13. In RADIUS Options, click + (plus sign) to display the options, and then configure the following:
• RADIUS NAS ID: Select how to the RADIUS server will identify the AP:
• WLAN BSSID
• AP MAC
• User-defined
• RADIUS NAS Request Timeout: Type the timeout period (in seconds) after, which an
expected RADIUS response message is considered to have failed.
• RADIUS NAS Max Number of Retries: Type the number of failed connection attempts
after which the controller will fail over to the backup RADIUS server.
• RADIUS NAS Reconnect Primary: If the controller fails over to the backup RADIUS
server, this is the interval (in minutes) at which the controller will recheck the primary RADIUS
server if it is available. The default interval is 5 minutes.
• Called STA ID: Use WLAN BSSID, AP MAC, AP GROUP, or NONE as the called station
ID. Select one.
NOTE: Selecting NONE resets both Called and Calling station ID's to empty.
14. In Advanced Options, configure the following options:
• User Traffic Profile: If you want this WLAN to use a user traffic profile that you previously
created, select it from the drop-down menu. Otherwise, select System Default. For more
information, see Working with User Traffic Profiles on page 185
• L2 Access Control: If you want this WLAN to use an L2 access control policy that you
previously created, select it from the drop-down menu. Otherwise, select Disable. For
more information, see Working with Device Policies on page 84.
• Device Policy: If you want this WLAN to use a device policy that you previously created,
select it from the drop-down menu. Otherwise, select Disable. For more information, see
Working with L2 Access Control Policies on page 87.
• Access VLAN: By default, all wireless clients associated with APs that the controller is
managing are segmented into a single VLAN (with VLAN ID 1). If you want to tag this WLAN
traffic with a different VLAN ID, enter a valid VLAN ID (2-4094) in the box.
• Enable VLAN Pooling: If you want to automatically segment large groups of clients
(that may or may not be connected to the same SSID) into multiple smaller subgroups
using multiple VLANs, select this check box. For more information, see VLAN Pooling
on page 41.
• Hide SSID: Click this option if you do not want the ID of this WLAN advertised at any time.
This will not affect performance or force the WLAN user to perform any unnecessary tasks.
• Client Load Balancing: Improve WLAN performance by enabling load balancing. Load
balancing spreads the wireless client load between nearby access points, so that one AP
does not get overloaded while another sites idle. Load balancing must be enabled on a
per-radio basis. To enable load balancing, select the Enable loading balancing on
[2.4GHz or 5GHz] check box, and then set or accept the default Adjacent Radio
Threshold (50dB for the 2.4GHz radio and 43dB for the 5GHz radio).
• Proxy ARP: When enabled on a WLAN, the AP provides proxy service for stations when
receiving neighbor discovery packets (e.g., ARP request and ICMPv6 Neighbor Solicit
SmartCell Gateway 200/Virtual SmartZone High-Scale for Release 3.4.1 Administrator Guide
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Managing Global Configuration, AP Tunnel Profiles, Templates, and AP Registration Rules
Working with Zone Templates