Cisco Wireless Lan Controller Memory; Cisco Wireless Lan Controller Failover Protection - Cisco SD2008T-NA Configuration Manual

4400 series wireless lan controller
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Pico Cell Functionality
To use the Startup Wizard, refer to the

Cisco Wireless LAN Controller Memory

The controller contains two kinds of memory: volatile RAM, which holds the current, active controller
configuration, and NVRAM (non-volatile RAM), which holds the reboot configuration. When you are
configuring the operating system in controller, you are modifying volatile RAM; you must save the
configuration from the volatile RAM to the NVRAM to ensure that the controller reboots in the current
configuration.
Knowing which memory you are modifying is important when you are:

Cisco Wireless LAN Controller Failover Protection

Each controller has a defined number of communication ports for lightweight access points. This means
that when multiple controllers with unused access point ports are deployed on the same network, if one
controller fails, the dropped access points automatically poll for unused controller ports and associate
with them.
During installation, Cisco recommends that you connect all lightweight access points to a dedicated
controller, and configure each lightweight access point for final operation. This step configures each
lightweight access point for a primary, secondary, and tertiary controller and allows it to store the
configured mobility group information.
During failover recovery, the configured lightweight access points obtain an IP address from the local
DHCP server (only in Layer 3 operation), attempt to contact their primary, secondary, and tertiary
controllers, and then attempt to contact the IP addresses of the other controllers in the Mobility group.
This prevents the access points from spending time sending out blind polling messages, resulting in a
faster recovery period.
In multiple-controller deployments, this means that if one controller fails, its dropped access points
reboot and do the following under direction of the radio resource management (RRM):
Cisco Wireless LAN Controller Configuration Guide
1-16
Asks you to define whether or not clients can use static IP addresses. Yes = more convenient, but
lower security (session can be hijacked), clients can supply their own IP Address, better for devices
that cannot use DHCP. No = less convenient, higher security, clients must DHCP for an IP Address,
works well for Windows XP devices.
If you want to configure a RADIUS server from the Startup Wizard, the RADIUS server IP address,
communication port, and Secret.
Collects the Country Code.
Enables and/or disables the 802.11a, 802.11b and 802.11g lightweight access point networks.
Enables or disables Radio Resource Management (RRM).
Using the Configuration Wizard
Clearing the Controller Configuration
Saving Configurations
Resetting the Controller
Logging Out of the CLI
Obtain an IP address from a local DHCP server (one on the local subnet).
"Using the Configuration Wizard" section on page
Chapter 1
Overview
4-2.
OL-9141-03

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