor roaming logic. A coverage hole is detected if both the number and percentage of failed clients meet or exceed the values entered in the config advanced 802.11 coverage level global and config advanced 802.11 coverage exception global commands over a 90-second period. The controller determines whether the coverage hole can be corrected and, if appropriate, mitigates the coverage hole by increasing the transmit power level for that specific access point.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the threshold count for minimum uplink failures for data packets:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 coverage fail-rate 80

config advanced 802.11 coverage level global

To specify the minimum number of clients on an access point with an received signal strength indication (RSSI) value at or below the data or voice RSSI threshold, use the config advanced 802.11 coverage level global command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} coverage level global clients

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

clients

Minimum number of clients. Valid values are from 1 to 75.

Command Default

The default minimum number of clients on an access point is 3.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

If both the number and percentage of failed packets exceed the values that you entered in the config advanced 802.11 coverage packet-count and config advanced 802.11 coverage fail-rate commands for a 5-second period, the client is considered to be in a pre-alarm condition. The controller uses this information to distinguish between real and false coverage holes and excludes clients with poor roaming logic. A coverage hole is detected if both the number and percentage of failed clients meet or exceed the values entered in the config advanced 802.11 coverage level global and config advanced 802.11 coverage exception global commands over a 90-second period. The controller determines whether the coverage hole can be corrected and, if appropriate, mitigates the coverage hole by increasing the transmit power level for that specific access point.

Examples

The following example shows how to specify the minimum number of clients on all 802.11a access points with an RSSI value at or below the RSSI threshold:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 coverage level global 60

config advanced 802.11 coverage packet-count

To specify the minimum failure count threshold for uplink data or voice packets, use the config advanced 802.11 coverage packet-count command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} coverage { data | voice} packet-count packets

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

data

Specifies the threshold for data packets.

voice

Specifies the threshold for voice packets.

packets

Minimum number of packets. Valid values are from 1 to 255 packets.

Command Default

The default failure count threshold for uplink data or voice packets is10.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

If both the number and percentage of failed packets exceed the values that you entered in the config advanced 802.11 coverage packet-count and config advanced 802.11 coverage fail-rate commands for a 5-second period, the client is considered to be in a pre-alarm condition. The controller uses this information to distinguish between real and false coverage holes and excludes clients with poor roaming logic. A coverage hole is detected if both the number and percentage of failed clients meet or exceed the values entered in the config advanced 802.11 coverage level global and config advanced 802.11 coverage exception global commands over a 90-second period. The controller determines whether the coverage hole can be corrected and, if appropriate, mitigates the coverage hole by increasing the transmit power level for that specific access point.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the failure count threshold for uplink data packets:

(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 coverage packet-count 100

config advanced 802.11 coverage rssi-threshold

To specify the minimum receive signal strength indication (RSSI) value for packets that are received by an access point, use the config advanced 802.11 coverage rssi-threshold command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} coverage { data | voice} rssi-threshold rssi

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

data

Specifies the threshold for data packets.

voice

Specifies the threshold for voice packets.

rssi

Valid values are from –60 to –90 dBm.

Command Default

  • The default RSSI value for data packets is –80 dBm.

  • The default RSSI value for voice packets is –75 dBm.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

The rssi value that you enter is used to identify coverage holes (or areas of poor coverage) within your network. If the access point receives a packet in the data or voice queue with an RSSI value that is below the value that you enter, a potential coverage hole has been detected.

The access point takes RSSI measurements every 5 seconds and reports them to the controller in 90-second intervals.

If both the number and percentage of failed packets exceed the values that you entered in the config advanced 802.11 coverage packet-count and config advanced 802.11 coverage fail-rate commands for a 5-second period, the client is considered to be in a pre-alarm condition. The controller uses this information to distinguish between real and false coverage holes and excludes clients with poor roaming logic. A coverage hole is detected if both the number and percentage of failed clients meet or exceed the values entered in the config advanced 802.11 coverage level global and config advanced 802.11 coverage exception global commands over a 90-second period. The controller determines whether the coverage hole can be corrected and, if appropriate, mitigates the coverage hole by increasing the transmit power level for that specific access point.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the minimum receive signal strength indication threshold value for data packets that are received by an 802.11a access point:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a coverage rssi-threshold -60

config advanced 802.11 edca-parameters

To enable a specific Enhanced Distributed Channel Access (EDCA) profile on a 802.11a network, use the config advanced 802.11 edca-parameters command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} edca-parameters { wmm-default | svp-voice | optimized-voice | optimized-video-voice | custom-voice | | custom-set { QoS Profile Name } { aifs AP-value (0-16 ) Client value (0-16) | ecwmax AP-Value (0-10) Client value (0-10) | ecwmin AP-Value (0-10) Client value (0-10) | txop AP-Value (0-255) Client value (0-255) } }

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

wmm-default

Enables the Wi-Fi Multimedia (WMM) default parameters. Choose this option if voice or video services are not deployed on your network.

svp-voice

Enables Spectralink voice-priority parameters. Choose this option if Spectralink phones are deployed on your network to improve the quality of calls.

optimized-voice

Enables EDCA voice-optimized profile parameters. Choose this option if voice services other than Spectralink are deployed on your network.

optimized-video-voice

Enables EDCA voice-optimized and video-optimized profile parameters. Choose this option when both voice and video services are deployed on your network.

