3Com WX1200 3CRWX120695A manual

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198

Go to page of

A good user manual

The rules should oblige the seller to give the purchaser an operating instrucion of 3Com WX1200 3CRWX120695A, along with an item. The lack of an instruction or false information given to customer shall constitute grounds to apply for a complaint because of nonconformity of goods with the contract. In accordance with the law, a customer can receive an instruction in non-paper form; lately graphic and electronic forms of the manuals, as well as instructional videos have been majorly used. A necessary precondition for this is the unmistakable, legible character of an instruction.

What is an instruction?

The term originates from the Latin word „instructio”, which means organizing. Therefore, in an instruction of 3Com WX1200 3CRWX120695A one could find a process description. An instruction's purpose is to teach, to ease the start-up and an item's use or performance of certain activities. An instruction is a compilation of information about an item/a service, it is a clue.

Unfortunately, only a few customers devote their time to read an instruction of 3Com WX1200 3CRWX120695A. A good user manual introduces us to a number of additional functionalities of the purchased item, and also helps us to avoid the formation of most of the defects.

What should a perfect user manual contain?

First and foremost, an user manual of 3Com WX1200 3CRWX120695A should contain:
- informations concerning technical data of 3Com WX1200 3CRWX120695A
- name of the manufacturer and a year of construction of the 3Com WX1200 3CRWX120695A item
- rules of operation, control and maintenance of the 3Com WX1200 3CRWX120695A item
- safety signs and mark certificates which confirm compatibility with appropriate standards

Why don't we read the manuals?

Usually it results from the lack of time and certainty about functionalities of purchased items. Unfortunately, networking and start-up of 3Com WX1200 3CRWX120695A alone are not enough. An instruction contains a number of clues concerning respective functionalities, safety rules, maintenance methods (what means should be used), eventual defects of 3Com WX1200 3CRWX120695A, and methods of problem resolution. Eventually, when one still can't find the answer to his problems, he will be directed to the 3Com service. Lately animated manuals and instructional videos are quite popular among customers. These kinds of user manuals are effective; they assure that a customer will familiarize himself with the whole material, and won't skip complicated, technical information of 3Com WX1200 3CRWX120695A.

Why one should read the manuals?

It is mostly in the manuals where we will find the details concerning construction and possibility of the 3Com WX1200 3CRWX120695A item, and its use of respective accessory, as well as information concerning all the functions and facilities.

After a successful purchase of an item one should find a moment and get to know with every part of an instruction. Currently the manuals are carefully prearranged and translated, so they could be fully understood by its users. The manuals will serve as an informational aid.

Table of contents for the manual

  • Page 1

    http://www.3com.com/ Part No. 10015081 Published June 2 006 Wir eless LAN Mobility System W ir eless LAN Switch Manager User’ s Guide WX4400 3CRWX440095A WX1200 3CRWX120695A WXR100 3CRWXR10095A[...]

  • Page 2

    3Com Corporati on 350 Campus Drive Marlborough, MA USA 01752-3064 Copyright © 2 006, 3Com Corporatio n. All rights reserved . No part of this documen tatio n may be repro duced in any form or by any means or used to make any derivative work (such as translation, transformation, or adaptation) without writt en permission fr om 3Com Cor poration. 3C[...]

  • Page 3

    C ONTENTS A BOUT T HIS G UIDE Conventions 9 Documentation 10 Documentation Comments 11 1 G ETTING S TARTED Hardwar e Requir ements for 3WXM Cl ient 13 Hardwar e Requir ements for 3WXM Services 14 Software Requirements 14 Preparing for Installation 15 User Privileges 15 Serial Number and License Key 15 Resour ce Allocation 16 Installing 3WXM 17 Star[...]

  • Page 4

    RF Auto-T uning 3 0 RF Auto-T uning with Modelling 30 RF Planning 31 Which Planning Method Should I Use? 31 Configuration 33 Wireless Configuration 34 AAA Security Configuration 36 System and Adminis tration Configur ation 38 Equipment Installation 40 Deployment 41 Management and Monitori ng 41 Network Status 42 RF Monitoring 42 Client Monitoring 4[...]

  • Page 5

    4 U SING RF A UTO -T UNING What Is RF Auto-T uning? 95 Place Y our Equipment 96 Configure Initial WX Switch Connectivity 96 Upload the WX Switch Configurat ion into a 3WXM Netw ork Plan 96 Create a Service Pr ofile 97 Create a Radio Profile and Map the Service Profile to It 98 Create Y our MAPs 99 Apply a Radio Pr ofile to Each Radio 102 What’ s [...]

  • Page 6

    Calculate Optimal Power 146 Display Coverage 148 Generate a Wor k Order 149 Install the Equipment 151 What’ s Next? 151 7 M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK Deploy Y our Configurati on 153 Perform Basic Admini strative T asks 155 Configuring WX Ma nagement Services 155 Distributing System Images 157 Using the Image Repository 157 Distributi[...]

  • Page 7

    A O BTAINING S UPPORT FOR YOUR P RODUCT Register Y our Pr oduct 191 Purchase V alue-Added Services 191 T roubleshoot Online 192 Access Software Downloads 192 T elephone T echnical S upport and Repair 192 Contact Us 193 I NDEX[...]

  • Page 8

    [...]

  • Page 9

    A BOUT T HIS G UIDE This manual shows you ho w to plan , configure, deploy , an d manage a Mobility System wireless LAN (WL AN) using the 3Com Wireless LAN Switch Manager (3WXM) tool suite. Read this manual if you are a network administrator or a person responsible for managing a WLAN. If release notes are shipped with your product and the informat[...]

  • Page 10

    10 A BOUT T HIS G UIDE This manual uses the follo wi ng text and syntax conventions: Documentation The 3WXM documentation set includes the following documents.  Wireless LAN Switch Manage r (3WXM) Release Notes These notes provide information about the system software release, including new features and bug fixes.  Wireless LAN Switch and Con[...]

  • Page 11

    Documentation Comments 11  Wireless LAN Switch Ma nager Refere nce Manual This manual shows you how to plan , configure, deploy , and manage a Mobility System wireless LAN (WL AN) using the 3Com Wireless LAN Switch Manage r (3WXM).  Wireless LAN Switch Manager User’ s Guide (this document) This guide shows y ou how to pl an, configure, depl[...]

  • Page 12

    12 A BOUT T HIS G UIDE Example:  Wireless LAN Switch and Cont roller Configuration Guide  Part number 730-9502- 0071, Revision B  Page 25 Please note that we can only r esp ond to comments and questions about 3Com product documentation at this e-mail address. Qu estions related to T echnical Support or sales should be di rected in the firs[...]

  • Page 13

    G ETTING S TARTED This chapter contain s informat ion about recommended system requir ements you should meet for optimum 3WXM performance, installing 3WXM client and 3WXM Ser vices softwar e, and an introduction to using the 3WXM interface. Ha rdw are Requirements for 3WXM Client T able 3 shows the min imum and r ecommended requir ements to run the[...]

