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Cisco Unified Wireless IP Phone 7925G Administration Guide for Cisco Unified Communications Manager 7.0(1)
OL-15984-01
Chapter 2      Overview of the VoIP Wireless Network
Understanding WLAN Standards and Technologies
WLANs and Roaming
Wireless IP phones provide communication mobility to users within the WLAN environment. Unlike 
cellular phones that have broad coverage, the coverage area for the wireless IP
 phone is smaller; 
therefore, phone users frequently roam from one AP to another. To understand some of the limitations 
of roaming with wireless IP phones, these examples provide information about the WLAN environment.
  • Pre-call Roaming—A wireless IP phone user powers on the phone in the office, and the phone 
associates with the nearby AP. The user leaves the building, moves to another building, and then 
places a call. The phone associates with a different AP in order to place the call from the new 
location. If the associated AP is within the same Layer 2 VLAN, the IP address remains the same 
for the phone. But, if the roaming phone crosses a Layer 3 boundary with DHCP enabled, the phone 
recognizes that it is no longer in the same subnet. The phone requests a new IP address before it can 
connect to the network and place the call.
Note If a user leaves the WLAN coverage area and then comes back into the same WLAN area, the 
phone must reconnect to the network. By pressing a key on the phone, the user activates the 
phone and increases the scanning rate to speed up reconnecting to the network.
  • Mid-call Roaming—A wireless IP phone user is actively engaged in a call and moves from one 
building to another. The roaming event occurs when the phone moves into the range of a different 
AP, and then the phone authenticates and associates with the new AP. The previous AP hands the 
call over to the new AP while maintaining continuous audio connection without user intervention. 
As long as the APs are in the same Layer 2 subnet, the wireless IP
 phone keeps the same IP address 
and the call continues. As a wireless IP
 phone roams between APs, it must re-authenticate with each 
new AP. See the 
“Authentication Methods” section on page 2-16 for information about 
authentication.
If the wireless IP phone user moves from an AP that covers IP Subnet A to an AP that covers IP 
Subnet B, the phone no longer has an IP address or gateway that is valid within the new subnet and 
the call can disconnect. 
  • Layer 3 Roaming—With the release of the Cisco Catalyst 6500 Series Wireless LAN Services 
Module (WLSM), the Cisco
 Unified Wireless IP Phone 7925G now supports Layer 3 roaming for 
autonomous mode APs. For details about the Cisco WLSM, refer to the product documentation 
available at: 
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/lan/cat6000/cfgnotes/wlsm_1_1/index.htm
Layer 3 roaming with lightweight mode APs is accomplished by controllers that use dynamic 
interface tunneling. Clients that roam across controllers and VLANS can keep their IP address when 
using the same SSID.
  • Fast and Secure Roaming—Cisco Centralized Key Management (CCKM) enables authenticated 
client devices to roam securely from one AP to another without any perceptible delay during 
reassociation. With the support of CCKM protocol, the wireless
 IP phone is able to negotiate the 
handoff from one AP to another more easily. During the roaming process, the phone must scan for 
the nearby APs, determine which AP can provide the best service, and then reassociate with the new 
AP. When implementing stronger authentication methods, such as WPA and EAP, the number of 
information exchanges increases and causes more delay during roaming. To avoid additional delays, 
use CCKM to manage authentication.