Cisco Centralized Key Management (CCKM) authenticated
client devices can roam from one access point to another without
any perceptible delay during reassociation. An access point on your
network acts as a wireless domain service (WDS) and creates a cache
of security credentials for CCKM-enabled client devices on the subnet.
The WDS cache of credentials dramatically reduces the time required
for reassociation when a CCKM-enabled client device roams to a new
access point. When a client device roams, the WDS forwards the client's
security credentials to the new access point, and the reassociation
process is reduced to a two-packet exchange between the roaming
client and the new access point.
WDS MAC Address
Contains the MAC address of the wireless domain
service that this access point (the one you browsed to) is configured
to use.
WDS IP Address
Contains the IP address of the wireless domain
service that this access point (the one you browsed to) is configured
to use.
IN Authenticator
The server list (for example, wlan 1-list) used
to authenticate infrastructure devices such as access points on
your wireless LAN.
MN Authenticator
The server list (for example, lep1-list) used to
authenticate client devices on your wireless LAN.
State
The WDS interface state (administratively standalone,
active, backup, or candidate).
- standalone - configured as the WDS, but with
no other devices participating
- active - the WDS is actively performing as the
WDS on the subnet
- backup - the WDS is acting as a backup to the
main WDS
- candidate - the device is configured as a WDS
candidate
- can be physically
secured to prevent theft.
- serves few client
devices, because the access point's WDS duties can degrade performance
for associated client devices.
MAC Address
The Media Access Control (MAC) address is a unique
identifier assigned to the network interface by the manufacturer.
IP Address
IP address of this access point as it is configured
to serve as a WDS or as a WDS candidate.
Priority
If you configure access points as backup WDSs,
assign the highest priority to the access point that you want to
act as the main WDS and lower priorities to backup WDSs. If your
main WDS fails, the backup with the highest priority becomes the
active WDS.
State
The WDS state (administratively standalone, active,
backup, or candidate).
- admin standalone - configured as the WDS but
with no other devices participating
- active - the WDS is actively performing as the
WDS on the subnet
- backup - the WDS is acting as a backup to the
main WDS
- candidate - the device is configured as a WDS
candidate
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