  • Page 14

    14 C HAPTER 1: G ETTING S TARTED Ha rdw are Requirements for 3WXM Services T able 4 shows the min imum and r ecommended requir ements to run the 3WXM Services on a W indows platform. Software Requirements 3WXM client and 3WXM Services are each supported on th e following Wind ows operating systems:  Microsoft Windows Server 2003  Microsoft Wi[...]

  • Page 15

    Preparing for Installation 15 Preparing for Installation A licensed copy of 3WXM comes with a base license key . Before you install 3WXM, make sure you have the appropriate administrative privileges on the system. After you have installed 3WXM, you will need to r egister your license and the serial number with 3Com in order to obtain an activation [...]

  • Page 16

    16 C HAPTER 1: G ETTING S TARTED Resource Allocation T able 5 co ntains general recommended guidelines for hardware requir ements and memory allocation based on the nu mber of radios and WX switches your server will support. A larger number of WX switches implies more connections and data pr ocessing, and consequently , more CPU is r equired. A lar[...]

  • Page 17

    Installing 3WXM 17 Installing 3WXM T o install the 3Com Wireless Switch Manager , follow the instructions below . The 3WXM install program installs ei ther just the 3WXM client, or both the 3WXM client and Services. There is no option to install the 3WXM Services only . 1 Insert the 3WXM CD in the CD-ROM drive. If Autorun is enabled, wait briefly f[...]

  • Page 18

    18 C HAPTER 1: G ETTING S TARTED 4 Click the View button. The 3Com Wi r eless LAN Switch Manager (3WXM) information screen appears. 5 Click the Install b utton. The installation begins. During the inst allation, the 3Com W ireless Switch Manager installation wizard minimizes. 6 When the installation is complete, maximize the 3Com Wireless Switch Ma[...]

  • Page 19

    Installing 3WXM 19 The port number used by the mon itoring service must not be us ed by another applicat ion on the machine where the mo nitoring service is installed. If the port nu mber is used by another application, change the port number on th e monitoring servic e. (See “Configure 3WXM Services”.) 4 Click Next to connect to the server . 5[...]

  • Page 20

    20 C HAPTER 1: G ETTING S TARTED By default, a username and password are not r equir ed to access 3WXM Services from 3WXM client. Y ou can configure user accounts for administrative, pr ovisioning, and mo nitoring access. (S ee “3WXM Access Control” on page 21.) 2 Y ou can optionally configure the following:  Select the arrow buttons to chan[...]

  • Page 21

    3WXM Interface 21 3WXM Access Control Y ou can create a user account with ad ministrator , provision, or monitor privileges. See T able 6 for basic privilege definitions. For a details, see t he “Restricting Access to 3WXM” section in the “Getting Started” chapter of the Wireless LAN Switch Ma nager Reference Manual T o configure access con[...]

  • Page 22

    22 C HAPTER 1: G ETTING S TARTED Display the Main Window When you start 3WXM client and l og onto 3WXM Services, a network plan is displayed by the 3W XM client. (See Figur e 2 on page 23.)  Organi zer panel disp lays a netwo rk tr ee r epr esenting your WLAN’ s devices and configurations on thos e devices. Y ou can use it to navigate to Polic[...]

  • Page 23

    3WXM Interface 23 Figure 2 Main 3WXM Window with Open Network Plan Using the T oolbar and Menu Bar The main 3WXM window has a toolbar that provides quick access to features. Y ou can use the Back and Forward buttons to cycle through your display selections. The menu bar (located above the toolba r) p rovide s access to administrative options such a[...]

  • Page 24

    24 C HAPTER 1: G ETTING S TARTED Setting Pr efer ences Y ou can set network and user interface preferences, as well as prefer ences for save interval and autosave , certificate handling, RF monitoring, and logging. 1 Select To o l s > Prefer ences from the 3WXM main tool bar . The Preferences wizar d is displayed. 2 Select any of the tab s, make[...]

  • Page 25

    3WXM Interface 25 Y ou also can select a radio, in which case t he floor plan where the radio is located is displayed, with status for all MAPs on that floor . Getting Help Click Help from the Main menu bar to access dif ferent types of help: 1 Select Help > Help to displa y HTML help about conf iguring and usi ng 3WXM. 2 Select Help > Licens[...]

  • Page 26

    26 C HAPTER 1: G ETTING S TARTED[...]

  • Page 27

    P LANNING AND M ANAGING Y OUR W IR ELESS N ETWORK WITH 3WXM This chapter contain s information about planning and man aging your wireless network with 3WXM. Planning your wir eless network is highly recommended because it not only helps you configure and deploy it, but also aids in scaling and monitoring your network. 3Com pr ovides you with flexib[...]

  • Page 28

    28 C HAPTER 2: P LANNING AND M ANAGING Y OUR W IRELESS N ETWO RK WITH 3WXM Which Services T o Provide? What is a service? : A service is a concept (not a selectable item in the 3WXM interface) that r epr esents a se t of options you configur e and deplo y on your wireless network. Y ou configure services to support the different levels of network a[...]

  • Page 29

    Network Plan 29 Network Plan What is a network plan? : A network plan is the workspace in 3WXM you use to design a wir eless ne twork. Why is this importan t? : Y ou can better manage a nd visualize your network topology by creating a detailed and accurate network plan. Y ou can start by creating a device-oriented (WX switches and MAPs) view of you[...]

  • Page 30

    30 C HAPTER 2: P LANNING AND M ANAGING Y OUR W IRELESS N ETWO RK WITH 3WXM  RF Auto-T uning with Modelling , as with the RF Auto-T uning technique, lets you set the auto tuning feature to adjust power and channel settings to provide RF sign als to the coverage area for your users. Enhance the auto tuning feature by pr oviding modelling informati[...]

  • Page 31

    RF Coverage Area 31 RF Planning T o do RF Planning, you provide detaile d information about your site and buildings by importing AutoCAD DXF™, AutoCAD DWG, JPEG, or GIF floor plan files of the buildings into 3WXM. As you import the floor plans, you can modify them to add or remo ve RF obstacles. Y ou define RF obstacles by specifying the attenuat[...]

  • Page 32

    32 C HAPTER 2: P LANNING AND M ANAGING Y OUR W IRELESS N ETWO RK WITH 3WXM Use the RF Auto-T uning with Modelling technique if you want to bet ter monitor your wireless network in terms of buildings, floo rs, or coverage areas. Y ou may only be able to loca te inaccurate or incomplete building and floor plans (perhaps only a JPEG file), but with ev[...]

  • Page 33

    Configuration 33 If RF Planning does not fit your requ irements now , you can always use the RF Planning technique in t he future when you have the need, the time, and the necessary floor plan s available. Y ou also can leverage the data in RF Auto-T uning and conver t these RF measurements to configured baseline values for planning. Configuration [...]

  • Page 34

    34 C HAPTER 2: P LANNING AND M ANAGING Y OUR W IRELESS N ETWO RK WITH 3WXM This section contains infor mation about:  “W ir eless Configuration” on page 34  “AAA Security Configuration” on page 3 6  “System and Administration Configuration” on page 38 Wireless Configuration Wi r eless configuration focuses on the configuration [...]