Note 

If you deploy video services, admission control must be disabled.

custom-voice

Enables custom voice EDCA parameters for 802.11a. The EDCA parameters under this option also match the 6.0 WMM EDCA parameters when this profile is applied.

custom-set

Enables customization of EDCA parameters

  • aifs—Configures the Arbitration Inter-Frame Space.

    AP Value (0-16) Client value (0-16)

  • ecwmax—Configures the maximum Contention Window.

    AP Value(0-10) Client Value (0-10)

  • ecwmin—Configures the minimum Contention Window.

    AP Value(0-10) Client Value(0-10)

  • txop—Configures the Arbitration Transmission Opportunity Limit.

    AP Value(0-255) Client Value(0-255)

QoS Profile Name - Enter the QoS profile name:

  • bronze

  • silver

  • gold

  • platinum

Command Default

The default EDCA parameter is wmm-default .

Command History

Release Modification

7.6

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

8.2.110.0

In this release, custom-set keyword was added to edca-parameters command.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable Spectralink voice-priority parameters:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 edca-parameters svp-voice

config advanced 802.11 factory

To reset 802.11a advanced settings back to the factory defaults, use the config advanced 802.11 factory command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} factory

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to return all the 802.11a advanced settings to their factory defaults:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a factory

config advanced 802.11 group-member

To configure members in 802.11 static RF group, use the config advanced 802.11 group-member command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} group-member { add | remove} controller controller-ip-address

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

add

Adds a controller to the static RF group.

remove

Removes a controller from the static RF group.

controller

Name of the controller to be added.

controller-ip-address

IP address of the controller to be added.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to add a controller in the 802.11a automatic RF group:

(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a group-member add cisco-controller 209.165.200.225

config advanced 802.11 group-mode

To set the 802.11a automatic RF group selection mode on or off, use the config advanced 802.11 group-mode command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} group-mode { auto | leader | off | restart}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

auto

Sets the 802.11a RF group selection to automatic update mode.

leader

Sets the 802.11a RF group selection to static mode, and sets this controller as the group leader.

off

Sets the 802.11a RF group selection to off.

restart

Restarts the 802.11a RF group selection.

Command Default

The default 802.11a automatic RF group selection mode is auto.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the 802.11a automatic RF group selection mode on:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a group-mode auto

The following example shows how to configure the 802.11a automatic RF group selection mode off:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a group-mode off

config advanced 802.11 logging channel

To turn the channel change logging mode on or off, use the config advanced 802.11 logging channel command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} logging channel { on | off}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

logging channel

Logs channel changes.

on

Enables the 802.11 channel logging.

off

Disables 802.11 channel logging.

Command Default

The default channel change logging mode is Off (disabled).

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to turn the 802.11a logging channel selection mode on:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a logging channel on

config advanced 802.11 logging coverage

To turn the coverage profile logging mode on or off, use the config advanced 802.11 logging coverage command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} logging coverage { on | off}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

on

Enables the 802.11 coverage profile violation logging.

off

Disables the 802.11 coverage profile violation logging.

Command Default

The default coverage profile logging mode is Off (disabled).

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to turn the 802.11a coverage profile violation logging selection mode on:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a logging coverage on

config advanced 802.11 logging foreign

To turn the foreign interference profile logging mode on or off, use the config advanced 802.11 logging foreign command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} logging foreign { on | off}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

on

Enables the 802.11 foreign interference profile violation logging.

off

Disables the 802.11 foreign interference profile violation logging.

Command Default

The default foreign interference profile logging mode is Off (disabled).

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to turn the 802.11a foreign interference profile violation logging selection mode on:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a logging foreign on

config advanced 802.11 logging load

To turn the 802.11a load profile logging mode on or off, use the config advanced 802.11 logging load command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} logging load { on | off}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

on

Enables the 802.11 load profile violation logging.

off

Disables the 802.11 load profile violation logging.

Command Default

The default 802.11a load profile logging mode is Off (disabled).

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to turn the 802.11a load profile logging mode on:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 logging load on

config advanced 802.11 logging noise

To turn the 802.11a noise profile logging mode on or off, use the config advanced 802.11 logging noise command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} logging noise { on | off}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

on

Enables the 802.11 noise profile violation logging.

off

Disables the 802.11 noise profile violation logging.

Command Default

The default 802.11a noise profile logging mode is off (disabled).

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to turn the 802.11a noise profile logging mode on:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a logging noise on

config advanced 802.11 logging performance

To turn the 802.11a performance profile logging mode on or off, use the config advanced 802.11 logging performance command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} logging performance { on | off}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

on

Enables the 802.11 performance profile violation logging.

off

Disables the 802.11 performance profile violation logging.

Command Default

The default 802.11a performance profile logging mode is off (disabled).

