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Configuring the WAP2000 Access Point
Configuring Wireless Settings
Cisco WAP2000 Wireless-G Access Point with Power Over Ethernet Administration Guide
41
6
Configuring Connection Control
The Wireless > Connection Control window displays the wireless connection
settings and allows you to configure the Connection Control List to either permit or
block specific wireless client devices connecting to (associating with) the access
point.
Disabling Wireless Connection Control
You can use the Wireless Connection Control window to disable wireless
connection control.
To disable wireless connection control for your access point, follow these steps:
STEP 1
Click
Wireless > Connection Control
.
STEP
2
From the Select SSID drop-down menu, select the SSID of the wireless network
that you want to disable.
STEP
3
In the connection control section, click
Disabled
(default).
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Configuring the WAP2000 Access Point
Configuring Wireless Settings
Cisco WAP2000 Wireless-G Access Point with Power Over Ethernet Administration Guide
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STEP
4
Click
Save
.
Allowing Specified MAC Addresses to Connect to the Wireless Network
To allow only specific MAC addresses to connect to the wireless network, follow
these steps:
STEP 1
Click
Wireless > Connection Control
.
STEP
2
In the
Select SSID
drop-down menu, select the SSID of the wireless network on
which you want to allow the specified MAC addresses.
STEP
3
In the connection control section, click
Enabled
(default).
STEP
4
Click
Allow only following MAC addresses to connect to wireless network
.
When this option is selected, only devices with a MAC address specified in the
Connection Control List can connect to the access point.
STEP
5
To automatically capture the MAC addresses of each client to allow, click
Wireless
Client List
.
A window appears to let you select each MAC address from the table. The
selected MAC address is copied into the Connection Control List.
Alternatively, manually enter the MAC addresses of the wireless client devices you
want to allow, in the text boxes labeled MAC 01–16.
STEP
6
Click
Save
.
Preventing MAC Addresses from Connecting to the Wireless Network
To allow only specific MAC addresses to connect to the wireless network, follow
these steps:
STEP 1
Click
Wireless > Connection Control
.
STEP
2
In the
Select SSID
drop-down menu, select the SSID of the wireless network on
which you want to block the specified MAC addresses.
STEP
3
In the connection control section, click
Enabled
(default).
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Configuring the WAP2000 Access Point
Configuring Wireless Settings
Cisco WAP2000 Wireless-G Access Point with Power Over Ethernet Administration Guide
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6
STEP
4
Click
Prevent following MAC addresses from connecting to wireless network
.
When this option is selected, devices with a MAC address specified in the
Connection Control List is not allowed to connect to the access point.
STEP
5
To automatically capture the MAC addresses of each client to block, click
Wireless Client List
.
A window appears to let you select each MAC address from the table. The
selected MAC address is copied into the Connection Control List.
Alternatively, manually enter the MAC addresses of the wireless client devices you
want to disallow, in the text boxes labeled MAC 01-16.
STEP
6
Click
Save
.
Configuring Advanced Settings
This Wireless > Advanced Settings window allows you to configure the advanced
settings for the access point.
We recommend letting your access point automatically adjust the parameters for
maximum data throughput.
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Configuring the WAP2000 Access Point
Configuring Wireless Settings
Cisco WAP2000 Wireless-G Access Point with Power Over Ethernet Administration Guide
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6
To configure the wireless advanced settings for the access point, follow these
steps:
STEP 1
Click
Wireless > Advanced Settings
.
STEP
2
In the Advanced Settings section, configure the following advanced parameters:
CTS Protection Mode
—The Clear-To-Send (CTS) Protection Mode function
boosts the access point’s ability to catch all wireless transmissions but
severely reduces performance.
Keep the default setting,
Auto
, so the access point can use this feature as
needed, when the Wireless-G products are not able to transmit to the
access point in an environment with heavy 802.11b traffic.
Select
Disabled
to permanently disable this mode.
BSSBasicRateSet
—This setting provides a series of rates that are
advertised to other wireless devices as defined in IEEE 802.11
specifications, so they know which data rates the access point can support.
One of the rates is picked from the list for transmitting control frames,
broadcast/ multicast frames, or ACK frames.
To support both 802.11b & 802.11g devices, use the default setting (
Mixed
)
so that frames can be decoded by all devices. To support 802.11g devices
only, use the
All (G-only)
setting to achieve higher frame rates. For regular
data frames, configure the transmission rate through the Tx Rate Limiting
field in the Wireless > VLAN & QoS window.
Power Output
—Adjust the output power of the access point to get the
appropriate coverage for your wireless network. Select the level you need
for your environment. If you are not sure about which setting to choose, then
keep the default setting,
100%
.
Beacon Interval
—This value indicates the frequency interval of the beacon.
A beacon is a packet broadcast by the access point to keep the network
synchronized. A beacon includes information regarding the wireless
networks service area, the access point address, the broadcast destination
addresses, a time stamp, delivery traffic indicator maps, and the Traffic
Indicator Message (TIM). The default is
100 ms
.
DTIM Interval
—This value indicates how often the access point sends out a
Delivery Traffic Indication Message (DTIM). Lower settings result in more
efficient networking, while preventing your computer from dropping into
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Configuring the WAP2000 Access Point
Configuring Wireless Settings
Cisco WAP2000 Wireless-G Access Point with Power Over Ethernet Administration Guide
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power-saving sleep mode. Higher settings allow your computer to enter
sleep mode, thus saving power, but interferes with wireless transmissions.
The default is
1 ms
.
RTS Threshold
—This setting determines how large a packet can be before
the access point coordinates transmission and reception to ensure efficient
communication. This value should remain at its default setting of
2347
. If you
encounter inconsistent data flow, only minor modifications are
recommended.
Fragmentation Threshold
—This specifies the maximum size a data packet
can be before splitting and creating a new packet. It should remain at its
default setting of
2346
.
A smaller setting means smaller packets, which creates more packets for
each transmission. If you experience high packet error rates, you can
decrease this value, but it likely decreases overall network performance.
Only minor modifications of this value are recommended.
STEP
3
Click
Save
.

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