  • Page 35

    Configuration 35 Y ou must configure a radio pr ofile to set attributes that you can apply to multiple radios. Rather than conf iguring each radio individually , you create a radio profile and apply it to multiple radios that you select. Y ou can also cr eat e a radi o pr ofile as pa rt of a po licy and ap ply it to M AP access points on different [...]

  • Page 36

    36 C HAPTER 2: P LANNING AND M ANAGING Y OUR W IRELESS N ETWO RK WITH 3WXM If the services ar e being used to advertise multiple wir eless service providers (WISP), such as T -Mobile TM , Wayport ® , and Bo ingo Wireless TM , then these services would probably be completely open. However , they would likely be assig ned to their own de dicated sub[...]

  • Page 37

    Configuration 37 Figure 6 Authentication Flowchart for Netw ork Users last-resor t? web? none? Client associates with 3Com radio or requests access from wired authentication por t Use fallthru authentication Ye s No Ye s Ye s Ye s Ye s No Ye s Ye s No No No No Client requests encr ypted SSID? Client 802.1X rule that matches SSID? responds Ye s MA C[...]

  • Page 38

    38 C HAPTER 2: P LANNING AND M ANAGING Y OUR W IRELESS N ETWO RK WITH 3WXM Authorization Authorization is the method for providing users with specific rights to the network by associating attribute-valu e (A V) pairs to the user . AAA authorization works by assemblin g a se t of attributes that describe what the user is authorized to pe rform. Thes[...]

  • Page 39

    Configuration 39 Y ou can create the following types of WX switches:  WX4400—Provides four dual-interface gigabit Ethernet ports. Each port has a 1000BASE-TX copper in terface and a Gigabit interface converter (GBIC) slot for insert ion of a 1000BASE-SX or 1000BASE-LX fiber -optic interface.  WX1200—Provides eight 10/100 Ethernet ports, s[...]

  • Page 40

    40 C HAPTER 2: P LANNING AND M ANAGING Y OUR W IRELESS N ETWO RK WITH 3WXM Configure WX Switch Connection Information Y ou need to supply connection information for the WX switch on both the WX switch and in 3WXM when you make the WX a managed device. Connection information includes the IP address of the switch and how it will connect to the backbo[...]

  • Page 41

    Deployment 41 Deployment What is deployment? : Sending the WX configuration information in the 3WXM network plan to your WX switch. Purpose of this section : T o describe how changes are made to 3WXM and deployed to your net work. Why is this important? : T o understand best practices for sending and deploying configurations to your WX. Configurati[...]

  • Page 42

    42 C HAPTER 2: P LANNING AND M ANAGING Y OUR W IRELESS N ETWO RK WITH 3WXM Network Status 3WXM provides summary status on devices in the network at the Mobility Domain, switch or MAP level. View the summary status as the initial step in monitoring . Summary status displays the operational status of WX switches, MAPs, and their radi os (whether they[...]

  • Page 43

    Management and Monitoring 43  RF neighborhood  T ransmitters (heard by this radio)  Listeners (who heard this radio)  Neighbors  BSSID to SSID mappin g  Channel  RSSI Statistics collected for the RF enviro nment provides data on a per -channel basis. Y ou can view noise levels, cyclic redundancy check (CRC) and PHY errors, pack[...]

  • Page 44

    44 C HAPTER 2: P LANNING AND M ANAGING Y OUR W IRELESS N ETWO RK WITH 3WXM Rogue Detection A r ogue AP is an access point that is not authorized to oper ate in or near your network. Y ou can use RF counter measures to deny service to or from a targeted rogue AP , and render them inef fective. Once a rogue AP is detected and reported, the closes t 3[...]

  • Page 45

    Management and Monitoring 45 V erification Both configuration verification and ne twork verification rules are checked for any inconsistencies or pr oblems. V erification rules include “instant fix” resolutions. Instant fix r esolutions are err ors that can be automatically fixed, or alternatively providing a hot link to the object containing t[...]

  • Page 46

    46 C HAPTER 2: P LANNING AND M ANAGING Y OUR W IRELESS N ETWO RK WITH 3WXM RF Plan Optimization What is optimization? : Importing RF measurement data into an RF model to improve the accuracy of the model. Purpose of this section : Provides an overview of optimization methods. Why is this important? : A network plan contains the configuration settin[...]

  • Page 47

    RF Plan Optimization 47 Based on RF measurement data you ga ther in 3WXM to optimize the RF model of a floor , you can make con figuration changes in the software to improve signal str ength a nd coverage for gr oups or individuals, modify MAP locations, or add additional equi pment to your wireless network if statistics indicate your network has o[...]

  • Page 48

    48 C HAPTER 2: P LANNING AND M ANAGING Y OUR W IRELESS N ETWO RK WITH 3WXM[...]

  • Page 49

    C ONFIGURING W IR ELESS S ERVICES What are Services? A service is a concept (not a selectable item in the 3WXM interface) that repr esents a set of options you conf igur e and d eploy on your wir eless network. Services are configured to pr ovide various levels of wireless network access to users, such as se cure employee access, guest access, mult[...]

  • Page 50

    50 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES Configure Employee Access Services Services for Employee access are typi cally configur ed to provide secure, encrypted access to the wireless network. The following sections provide information about how to configure Employee access:  “T ask T ab le” on page 50  “Step Summary” on page 5[...]

  • Page 51

    Configure Employee Access Services 51 “Configure RADIUS Servers” on page 56 1 Tool bar option: select Configuration. 2 Organizer panel : expand the WX switch. 3 Expand AAA. 4 Click RADIUS. 5 Select RADIUS Server in the Task List. From the Cr eate RADIUS Server wizard:  Name: enter server name  IP Address: enter server IP address  Key: [...]

  • Page 52

    52 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES Step Summary The following list summarizes the fields selected or conf iguration items entered in the example that follows to configure Employee access: 1 Create a radio profile.  From the Radio Pr ofile wizar d, enter RadioProfile1 as the name of the radio profile.  Click Finish . 2 Configure t[...]

  • Page 53

    Configure Employee Access Services 53  Configure each user r ecor d with either the VLAN-Name attribute or the RADIUS T unnel-Private-Group-ID.  Configure 802.1X authentication rules. 3 Configure the RADIUS server in 3WXM:  From the Cr eate RADIUS wizar d, enter sg1 as the Name of the server , the server’ s IP address, and the Key . Allo[...]

  • Page 54

    54 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES In general, these same steps are requir ed to configure other services, too. Y ou can refer back to this section, using the summary list or the task table, with configuratio n options for “Configure Guest Access Services” on page 67 or “Conf igur e V oice over W ir eless IP Service” on page 81[...]

  • Page 55

    Configure Employee Access Services 55 5 Enter the name of the radio profile, then click Next at t he bottom of the wizard. 6 If MAPs are alr eady configured, sele ct the radios to map to the radio profile, then click Move . 3WXM removes the radios fr om the radio profile they are in and places them in the new pr ofile. If you have not configured th[...]