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to turn the 802.11a performance profile logging mode on:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a logging performance on

config advanced 802.11 logging txpower

To turn the 802.11a transmit power change logging mode on or off, use the config advanced 802.11 logging txpower command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} logging txpower { on | off}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

on

Enables the 802.11 transmit power change logging.

off

Disables the 802.11 transmit power change logging.

Command Default

The default 802.11a transmit power change logging mode is off (disabled).

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to turn the 802.11a transmit power change mode on:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 logging txpower off

config advanced 802.11 monitor channel-list

To set the 802.11a noise, interference, and rogue monitoring channel list, use the config advanced 802.11 monitor channel-list command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} monitor channel-list { all | country | dca}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

all

Monitors all channels.

country

Monitors the channels used in the configured country code.

dca

Monitors the channels used by the automatic channel assignment.

Command Default

The default 802.11a noise, interference, and rogue monitoring channel list is country.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to monitor the channels used in the configured country:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 monitor channel-list country

config advanced 802.11 monitor coverage

To set the coverage measurement interval between 60 and 3600 seconds, use the config advanced 802.11 monitor coverage command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} monitor coverage seconds

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

seconds

Coverage measurement interval between 60 and 3600 seconds.

Command Default

The default coverage measurement interval is180 seconds.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to set the coverage measurement interval to 60 seconds:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 monitor coverage 60

config advanced 802.11 monitor load

To set the load measurement interval between 60 and 3600 seconds, use the config advanced 802.11 monitor load command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} monitor load seconds

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

seconds

Load measurement interval between 60 and 3600 seconds.

Command Default

The default load measurement interval is 60 seconds.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to set the load measurement interval to 60 seconds:

(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 monitor load 60

config advanced 802.11 monitor mode

To enable or disable 802.11a access point monitoring, use the config advanced 802.11 monitor mode command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} monitor mode { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

enable

Enables the 802.11 access point monitoring.

disable

Disables the 802.11 access point monitoring.

Command Default

The default 802.11a access point monitoring is enabled.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable the 802.11a access point monitoring:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a monitor mode enable

config advanced 802.11 monitor ndp-type

To configure the 802.11 access point radio resource management (RRM) Neighbor Discovery Protocol (NDP) type, use the config advanced 802.11 monitor ndp-type command:

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} monitor ndp-type { protected | transparent}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

protected

Specifies the Tx RRM protected NDP.

transparent

Specifies the Tx RRM transparent NDP.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

Before you configure the 802.11 access point RRM NDP type, ensure that you have disabled the network by entering the config 802.11 disable network command.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable the 802.11a access point RRM NDP type as protected:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 monitor ndp-type protected

config advanced 802.11 monitor noise

To set the 802.11a noise measurement interval between 60 and 3600 seconds, use the config advanced 802.11 monitor noise command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} monitor noise seconds

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

seconds

Noise measurement interval between 60 and 3600 seconds.

Command Default

The default 802.11a noise measurement interval is 80 seconds.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to set the noise measurement interval to 120 seconds:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 monitor noise 120

config advanced 802.11 monitor signal

To set the signal measurement interval between 60 and 3600 seconds, use the config advanced 802.11 monitor signal command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} monitor signal seconds

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

seconds

Signal measurement interval between 60 and 3600 seconds.

Command Default

The default signal measurement interval is 60 seconds.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to set the signal measurement interval to 120 seconds:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 monitor signal 120

config advanced 802.11 profile foreign

To set the foreign 802.11a transmitter interference threshold between 0 and 100 percent, use the config advanced 802.11 profile foreign command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} profile foreign { global | cisco_ap} percent

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

global

Configures all 802.11a Cisco lightweight access points.

cisco_ap

Cisco lightweight access point name.

percent

802.11a foreign 802.11a interference threshold between 0 and 100 percent.

Command Default

The default foreign 802.11a transmitter interference threshold value is 10.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to set the foreign 802.11a transmitter interference threshold for all Cisco lightweight access points to 50 percent:

(Cisco Controller) >config advanced 802.11a profile foreign global 50

The following example shows how to set the foreign 802.11a transmitter interference threshold for AP1 to 0 percent:

(Cisco Controller) >config advanced 802.11 profile foreign AP1 0

config advanced 802.11 profile noise

To set the 802.11a foreign noise threshold between –127 and 0 dBm, use the config advanced 802.11 profile noise command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} profile noise { global | cisco_ap} dBm

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a/n network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g/n network.

global

Configures all 802.11a Cisco lightweight access point specific profiles.

cisco_ap

Cisco lightweight access point name.

dBm

802.11a foreign noise threshold between –127 and 0 dBm.

