Cisco Systems 3.2 Wireless Office Headset User Manual


 
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Cisco Wireless LAN Controller Configuration Guide
OL-8335-02
Chapter 7 Controlling Lightweight Access Points
Autonomous Access Points Converted to Lightweight Mode
Autonomous Access Points Converted to Lightweight Mode
You can use an upgrade conversion tool to convert autonomous Cisco Aironet 1130AG, 1200, and
1240AG Series Access Points to lightweight mode. When you upgrade one of these access points to
lightweight mode, the access point communicates with a wireless LAN controller and receives a
configuration and software image from the controller.
Refer to these documents for complete instructions on upgrading an autonomous access point to
lightweight mode:
Release Notes for Cisco Aironet 1130AG, 1200, and 1240AG Series Access Points for Cisco IOS
Release 12.3(7)JX
Application Note: Upgrading Autonomous Cisco Aironet Access Points to Lightweight Mode
Guidelines for Using Access Points Converted to Lightweight Mode
Keep these guidelines in mind when you use autonomous access points that have been converted to
lightweight mode:
Converted access points support 2006, 4400, and WiSM controllers only. When you convert an
autonomous access point to lightweight mode, the access point can communicate with Cisco 2006
series wireless LAN controllers, 4400 series controllers, or the controllers on a Wireless Services
Module (WiSM) only. Cisco 4100 series, Airespace 4012 series, and Airespace 4024 series
controllers are not supported because lack the memory required to support access points running
Cisco IOS software.
Access points converted to lightweight mode do not support Wireless Domain Services (WDS).
Converted access points communicate only with Cisco wireless LAN controllers and cannot
communicate with WDS devices. However, the controller provides functionality equivalent to WDS
when the access point associates to it.
Access points converted to LWAPP mode support 8 BSSIDs per radio and a total of 8 wireless LANs
per access point. (Cisco 1000 series access points support 16 BSSIDs per radio and 16 wireless
LANs per access point.) When a converted access point associates to a controller, only wireless
LANs with IDs 1 through 8 are pushed to the access point.
Access points converted to lightweight mode do not support Layer 2 LWAPP. Access Points
converted to lightweight mode must get an IP address and discover the controller using DHCP, DNS,
or IP subnet broadcast.
After you convert an access point to lightweight mode, the console port provides read-only access
to the unit.
Reverting from Lightweight Mode to Autonomous Mode
After you use the upgrade tool to convert an autonomous access point to lightweight mode, you can
convert the access point from a lightweight unit back to an autonomous unit by loading a Cisco IOS
release that supports autonomous mode (Cisco IOS release 12.3(7)JA or earlier). If the access point is
associated to a controller, you can use the controller to load the Cisco IOS release. If the access point is
not associated to a controller, you can load the Cisco IOS release using TFTP. In either method, the
access point must be able to access a TFTP server that contains the Cisco IOS release to be loaded.