  • Page 56

    56 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES Configure RADIUS Servers Remote Authentication Dial-In User Se rvice (RADIUS) is a client-serve r security protocol that pr ovides authentication, authorization, and accounting for network users and device s. A RADIUS server stor es user profiles, which include usernames, passwor ds, and other user at[...]

  • Page 57

    Configure Employee Access Services 57 5 T ype the name, IP address, and key , then click Next . 3WXM suggests the name of a server group to place the server in. The server group is r equir ed because AAA rules refer to server gr oups, not to individual servers. 6 Click Finish to save the server and create the server group. The new server and group [...]

  • Page 58

    58 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES Configure Attributes on the RADIUS Server T o authenticate users, you will need to configure users either in the local database or on RADIUS servers. T o configure services for Em ployee access, the following items should be configured on the RADIUS server . T o configure the RADIUS server 1 Configure[...]

  • Page 59

    Configure Employee Access Services 59 4 Configure each user r ecor d with authorization rules (username and password) and with either the Vlan-Name att ribute (3Com VSA) or the RADIUS T unnel-Private-Group-ID to assign users to VLANs. Other attributes are optional. Create a Service Profile for 802.1X Access A service profile contains the config ura[...]

  • Page 60

    60 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES 5 Click Next . 6 Change the service profile name to Secure-802.1X-Employees , and use Employees as the SSID, as shown in the figure on the next page. 7 Click Next . Select WP A and deselect Dynamic WEP .[...]

  • Page 61

    Configure Employee Access Services 61 8 Click Next . TKIP is already selected. 9 Click Next . Leave Externa l RADIUS Server selected as the EAP T ype. 10 Select the RADIUS server group in th e Availa ble RADIUS Serv er Groups list and click Add . 11 Click Next . T ype vla n-mkt in the VLAN Name box. 12 Click Next . Select RadioProfile1 in the Avail[...]

  • Page 62

    62 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES 13 Click Finish . The new service profile appe ars in the Content panel. View the Service Profile’ s Access Rules Every service pr ofile requir es access rules. The access rules specify the usernames or MAC addre sses that are allowed to acc ess the SSID. The service profile wizar ds automatically c[...]

  • Page 63

    Configure Employee Access Services 63 T o view an 802.1X service profile’ s access rule s 1 Select the service pr ofile in the Wireless Service Pr ofiles table (located in the Content panel). A Setup group appears in the T ask List panel. 2 In the T ask List pane l, select 802.1X Access. The Configure 802.1X Access wizard appears. The wizard disp[...]

  • Page 64

    64 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES The 802.1X Service Profile wizards uses the ** userglob in the access rule. Y ou can use this rule, modify it, or delete it and create a new one. Y ou also can create additional rules. For syntax information, see th e “W ir eless Service Parameters” section in the “Configuring W ireless Paramete[...]

  • Page 65

    Configure Employee Access Services 65 4 In the T ask List panel, select VLAN. The Create VLAN wizard is displayed. 5 Enter vlan-mkt as th e VLAN name and use the VLAN ID suggested by the wizard. 6 Click Next . Select the ports you want to use in the VLAN and click Add or Move .  The Add button adds the ports to the new VLAN without r emoving the[...]

  • Page 66

    66 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES What’ s Next? After you create Employee services, you can cr eate additional services. For information about configuri ng ad ditional services, r efer to:  “Configure Guest Access Services” on page 67  “Configure V oice over W ireless IP Service” on page 81 After you ha ve cre ated add[...]

  • Page 67

    Configure Guest Access Services 67 Configure Guest Access Services Guest access is access for visitors at y our location and is typically clear (no encryption) . This section contains the following informatio n about how to configur e Guest access services:  “T ask T ab le” on page 67  “Step Summary” on page 69  “Optional: Config[...]

  • Page 68

    68 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES “Create a User Group and Guest Users” on page 70 1 Tool bar option: select Configuration. 2 Organizer panel: expand the WX switch. 3 Expand AAA. 4 Click Local User Database. 5 Select User in the Task List. From the Cr eate Named User wizard:  Username: enter name  Password: enter password ?[...]

  • Page 69

    Configure Guest Access Services 69 Step Summary The following list summarizes the fiel ds selected or configuration items entered configure Guest access. 1 Create a radio profile.  From the Radio Pr ofile wizar d, enter RadioProfile1 as the Name of the radio profile.  Click Finish . 2 Configure users in the local database:  From the Cr eat[...]

  • Page 70

    70 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES  Choose the Ports or Distr ibuted MAPs to which you’ll restrict guest users to certain geographic areas of your network.  Click Finish . For detailed information about the steps, see the cross-refer ences in the “T ask T able” on page 67. New configuration items that were not part of the e[...]

  • Page 71

    Configure Guest Access Services 71 Leave the VLAN name unassigned. For Web Portal access, you specify the VLAN name when you configure the guest service profile. (See step 8 on page 75.) 6 Click Next . The wizard lists the authorization attribut es you can configure for the user . A very useful authorization attr ibute for guest users is the end-d [...]

  • Page 72

    72 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES T o create a user gr oup and add users to it 1 In the T ask List panel, select User Group. 2 T ype a name for the group in the name box and click Next . The wizard lists the authorization attribut es you can configure for the group. For this example, leave the attributes un configured. If attributes a[...]

  • Page 73

    Configure Guest Access Services 73 4 Click Finish . The new group appears in the Content panel. Create a Service Pr ofile for Guest Access with Web Login T o create a Web-Portal service profile 1 Select Configuration on the toolbar . 2 In the Organizer panel, expand the WX switch. 3 Expand Wireless, then select Wireless Services . 4 In the T ask Li[...]

  • Page 74

    74 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES 5 Click Next . 6 Change the service profile name to Web-Portal-Guests , and use the name Guests for the SSID.[...]

  • Page 75

    Configure Guest Access Services 75 7 Select the SSID T ype:  Clear —Data is n ot encrypted  Encrypted —Data is encrypt ed For this example, Clear is selected. 8 Click Next . T ype or select the name of th e VLAN you want to place your guests users in. For this example, use guest-vlan . T yping the VLAN name h ere does no t actually config[...]

  • Page 76

    76 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES 10 Click Next . Select the location of th e user information and click Add :  LOCAL—The switch’ s local database  RADIUS server group—group of external RADIUS servers (For a server group to be available in the wizar d, the gr oup must already be configured. See “Configur e RADIUS Servers[...]

  • Page 77

    Configure Guest Access Services 77 11 Click Next . The wizard shows the user names configur ed in the local database. The users created in “T o create users” on pag e 70 ar e listed.[...]

  • Page 78

    78 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES Also listed is a user named web-portal- ssid , wher e ssid is the W eb-Portal SSID name. This user is automatically created. The switch uses the web-portal- ss id username for users while they are in the portal and ar e being authenticated. After a user is authenticated, the user name of the session c[...]

  • Page 79

    Configure Guest Access Services 79 View the Service Profile’ s Access Rules T o view a W eb-Portal s ervice pr ofile’ s access rules 1 Select the service pr ofile in the Wireless Service Pr ofiles table (located in the Content panel). A Setup group appears in the T ask List panel. 2 In the T ask List panel, select Web Portal Access. The Configu[...]