Command Default

The default foreign noise threshold value is –70 dBm.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to set the 802.11a foreign noise threshold for all Cisco lightweight access points to –127 dBm:

(Cisco Controller) >config advanced 802.11a profile noise global -127

The following example shows how to set the 802.11a foreign noise threshold for AP1 to 0 dBm:

(Cisco Controller) >config advanced 802.11a profile noise AP1 0

config advanced 802.11 profile throughput

To set the Cisco lightweight access point data-rate throughput threshold between 1000 and 10000000 bytes per second, use the config advanced 802.11 profile throughput command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} profile throughput { global | cisco_ap} value

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

global

Configures all 802.11a Cisco lightweight access point specific profiles.

cisco_ap

Cisco lightweight access point name.

value

802.11a Cisco lightweight access point throughput threshold between 1000 and 10000000 bytes per second.

Command Default

The default Cisco lightweight access point data-rate throughput threshold value is 1,000,000 bytes per second.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to set all Cisco lightweight access point data-rate thresholds to 1000 bytes per second:

(Cisco Controller) >config advanced 802.11 profile throughput global 1000

The following example shows how to set the AP1 data-rate threshold to 10000000 bytes per second:

(Cisco Controller) >config advanced 802.11 profile throughput AP1 10000000

config advanced 802.11 profile utilization

To set the RF utilization threshold between 0 and 100 percent, use the config advanced 802.11 profile utilization command. The operating system generates a trap when this threshold is exceeded.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} profile utilization { global | cisco_ap} percent

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

global

Configures a global Cisco lightweight access point specific profile.

cisco_ap

Cisco lightweight access point name.

percent

802.11a RF utilization threshold between 0 and 100 percent.

Command Default

The default RF utilization threshold value is 80 percent.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to set the RF utilization threshold for all Cisco lightweight access points to 0 percent:

(Cisco Controller) >config advanced 802.11 profile utilization global 0

The following example shows how to set the RF utilization threshold for AP1 to 100 percent:

(Cisco Controller) >config advanced 802.11 profile utilization AP1 100

config advanced 802.11 receiver

To set the advanced receiver configuration settings, use the config advanced 802.11 receiver command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} receiver { default | rxstart jumpThreshold value}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

receiver

Specifies the receiver configuration.

default

Specifies the default advanced receiver configuration.

rxstart jumpThreshold

Specifies the receiver start signal.

Note 

We recommend that you do not use this option as it is for Cisco internal use only.

value

Jump threshold configuration value between 0 and 127.

Command Default

None

Usage Guidelines

  • Before you change the 802.11 receiver configuration, you must disable the 802.11 network.

  • We recommend that you do not use the rxstart jumpThreshold value option as it is for Cisco internal use only.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to prevent changes to receiver parameters while the network is enabled:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 receiver default

config advanced 802.11 tpc-version

To configure the Transmit Power Control (TPC) version for a radio, use the config advanced 802.11 tpc-version command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} tpc-version { 1 | 2}

Syntax Description

1

Specifies the TPC version 1 that offers strong signal coverage and stability.

2

Specifies TPC version 2 is for scenarios where voice calls are extensively used. The Tx power is dynamically adjusted with the goal of minimum interference. It is suitable for dense networks. In this mode, there could be higher roaming delays and coverage hole incidents.

Command Default

The default TPC version for a radio is 1.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the TPC version as 1 for the 802.11a radio:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a tpc-version 1

config advanced 802.11 tpcv1-thresh

To configure the threshold for Transmit Power Control (TPC) version 1 of a radio, use the config advanced 802.11 tpcv1-thresh command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} tpcv1-thresh threshold

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g/n network.

threshold

Threshold value between –50 dBm to –80 dBm.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the threshold as –60 dBm for TPC version 1 of the 802.11a radio:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 tpcv1-thresh -60

config advanced 802.11 tpcv2-intense

To configure the computational intensity for Transmit Power Control (TPC) version 2 of a radio, use the config advanced 802.11 tpcv2-intense command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} tpcv2-intense intensity

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g/n network.

intensity

Computational intensity value between 1 to 100.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the computational intensity as 50 for TPC version 2 of the 802.11a radio:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 tpcv2-intense 50

config advanced 802.11 tpcv2-per-chan

To configure the Transmit Power Control Version 2 on a per-channel basis, use the config advanced 802.11 tpcv2-per-chan command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} tpcv2-per-chan { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

enable

Enables the configuration of TPC version 2 on a per-channel basis.

disable

Disables the configuration of TPC version 2 on a per-channel basis.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable TPC version 2 on a per-channel basis for the 802.11a radio:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 tpcv2-per-chan enable

config advanced 802.11 tpcv2-thresh

To configure the threshold for Transmit Power Control (TPC) version 2 of a radio, use the config advanced 802.11 tpcv2-thresh command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} tpcv2-thresh threshold

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

threshold

Threshold value between –50 dBm to –80 dBm.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the threshold as –60 dBm for TPC version 2 of the 802.11a radio:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11a tpcv2-thresh -60

config advanced 802.11 txpower-update

To initiate updates of the 802.11a transmit power for every Cisco lightweight access point, use the config advanced 802.11 txpower-update command.

config advanced 802.11{ a | b} txpower-update

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to initiate updates of 802.11a transmit power for an 802.11a access point:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced 802.11 txpower-update

config advanced dot11-padding

To enable or disable over-the-air frame padding, use the config advanced dot11-padding command.

config advanced dot11-padding { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

enable

Enables the over-the-air frame padding.

disable

Disables the over-the-air frame padding.