  • Page 80

    80 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES 4 In the T ask List panel, select Mobility Profile. The Create Mobility Pr of iles wizar d appears. 5 In the Profile Name box, type the name of the Mobility Pr ofile. The name can be up to 16 alphanu meric characters, and it cannot contain tabs. The Mobility Profile Name has to be defined as an author[...]

  • Page 81

    Configure Voice over Wireless IP Service 81 For information about deploying your configu ration and enabling monitoring your network, refer to:  “Managing and Monitoring Y our Network” on page 153. Configure V oice over Wireless IP Service V oice over W ir eless IP (V oWIP) is a new technology , merging V oIP (V oice over IP) with 802.11 wir[...]

  • Page 82

    82 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES T able 12 Creating a Service for V oWIP Access Ta s k Path Primary Parameters to Configure “Create a Radio Pr ofile” on page 54 1 Tool bar opti on: select Configuration. 2 Organizer panel: expand the WX switch. 3 Expand Wireless. 4 Click Radio Profiles. 5 Select Radio Profile in the Task List. Fro[...]

  • Page 83

    Configure Voice over Wireless IP Service 83 Step Summary The following list summarizes the fiel ds selected or configuration items entered in the example that follows to configu r e V oWIP access: 1 Create a radio profile.  From the Radio Pr ofile wizar d, enter RadioProfileV oic as the Name of the radi o pr ofile.  Click Finish .  Select [...]

  • Page 84

    84 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES Create a Radio Pr ofile for V oice This procedure is similar to the proc edure in “Create a Radio Profile” on page 54, bu t has additional steps to ch ange the delivery traffic indication map (DTIM) interval to 3. T o create a radio profile for voice service 1 Select Configuration on the too lbar [...]

  • Page 85

    Configure Voice over Wireless IP Service 85 The SpectraLink, Avaya, and V oce ra options configure service for proprietary V oWIP solutions from these vendors. If you are configuring V oWIP for devices that use the W i-Fi Multimedia (WMM) standard, or a proprietary solution other than one of the listed vendors’, use the Other option. Create a Ser[...]

  • Page 86

    86 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES 9 Click Next . Select WP A and de select Static WEP .[...]

  • Page 87

    Configure Voice over Wireless IP Service 87 10 Click Next . Leave TKIP enabled and click Ne xt . 11 Click Next . T ype a passphrase from 8 to 63 characters long in the Pre-shar ed Key box and click Generate .[...]

  • Page 88

    88 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES 12 Click Next . T ype or select the name of the VLAN you want to plac e voice users in. For this example , use voice-vlan . T yping the VLAN name h ere does no t actually configure the VLAN. T o configure a VLAN, see “Set Up VLANs on WX Switches” on page 64. 13 Click Next . Select Enable WMM . 14 [...]

  • Page 89

    Configure Voice over Wireless IP Service 89 7 Leave SpectraLink selected in the V endor dr op-down list. 8 Click Next . Select Open Access an d deselect MAC Access. 9 Click Next . Select WP A and deselec t Static WEP . 10 Click Next . Leave TKIP enabled and click Ne xt . 11 Click Next . T ype a passphrase from 8 to 63 characters long in the Pre-sha[...]

  • Page 90

    90 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES Create a Service Profile for Avaya V oWIP Devices 1 Select Configuration on the too lbar . 2 In the Organizer panel, expand the WX switch. 3 Expand Wireless, then select W ir eless Services. 4 In the T ask List panel, se lect V oice Service Profile. The V oice Se rvice Pr ofile wizard is displayed. 5 [...]

  • Page 91

    Configure Voice over Wireless IP Service 91 15 Click Next . Select RadioProfileV oic in the Radio Profiles list . 16 Click Finish . Create a Service Profile for V ocera V oWIP Devices 1 Select Configuration on the toolbar . 2 In the Organizer panel, expand the WX switch. 3 Expand Wireless, then select Wireless Services . 4 In the T ask List panel, [...]

  • Page 92

    92 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES 11 Click Next . T ype o r select the name of the VLAN you want to place SVP users in. For this example , use voice-vlan . T yping the VLAN name h ere does no t actually configure the VLAN. T o configure a VLAN, see “Set Up VL ANs on WX Switches” on page 64. 12 Click Create to add MAC users to the [...]

  • Page 93

    What’s Next? 93 6 Click Next . Select the ports you want to use in the VLAN and click Add or Move .  The Add button adds the ports to the new VLAN without r emoving them from any other VLANs.  The Move button removes the ports fr om all other VLANs, and places them in the new VLAN. The ports appear in the Curr ent Members list. T o tag port[...]

  • Page 94

    94 C HAPTER 3: C ONFIGURING W IRELESS S ERVICES For information about deploying your configu ration and enabling monitoring your network, refer to:  “Managing and Monitoring Y our Network” on page 153.[...]

  • Page 95

    U SING RF A UTO -T UNING What Is RF Auto-T uning? RF Auto-T uning is a technique you ca n use to configure your RF (radio) network. RF Auto-T uning is a quick method that requir es minimal configuration and no RF planning or site surveys, and instead, relies on the AutoT une feature to set MA P channels and power settings. This is a great way to qu[...]

  • Page 96

    96 C HAPTER 4: U SING RF A UTO -T UNING Place Y our Equipment Y ou will need to unpack and physical ly install your WX switches and MAPs. For inf ormation ab out instal ling your eq uipment, se e “Equipme nt Installation” on page 40. Configure Initial WX Switch Connectivity After installing a WX switch, you must prepare it for configuration and[...]

  • Page 97

    Create a Service Profile 97 3WXM uses its verification rules to ch eck the switch’ s conf iguration. If an item in the configuratio n ge nerates an err or or warning, 3WXM displays the error or warning message. 7 Review the verification messages to determine whether you will need to make changes to the switch’ s conf iguration after uploading i[...]

  • Page 98

    98 C HAPTER 4: U SING RF A UTO -T UNING A wizard for configuring th e service profile appears. 6 Read the first page of the wizard and click Next . 7 Edit the service profile and type an SSID name. 8 Edit additional settings as applicable to the type of service profile you are creating. For information, see the following:  “Configuring W ire l[...]

  • Page 99

    Create Your MAPs 99 Create Y our MAPs Depending on how your MAPs are connected to a WX switch, you need to create a direct connect MAP or a distributed MAP in your network plan in 3WXM. A direct connect MAP is connected to the wir ed network through a direct 10/100 Ethernet connection to a WX switch. A distributed MAP is connected to the WX switch [...]

  • Page 100

    100 C HAPTER 4: U SING RF A UTO -T UNIN G 8 Click Next . 9 Configure the radios: a T o enable the radio, select Enabled . b In the Radio Pr ofile list, select the profile to which the radio belongs. c In the Channel Number list, select the channel number for the radio . If RF Auto-T uning for chan nel configuration is enabled, setting this value ha[...]

  • Page 101

    Create Your MAPs 101 5 In the Fingerp rint box, type th e 16-digit he xadecimal numb er of the MAP’ s encryption fingerprint. Use either of the following formats:  11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88: 99:aa:bb:cc: dd:ee:ff:00  1122:3344:5566:7 788:99 aa:bbcc:ddee:f f00 A MAP’ s fingerprint is the hash value of the MAP’ s public encrypti on key . Th[...]

  • Page 102

    102 C HAPTER 4: U SING RF A UTO -T UNIN G Apply a Radio Profile to Each Radio When you create a MAP , a new radio (or radios, depending upon the type of MAP cr eated) are added into 3WXM . The radios use the default radio profile in 3WXM unless you create a new radio profile and apply it to each radi o on the MAP . For more information about creati[...]

  • Page 103

    U SING RF A UTO -T UNING WITH M ODELLING What Is RF Auto-T uning with Modelling? RF Auto-T uning with mo delling is a technique you can use to configure and implement your network that b uilds on the RF Auto-T uning method. Y ou will, as the name implies, still use RF Auto-T uning (auto tuning) to adjust power and chann el settings to pr ovide RF s[...]

  • Page 104

    104 C HAPTER 5: U SING RF A UTO -T UNIN G WITH M ODELLING Add Site Information By addi ng minimal informati on about your bui ldings an d floors at your site, you support improved monito ring for your network. Y ou can manually add building and flo or information or you can import a floor . For information about importing a floor plan, see “Impor[...]

  • Page 105

    Add Site Information 105 5 In the Starting Floor Level bo x, spec ify the floor number of the first floor in the building. T o start with a subterran ean floor , you can specify 0 or a negative floor nu mber . 6 In the Skip Floor Levels box, specify floor numbers you want to skip. Skipping floors is usef ul when you wa nt to model only certain f lo[...]

  • Page 106

    106 C HAPTER 5: U SING RF A UTO -T UNIN G WITH M ODELLING Insert RF Obstacles Add major RF obstacles that will affect the placement of your MAPs, such as solid walls, barriers , or el evator shafts. T o add RF obstacles 1 Display the floor plan in the Content panel. 2 In the T ask List panel, click T ools . 3 In the RF Obstacle area under Layout , [...]

  • Page 107

    Insert RF Obstacles 10 7 A default attenuation factor is displayed fo r the object type, or , you can select an attenuation f actor that yo u believe mor e closely matches the RF obstacle. 6 Click Finish . The RF obstacle is added to you r floor layout.[...]

  • Page 108

    108 C HAPTER 5: U SING RF A UTO -T UNIN G WITH M ODELLING Create Y our RF Coverage Ar ea T o create your RF cove rage area , you create a wiring close t (mandatory if you have dir ect MAPs in your plan), designat e an area for RF coverage, and add your distribu ted MAPs or direct MAP s to the coverage area. Distributed MAPs are indirectly attached [...]

  • Page 109

    Create Your RF Coverage Area 10 9 Create Y our RF Coverage Area T o create your RF coverage area 1 Display the floor plan in the Content panel. 2 In the T ask List panel, click T ools . 3 In the Cr eate ar ea under Coverage Ar ea, click one of the icons and draw the RF coverage ar ea you want to add to the floor by clicking and dragging the mouse. [...]

  • Page 110

    110 C HAPTER 5: U SING RF A UTO -T UNIN G WITH M ODELLING 5 In the Name box for each technology , type a name for the coverage ar ea (1 to 60 characters long, with no tabs). 6 In the Rate [Mb/s] list for each te chnology , select the average desired association rate for typical c lients in this coverage area. 7 For 802.11g, to prevent the associati[...]

  • Page 111

    Create Your RF Coverage Area 11 1 9 T o change the ceiling height, specify the new height in the Height of the Ceiling box. 10 T o change the heig ht wher e MAPs ar e mounted, specify the new mounting height in the MAP Placement Height box. 11 Click Next . The Default Device Settings p age appears.[...]

  • Page 112

    112 C HAPTER 5: U SING RF A UTO -T UNIN G WITH M ODELLING 12 T o change the def ault WX switch model, select the model fr om the WX Model list. 13 T o change the default MAP model, se lect the model from the Default AP Model list. 14 T o change the MAP conn ection type , select the type fr om the AP Connection T ype list:  Dire ct—MAPs are dir[...]

  • Page 113

    Create Your RF Coverage Area 11 3 17 T o change the MAP connection type fo r the r edundant co nnection, select Direct or Distributed from the MAP Connection T ype list. 18 T o change the number of redundant connections for the distributed connection type, type the number in the Redundancy Level box. For direct connections, the r edundancy level is[...]

  • Page 114

    114 C HAPTER 5: U SING RF A UTO -T UNIN G WITH M ODELLING 23 In the Station Oversubscription Ratio li st, select the ratio for the average transmit behavior of the stations. The station oversubscription ratio is th e ratio of active clients compar ed to total clients. For example, the ratio 5:1 indicates that, statistically , 20 percent of the clie[...]

  • Page 115

    Create Your RF Coverage Area 11 5 27 In the Active Handsets per AP list, sp ecify the number of voice ov er IP phones that you want each MAP to handle. 28 In the Expected Handset Count list, sp ecify the number of voice over IP phones you expect to be in the coverage area. 29 In the Handset Oversubscription Ratio lis t, select the ratio for the ave[...]

  • Page 116

    116 C HAPTER 5: U SING RF A UTO -T UNIN G WITH M ODELLING The profiles available depend on th e Mobility Domain you selected in step 31. The pr ofile you select applies to all radios associated with the coverage area. If you type the name of a radio profile that does not already exist, 3WXM cr eates it. 33 In the Wi ring Closet list, select the wir[...]

  • Page 117

    Create Your RF Coverage Area 11 7 5 Click the Associations tab to display area associations information for the coverag e ar ea. 6 In the Availabl e Access Points box, sele ct one or more available MAPs to use in the coverage area, then click Add to move the MAPs to the Current Access Points box. 7 Click OK to close the dialog box. 8 In the Organiz[...]

  • Page 118

    118 C HAPTER 5: U SING RF A UTO -T UNIN G WITH M ODELLING 9 Click on the MAP icon, then click on the lo cation wher e you installed the MAP . The MAP icon moves from the Ob jects T o Place panel to its location on the floor . What’ s Next? This section provides cross r eferences to information on the following tasks:  “Using RF Planning” o[...]

  • Page 119

    U SING RF P LANNING What is RF Planning? RF Planning is a technique you can use to import detailed information about your site into 3WXM, add RF obstacle information and third-party APs, and configure your RF coverage area at a finer level than is possible using the RF Auto-T uning with modelling technique. By defining sites, buildings, and floors,[...]

  • Page 120

    120 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING Prepar e the Floor Drawings If your floor drawings are contained in JPEG or GIF files, this step does not apply . Go directly to “Define Site Information” on pag e 121. If you plan to import AutoCAD DXF™ or AutoCAD DWG files i nto 3WXM, you should perform some “clean up” work befo r e importing the file[...]

  • Page 121

    Define Site Information 121 After you import the file into 3WXM, you have the opportunity t o r emove any unnecessary objects overlooked during your init ial pr eparation of the floor drawings. T o do this, you can use the Clean Layout featur e and other editing tools in the Building wizard. For more information about how to prepar e the AutoCAD fi[...]