Command Default

The default over-the-air frame padding is disabled.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable over-the-air frame padding:


(Cisco Controller) > config advanced dot11-padding enable

config client location-calibration

To configure link aggregation, use the config client location-calibration command.

config client location-calibration { enable mac_address interval | disable mac_address}

Syntax Description

enable

(Optional) Specifies that client location calibration is enabled.

mac_address

MAC address of the client.

interval

Measurement interval in seconds.

disable

(Optional) Specifies that client location calibration is disabled.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable the client location calibration for the client 37:15:85:2a with a measurement interval of 45 seconds:

(Cisco Controller) >config client location-calibration enable 37:15:86:2a:Bc:cf 45

config network rf-network-name

To set the RF-Network name, use the config network rf-network-name command.

config network rf-network-name name

Syntax Description

name

RF-Network name. The name can contain up to 19 characters.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to set the RF-network name to travelers:


(Cisco Controller) > config network rf-network-name travelers

Configuring 802.11k and Assisted Roaming

config assisted-roaming

To configure assisted roaming parameters on the controller, use the config assisted-roaming command.

config assisted-roaming { denial-maximum count | floor-bias RSSI | prediction-minimum number_of_APs}

Syntax Description

denial-maximum

Configures the maximum number of counts for association denial.

count

Maximum number of times that a client is denied for association when the association request that was sent to an access point does not match any access point on the prediction list. The range is from 1 to 10.

floor-bias

Configures the RSSI bias for access points on the same floor.

RSSI

RSSI bias for access points on the same floor. The range is from 5 to 25. Access points on the same floor have more preference.

prediction-minimum

Configures the minimum number of optimized access points for the assisted roaming feature.

number_of_APs

Minimum number of optimized access points for the assisted roaming feature. The range is from 1 to 6. If the number of access points in the prediction assigned to the client is smaller than this number, the assisted roaming feature does not work.

Command Default

The default RSSI bias for access points on the same floor is 15 dBm.

Usage Guidelines

802.11k allows a client to request a neighbor report that contains information about known neighbor access points, which can be used for a service set transition. The neighbor list reduces the need for active and passive scanning.

Examples

This example shows how to configure the minimum number of optimized access points for the assisted roaming feature:

(Cisco Controller) >config assisted-roaming prediction-minimum 4

config wlan assisted-roaming

To configure assisted roaming on a WLAN, use the config wlan assisted-roaming command.

config wlan assisted-roaming { neighbor-list | dual-list | prediction} { enable | disable} wlan_id

Syntax Description

neighbor-list

Configures an 802.11k neighbor list for a WLAN.

dual-list

Configures a dual band 802.11k neighbor list for a WLAN. The default is the band that the client is currently associated with.

prediction

Configures an assisted roaming optimization prediction for a WLAN.

enable

Enables the configuration on the WLAN.

disable

Disables the configuration on the WLAN.

wlan_id

Wireless LAN identifier between 1 and 512 (inclusive).

Command Default

The 802.11k neighbor list is enabled for all WLANs.

By default, dual band list is enabled if the neighbor list feature is enabled for the WLAN.

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Usage Guidelines

When you enable the assisted roaming prediction list, a warning appears and load balancing is disabled for the WLAN, if load balancing is already enabled on the WLAN.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable an 802.11k neighbor list for a WLAN:

(Cisco Controller) >config wlan assisted-roaming neighbor-list enable 1

show assisted-roaming

To display assisted roaming and 802.11k configurations, use the show assisted-roaming command.

show assisted-roaming

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

None.

Examples

This example shows how to display assisted roaming and 802.11k configurations:

(Cisco Controller) >show assisted-roaming
Assisted Roaming and 80211k Information:
Floor RSSI Bias.................................. 15 dBm
Maximum Denial................................... 2 counts
Minimium Optimized Neighbor Assigned............. 2 neighbors

Assisted Roaming Performance Chart:
Matching Assigned Neighbor....................... [0] = 0
Matching Assigned Neighbor....................... [1] = 0
Matching Assigned Neighbor....................... [2] = 0
Matching Assigned Neighbor....................... [3] = 0
Matching Assigned Neighbor....................... [4] = 0
Matching Assigned Neighbor....................... [5] = 0
Matching Assigned Neighbor....................... [6] = 0
Matching Assigned Neighbor....................... [7] = 0
No Matching Neighbor............................. [8] = 0
No Neighbor Assigned............................. [9] = 0

debug 11k

To configure the debugging of 802.11k settings, use the debug 11k command.

debug 11k { all | detail | errors| events | history | optimization | simulation} { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

all

Configures the debugging of all 802.11k messages.

detail

Configures the debugging of 802.11k details.

errors

Configures the debugging of 802.11k errors.

events

Configures the debugging of all 802.11k events.

history

Configures the debugging of all 802.11k history. The Cisco WLC collects roam history of the client.

optimization

Configures the debugging of 802.11k optimizations. You can view optimization steps of neighbor lists.

simulation

Configures the debugging of 802.11k simulation data. You can view details of client roaming parameters and import them for offline simulation.

enable

Enables the 802.1k debugging.

disable

Disables the 802.1k debugging.