  • Page 122

    122 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING 2 In the 3WXM Services Conne ction dialog box, enter the IP address of a host running 3WXM Services, opti onally enter a user name and password, and click Next . If the 3WXM Service is installed on the same machi ne as the one you are using to run 3WXM, enter 127.0.0.1 as th e IP address. This is a standard IP lo[...]

  • Page 123

    Define Site Information 123 T o add site information 1 Select the RF Planning tool bar option. 2 In the Organizer panel, click the name of the network plan. 3 Select Create Site in the T ask List panel. T he Cr eate Site wizard, a series of dialog boxes, prompts you for information about the new site. 4 In the Site Name box, type a name for the sit[...]

  • Page 124

    124 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING T o create a building 1 In the Organizer panel, click the site name. 2 Select Create Building in the T ask List panel. The Create Building wiza r d prompts you for information about the new building. 3 In the Building Name box, type the name of the building (1 to 30 alphanumeric characters, with no spaces or tabs[...]

  • Page 125

    Define Site Information 125 T o add a floor to the building 1 In the Organizer panel, click the building name. 2 Select Create Floor in the T ask Li st panel. The Crea te Floor wizar d prompts you for information about the new floor . 3 In the Floor Name box, type the na me of the floo r (1 to 60 alphanumeric characters, with no spaces or t abs), a[...]

  • Page 126

    126 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING Import a Floor Plan Import existing floor plans into 3WXM. The file can be in one of the AutoCAD DXF , AutoCAD DWG, JPEG, or GIF formats. 3Com recommends that you modify the AutoCAD files fro m AutoCAD to remove unnecessary objects and layers ; then save them i n .dxf format. For more information about ho w to mo[...]

  • Page 127

    Define Site Information 127 Set the Scale Set the scale on your floor plan to better define the distance between objects in your netw ork. T o set the scale 1 Display the floor plan in the Content panel. 2 Click on the toolbar . a Draw a line on the floor plan over an object whose length you know; for example, a 3-foot door . b Enter the actual len[...]

  • Page 128

    128 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING Clean Layout Clean up your floor drawings further if unnecessary objects still r emain after you your init ial floor drawing cleanup. Note the following when cleaning up a drawing:  Drawing cleanup does not apply to GIF or JPEG drawings .  Drawing cleanup does not change objects that are grouped.  If two[...]

  • Page 129

    Define Site Information 129 3 Click Next . Cleanup progr ess is displayed at the bottom of the wizard. 4 Y ou can display a Before Cleanup and After Cleanup view when cleanup is complete.[...]

  • Page 130

    130 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING 5 When you are satisfied with the results, click Fi nish .[...]

  • Page 131

    Model RF Obstacles 131 Model RF Obstacles When planning a 3Com network, you need to consider how the building layout and physical object s af fect si gnal loss. W alls, windows, and doors absorb RF signals, and differ ent building materials have differ ent attenuation facto rs. Y ou can model an RF obstacle on your floor plan and assign the obstacl[...]

  • Page 132

    132 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING 3 Select Create RF Obstacles from the menu that is displayed. The Create RF Obstacle dialog box appears. 4 Define the RF obstacle. 5 Click Finish . The layer’ s objects are now obstacles in your floor plan. Import a Site Survey Y ou can import RF measurement data by means of a site survey done outside of 3WXM. [...]

  • Page 133

    Plan RF Coverage 133 Plan RF Coverage How you plan the RF coverage for your network depends on whet her you are planning for the widest coverage or are planning for capacity . There are other contributing factors. One group of users may be mobile and requir e high thr oughput performance (a higher bandwidth), while another group of users ar e more [...]

  • Page 134

    134 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING 5 In the Name box, type the name of the wiring closet (1 to 60 characters, with no tabs). 6 Click a WX switch in the A vailable Devices box, then click the Add button to move it to the Current Devices box. 7 Click Finish to save the changes. The wiring closet is displayed on your floor plan. Cr eate Coverage Area[...]

  • Page 135

    Plan RF Coverage 135 When you draw a coverage area, it aligns to the grid to provide a whole number for width and height of the shape. T o create a coverage area 1 Display the floor plan in the Content panel. 2 In the T ask List panel, click T ools . 3 In the Cr eate ar ea under Coverage Ar ea, click one of the icons and draw the RF coverage ar ea [...]

  • Page 136

    136 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING 5 In the Name box for each technology , type a name for the coverage ar ea (1 to 60 characters long, with no tabs). 6 In the Rate [Mb/s] list for each te chnology , select the average desired association rate for typical c lients in this coverage area. 7 For 802.11g, to prevent the associatio n of 802.11b clients[...]

  • Page 137

    Plan RF Coverage 137 9 T o change the ceiling height, specify the new height in the Height of the Ceiling box. 10 T o change the heig ht wher e MAPs ar e mounted, specify the new mounting height in the MAP Placement Height box. 11 Click Next . The Default Device Settings p age appears.[...]

  • Page 138

    138 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING 12 T o change the def ault WX switch model, select the model fr om the WX Model list. 13 T o change the default MAP model, se lect the model from the Default AP Model list. 14 T o change the MAP conn ection type , select the type fr om the AP Connection T ype list:  Dire ct—MAPs are dir ectly attach ed to de[...]

  • Page 139

    Plan RF Coverage 139 17 T o change the MAP connection type fo r the r edundant co nnection, select Direct or Distributed from the MAP Connection T ype list. 18 T o change the number of redundant connections for the distributed connection type, type the number in the Redundancy Level box. 19 For direct connections, the r edundancy level is always 1.[...]

  • Page 140

    140 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING 24 In the Station Oversubscription Ratio li st, select the ratio for the average transmit behavior of the stations. The station oversubscription ratio is th e ratio of active clients compar ed to total clients. For example, the ratio 5:1 indicates that, statistically , 20 percent of the clients are active at any [...]

  • Page 141

    Plan RF Coverage 141 28 In the Active Handsets per AP list, sp ecify the number of voice ov er IP phones that you want each MAP to handle. 29 In the Expected Handset Count list, sp ecify the number of voice over IP phones you expect to be in the coverage area. 30 In the Handset Oversubscription Ratio lis t, select the ratio for the average transmit[...]

  • Page 142

    142 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING 34 In the Wi ring Closet list, select the wiring closet that contains the WX switch or switches to be connected to the shared MAPs. If the MAPs will be dir ectly connected to WX switches, a wiring closet is requir ed. If all the MAPs in the covera ge area will be indir ectly connected to WX switches through the n[...]

  • Page 143

    Plan RF Coverage 143 T o determine the number and placement of MAPs 1 Display the floor plan in the Content panel. 2 In the T ask List panel, click RF Planning . 3 Under RF Planning, click Compute and Place . The Compute and Place wizard appears. 4 T o remove a coverage area fr om MAP placement and computation, clear the area’ s Compute Layout bo[...]