Command Default

None.

Examples

This example shows how to enable the debugging of 802.11k simulation data:

(Cisco Controller) >debug 11k simulation enable

debug airewave-director

To configure the debugging of Airewave Director software, use the debug airwave-director command.

debug airewave-director { all | channel | detail | error | group | manager | message | packet | power | profile | radar | rf-change} { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

all

Configures the debugging of all Airewave Director logs.

channel

Configures the debugging of the Airewave Director channel assignment protocol.

detail

Configures the debugging of the Airewave Director detail logs.

error

Configures the debugging of the Airewave Director error logs.

group

Configures the debugging of the Airewave Director grouping protocol.

manager

Configures the debugging of the Airewave Director manager.

message

Configures the debugging of the Airewave Director messages.

packet

Configures the debugging of the Airewave Director packets.

power

Configures the debugging of the Airewave Director power assignment protocol and coverage hole detection.

profile

Configures the debugging of the Airewave Director profile events.

radar

Configures the debugging of the Airewave Director radar detection/avoidance protocol.

rf-change

Configures the debugging of the Airewave Director rf changes.

enable

Enables the Airewave Director debugging.

disable

Disables the Airewave Director debugging.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable the debugging of Airewave Director profile events:


(Cisco Controller) > debug airewave-director profile enable

debug dot11

To configure the debugging of 802.11 events, use the debug dot11 command.

debug dot11 { all | load-balancing | management | mobile | nmsp | probe | rldp | rogue | state} { enable | disable}

Syntax Description

all

Configures the debugging of all 802.11 messages.

load-balancing

Configures the debugging of 802.11 load balancing events.

management

Configures the debugging of 802.11 MAC management messages.

mobile

Configures the debugging of 802.11 mobile events.

nmsp

Configures the debugging of the 802.11 NMSP interface events.

probe

Configures the debugging of probe.

rldp

Configures the debugging of 802.11 Rogue Location Discovery.

rogue

Configures the debugging of 802.11 rogue events.

state

Configures the debugging of 802.11 mobile state transitions.

enable

Enables the 802.11 debugging.

disable

Disables the 802.11 debugging.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable the debugging of 802.11 settings:


(Cisco Controller) > debug dot11 state enable
(Cisco Controller) > debug dot11 mobile enable

show 802.11 extended

To display access point radio extended configurations, use the show 802.11 extended command.

show 802.11 { a | b} extended

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

extended

Displays the 802.11a/b radio extended configurations.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to display radio extended configurations:


(Cisco Controller) > show 802.11a extended 
Default 802.11a band radio extended configurations:
    beacon period 300, range 60;
    multicast buffer 45, rate 200;
    RX SOP -80; CCA threshold -90;
AP0022.9090.b618 00:24:97:88:99:60
    beacon period 300, range 60; multicast buffer 45, rate 200;
    RX SOP -80; CCA threshold -77
AP0022.9090.bb3e 00:24:97:88:c5:d0
    beacon period 300, range 0; multicast buffer 0, rate 0;
    RX SOP -80; CCA threshold -0
ironRap.ddbf 00:17:df:36:dd:b0
    beacon period 300, range 0; multicast buffer 0, rate 0;
    RX SOP  -80; CCA threshold -0

show advanced 802.11 channel

To display the automatic channel assignment configuration and statistics, use the show advanced 802.11 channel command.

show advanced 802.11{ a | b} channel

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the automatic channel assignment configuration and statistics:


(Cisco Controller) > show advanced 802.11a channel
Automatic Channel Assignment
  Channel Assignment Mode........................ AUTO
  Channel Update Interval........................ 600 seconds [startup]
  Anchor time (Hour of the day).................. 0
  Channel Update Contribution.................... SNI.
  Channel Assignment Leader...................... 00:1a:6d:dd:1e:40
  Last Run....................................... 129 seconds ago
  DCA Sensitivity Level: ...................... STARTUP (5 dB)
  DCA Minimum Energy Limit....................... -95 dBm
Channel Energy Levels
    Minimum...................................... unknown
    Average...................................... unknown
    Maximum...................................... unknown
  Channel Dwell Times
    Minimum...................................... unknown
    Average...................................... unknown
    Maximum...................................... unknown
  Auto-RF Allowed Channel List................... 36,40,44,48,52,56,60,64,149,
    ............................................. 153,157,161
  Auto-RF Unused Channel List.................... 100,104,108,112,116,132,136,
    ............................................. 140,165,190,196
  DCA Outdoor AP option.......................... Enabled

show advanced 802.11 coverage

To display the configuration and statistics for coverage hole detection, use the show advanced 802.11 coverage command.

show advanced 802.11{ a | b} coverage

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the statistics for coverage hole detection:


(Cisco Controller) > show advanced 802.11a coverage
Coverage Hole Detection
  802.11a Coverage Hole Detection Mode........... Enabled
  802.11a Coverage Voice Packet Count............ 100 packets
  802.11a Coverage Voice Packet Percentage....... 50%
  802.11a Coverage Voice RSSI Threshold.......... -80 dBm
  802.11a Coverage Data Packet Count............. 50 packets
  802.11a Coverage Data Packet Percentage........ 50%
  802.11a Coverage Data RSSI Threshold........... -80 dBm
  802.11a Global coverage exception level........ 25 %
  802.11a Global client minimum exception lev.... 3 clients

show advanced 802.11 group

To display 802.11a or 802.11b Cisco radio RF grouping, use the show advanced 802.11 group command.

show advanced 802.11{ a | b} group

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to display Cisco radio RF group settings:


(Cisco Controller) > show advanced 802.11a group
Radio RF Grouping
  802.11a Group Mode................................... AUTO
  802.11a Group Update Interval........................ 600 seconds
  802.11a Group Leader................................. xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx
    802.11a Group Member............................... xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx
  802.11a Last Run..................................... 133 seconds ago

show advanced 802.11 l2roam

To display 802.11a or 802.11b/g Layer 2 client roaming information, use the show advanced 802.11 l2roam command.

show advanced 802.11{ a | b} l2roam { rf-param | statistics} mac_address}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

rf-param

Specifies the Layer 2 frequency parameters.

statistics

Specifies the Layer 2 client roaming statistics.

mac_address

MAC address of the client.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following is a sample output of the show advanced 802.11b l2roam rf-param command:


(Cisco Controller) > show advanced 802.11b l2roam rf-param

L2Roam 802.11bg RF Parameters.....................
    Config Mode.................................. Default
    Minimum RSSI................................. -85
    Roam Hysteresis.............................. 2
    Scan Threshold............................... -72
    Transition time.............................. 5

show advanced 802.11 logging

To display 802.11a or 802.11b RF event and performance logging, use the show advanced 802.11 logging command.

show advanced 802.11{ a | b} logging

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to display 802.11b RF event and performance logging:


(Cisco Controller) > show advanced 802.11b logging
RF Event and Performance Logging
  Channel Update Logging......................... Off
  Coverage Profile Logging....................... Off
  Foreign Profile Logging........................ Off
  Load Profile Logging........................... Off
  Noise Profile Logging.......................... Off
  Performance Profile Logging.................... Off
  TxPower Update Logging......................... Off

show advanced 802.11 monitor

To display the 802.11a or 802.11b default Cisco radio monitoring, use the show advanced 802.11 monitor command.

show advanced 802.11{ a | b} monitor

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the radio monitoring for the 802.11b network:


(Cisco Controller) > show advanced 802.11b monitor
Default 802.11b AP monitoring
  802.11b Monitor Mode........................... enable
  802.11b Monitor Channels....................... Country channels
  802.11b RRM Neighbor Discovery Type............ Transparent
  802.11b AP Coverage Interval................... 180 seconds
  802.11b AP Load Interval....................... 60 seconds
  802.11b AP Noise Interval...................... 180 seconds
  802.11b AP Signal Strength Interval............ 60 seconds

show advanced 802.11 profile

To display the 802.11a or 802.11b lightweight access point performance profiles, use the show advanced 802.11 profile command.

show advanced 802.11{ a | b} profile { global | cisco_ap}

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

global

Specifies all Cisco lightweight access points.

cisco_ap

Name of a specific Cisco lightweight access point.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the global configuration and statistics of an 802.11a profile:


(Cisco Controller) > show advanced 802.11 profile global
Default 802.11a AP performance profiles
  802.11a Global Interference threshold.............. 10%
  802.11a Global noise threshold..................... -70 dBm
  802.11a Global RF utilization threshold............ 80%
  802.11a Global throughput threshold................ 1000000 bps
  802.11a Global clients threshold................... 12 clients
  802.11a Global coverage threshold.................. 12 dB
  802.11a Global coverage exception level............ 80%
  802.11a Global client minimum exception lev........ 3 clients

The following example shows how to display the configuration and statistics of a specific access point profile:


(Cisco Controller) >  show advanced 802.11 profile AP1
Cisco AP performance profile not customized

This response indicates that the performance profile for this lightweight access point is using the global defaults and has not been individually configured.

show advanced 802.11 receiver

To display the configuration and statistics of the 802.11a or 802.11b receiver, use the show advanced 802.11 receiver command.

show advanced 802.11{ a | b} receiver

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the configuration and statistics of the 802.11a network settings:


(Cisco Controller) > show advanced 802.11 receiver
802.11a Receiver Settings
  RxStart   : Signal Threshold........................... 15
  RxStart   : Signal Lamp Threshold...................... 5
  RxStart   : Preamble Power Threshold................... 2
  RxReStart : Signal Jump Status......................... Enabled
  RxReStart : Signal Jump Threshold...................... 10
  TxStomp : Low RSSI Status.............................. Enabled
  TxStomp : Low RSSI Threshold........................... 30
  TxStomp : Wrong BSSID Status........................... Enabled
  TxStomp : Wrong BSSID Data Only Status................. Enabled
  RxAbort : Raw Power Drop Status........................ Disabled
  RxAbort : Raw Power Drop Threshold..................... 10
  RxAbort : Low RSSI Status.............................. Disabled
  RxAbort : Low RSSI Threshold........................... 0
  RxAbort : Wrong BSSID Status........................... Disabled
  RxAbort : Wrong BSSID Data Only Status................. Disabled

show advanced 802.11 summary

To display the 802.11a or 802.11b Cisco lightweight access point name, channel, and transmit level summary, use the show advanced 802.11 summary command.

show advanced 802.11{ a | b} summary

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to display a summary of the 802.11b access point settings:


(Cisco Controller) > show advanced 802.11b summary
AP Name      MAC Address        Admin State  Operation State   Channel TxPower
------------ ------------------ ------------ ----------------- ------- --------
CJ-1240      00:21:1b:ea:36:60    ENABLED          UP           161      1( )
CJ-1130      00:1f:ca:cf:b6:60    ENABLED          UP           56*      1(*)

Note

An asterisk (*) next to a channel number or power level indicates that it is being controlled by the global algorithm settings.


show advanced 802.11 txpower

To display the 802.11a or 802.11b automatic transmit power assignment, use the show advanced 802.11 txpower command.

show advanced 802.11{ a | b} txpower

Syntax Description

a

Specifies the 802.11a network.

b

Specifies the 802.11b/g network.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the configuration and statistics of the 802.11b transmit power cost:


(Cisco Controller) > show advanced 802.11b txpower
Automatic Transmit Power Assignment
  Transmit Power Assignment Mode.................. AUTO
  Transmit Power Update Interval.................. 600 seconds
  Transmit Power Threshold........................ -65 dBm
  Transmit Power Neighbor Count................... 3 APs
  Transmit Power Update Contribution.............. SN.
  Transmit Power Assignment Leader................ xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx
  Last Run........................................ 384 seconds ago

show advanced dot11-padding

To display the state of over-the-air frame padding on a wireless LAN controller, use the show advanced dot11-padding command.

show advanced dot11-padding

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to view the state of over-the-air frame padding:


(Cisco Controller) > show advanced dot11-padding
dot11-padding.................................... Disabled

show client ccx rm

To display Cisco Client eXtension (CCX) client radio management report information, use the show client ccx rm command.

show client ccx rm client_MAC { status | { report { chan-load | noise-hist | frame | beacon | pathloss}}}

Syntax Description

client_MAC

Client MAC address.

status

Displays the client CCX radio management status information.

report

Displays the client CCX radio management report.

chan-load

Displays radio management channel load reports.

noise-hist

Displays radio management noise histogram reports.

beacon

Displays radio management beacon load reports.

frame

Displays radio management frame reports.

pathloss

Displays radio management path loss reports.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the client radio management status information:

(Cisco Controller) >show client ccx rm 00:40:96:15:21:ac status

Client Mac Address............................... 00:40:96:15:21:ac
Channel Load Request............................. Enabled
Noise Histogram Request.......................... Enabled
Beacon Request................................... Enabled
Frame Request.................................... Enabled
Interval......................................... 30
Iteration........................................... 10

The following example shows how to display the client radio management load reports:

(Cisco Controller) >show client ccx rm 00:40:96:15:21:ac report chan-load

Channel Load Report
Client Mac Address............................... 00:40:96:ae:53:bc
Timestamp........................................ 788751121
Incapable Flag................................... On
Refused Flag........................................ On
Chan CCA Busy Fraction
-----------------------
1  194
2  86
3  103
4  0
5  178
6  82
7  103
8  95
9  13
10 222
11 75
		

The following example shows how to display the client radio management noise histogram reports:

(Cisco Controller) >show client ccx rm 00:40:96:15:21:ac report noise-hist

Noise Histogram Report
Client Mac Address............................... 00:40:96:15:21:ac
Timestamp........................................ 4294967295
Incapable Flag................................... Off
Refused Flag........................................ Off
Chan RPI0 RPI1 RPI2 RPI3 RPI4 RPI5 RPI6 RPI7

show client location-calibration summary

To display client location calibration summary information, use the show client location-calibration summary command.

show client location-calibration summary

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the location calibration summary information:

(Cisco Controller) >show client location-calibration summary
MAC Address Interval
----------- ----------
10:10:10:10:10:10 60
21:21:21:21:21:21 45

show wps ap-authentication summary

To display the access point neighbor authentication configuration on the controller, use the show wps ap-authentication summary command.

show wps ap-authentication summary

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
7.6 This command was introduced in a release earlier than Release 7.6.

Examples

The following example shows how to display a summary of the Wireless Protection System (WPS) access point neighbor authentication:


(Cisco Controller) > show wps ap-authentication summary
AP neighbor authentication is <disabled>.
Authentication alarm threshold is 1.
RF-Network Name: <B1>