  • Page 144

    144 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING 7 Review the number of MAPs r equired for each coverage area, and the overriding criterion used (coverage or capacity). 8 Click Fi nish to apply the changes. Icons for the suggested MAP locations appear on the floor plan. Assign Channel Settings After identifying the MAPs r equir ed for a coverage area, you need [...]

  • Page 145

    Plan RF Coverage 145 T o assign channels 1 Display the floor plan in the Content panel. 2 In the T ask List panel, click RF Planning . 3 Under RF Planning, click Assign Channels . The Channel Assignment wizard appears, showing the curr ent channel assignment constraints. 4 T o change the star ting floor for channel assignment, select the floor from[...]

  • Page 146

    146 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING 9 Review the results. The 802.11a channel assignments ar e listed on the 802.11a Radio(s) tab. The 802.11b/g channel assignments are listed on the 802.11b/g Radio(s) tab. 10 Click Finish to accept the channel assignments. The new channel assignments ar e r eflected in the Coverage Ar eas panel. Calculate Optimal [...]

  • Page 147

    Plan RF Coverage 147 T o calculate optimal power 1 In the T ask List panel, click RF Planning . 2 Under RF Planning, click Compute Optimal Power . The Compute Power For wizard appears, showing a list of the ar eas you defined and the corresponding technology . 3 T o optimize the AP count, select Optimize AP Count . This option checks for coverage o[...]

  • Page 148

    148 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING Display Coverage Looking at the RF coverage allows you to see if the entire ar ea is adequately covered by the M APs. Y ou can move the MAPs and see how the coverage c hanges. T o display the RF coverage for an ar ea 1 Beside Show RF Coverage Using , select ho w you want to display the coverage:  Baseline Asso[...]

  • Page 149

    Generate a Work Order 149 If the coverage area pr ovided by a MAP on the floor above or below is one meter or less, 3WXM displays a message. This coverage ar ea is not displayed on the floor plan. Generate a Work Order Y ou can generate a work order as part of your wir eless network planning. The work order provides all of the necessary information[...]

  • Page 150

    150 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING 4 Specify the work order options. 5 In the Language list, select English or German . The language you select is the langu age used when you next access this page. 6 T o select the directory to which th e work order report is saved, click Choose . The Select dialog box appears. 7 Click Generate . The work order is[...]

  • Page 151

    Install the Equipment 151 Install the Equipment After you print the work order fr om 3WXM, you can distribute it to your installers. The work order shows where to instal l the 3Com equipm ent. If you have specified third-party APs in the n etwork plan, those will be considered in the work or der , too. For more information about installing the equi[...]

  • Page 152

    152 C HAPTER 6: U SING RF P LANNING[...]

  • Page 153

    M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK This chapter provides information to help you deploy the services you configured for your wireless network, enable communication between a 3WXM client and 3WXM Services, a nd enable and configur e monitoring. This chapter also provides thr ee monitoring examples you can use as a guide to troubleshooting user[...]

  • Page 154

    154 C HAPTER 7: M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK 3 Select one or mor e WX switches. T o select multiple switches, press Shift (for contiguous switches) or Control (for noncontiguous switches) while clicking. 4 In the Local Changes group in the T ask List panel, click Deploy . The Deploy Configurations dialog box appears. The dialog lists th[...]

  • Page 155

    Perform Basic Administrative Tasks 155 T o verify your deployment 1 Leave the Devices tool bar option selected. 2 Look in the Deploy Status column for the switch(es) to which you deployed configuration inform ation. The status should be Deploy Completed . Y ou also can verify successful deploy ment by checking the operation log. T o access the log:[...]

  • Page 156

    156 C HAPTER 7: M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK  SSH—By default, SSH is enabled. Y ou can use SSH for encrypted access to the CLI.  SNMP—By defa ult, SNMP is di sabled. Y ou can configur e SNMP community strings and User Security Model (USM) users, notification profiles, and notification targets.  Logging—The system log prov[...]

  • Page 157

    Distributing System Images 157 Distributing System Images Y ou can use 3WXM to upgrade or downgrade the system ima ge (MSS software) on WX switc hes. System images include switch softwa re and MAP softwar e. Using the Image Repository Use the image repository to add or delete WX syst em images. The image file is checked and its versio n is verified[...]

  • Page 158

    158 C HAPTER 7: M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK T o immediately install an image on WX switches 1 Select the Devices tool bar option. 2 At the bottom of the T ask List pa nel, select Device Operations. 3 In the Managed Devices list, select the WX switches onto which you want to install the image. T o select more than one WX, c lick Shift w[...]

  • Page 159

    Importing and Exporting Switch Configuration Fil es 159 If you need to roll back configur ation changes, you can use a saved version to roll back the system software image and configuration files to a known state. Before you can save a version of a network plan, you need to deploy and save the network plan. V ersions of network plans ar e saved in [...]

  • Page 160

    160 C HAPTER 7: M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK If you import a switch configuration, you must enable 3WXM management of the switch before you can deploy the switch to the network. (T o enable 3WXM manag ement of a switch, select the switch in the Organizer panel, sele ct Managed, then click Save .) T o import a configuration 1 In the main[...]

  • Page 161

    Monitoring Exampl es 161 4 T o overwrite previously exporte d configuration files, select Overwrite Existing Files . If you do not select this option, you cannot export a configuration file with the same name as an existing file in the output directory . Y ou can rename the existing file or move the file to another directory . 5 T o have 3WXM c re [...]

  • Page 162

    162 C HAPTER 7: M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK 4 View statistics over a period of time. Placing the user on the watch list allows 3WXM to gather long-term statistics. Find the User Y ou can find a user or multiple users based on the following criteria:  Username  MAC address  IP address  VLAN name T o find the user 1 Click on [...]

  • Page 163

    Monitoring Exampl es 163 4 Enter the type o f sear ch you want to perform, and select the scope for the searc h. 5 Click Next . The search r esults appear . Place User on W atch List If viewing the user’ s current activity does not conclusively indicate the source of the pr oblem, you can place the user on a watch list. Statistics polled for a wa[...]

  • Page 164

    164 C HAPTER 7: M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK Y ou can also add a user to the watch list by clicking the Client Sessions tab in the Client Monitor view , sele cting the client, and clicking the icon on the toolbar . Locate the User Y ou can display the user’ s ap pr oxim ate location by doing the following: 1 Click on the Monitor optio[...]

  • Page 165

    Monitoring Exampl es 165 Display User Ac tivity Y ou can display the event types disp layed for the user . Disassociation events can occur , and users dropped from the network. These events can indicate the reason why access is ba rred or performance slow for the user . For example, typical authoriz ation failur es occur if the local database or RA[...]

  • Page 166

    166 C HAPTER 7: M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK Using this data, you can determine whether the user’ s problem is interference due to low bandwidth (Unicast Bytes in). 3 Select the T rend: Session Stats tab to display Operational Rate, SNR, and RSSI statistics. Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR) statis tics can help you determine whether the in[...]

  • Page 167

    Monitoring Exampl es 167 A high number of T ransmit Timeouts for either the Cu rr ent MAP or Lifetime of the user can indicate interference problems. 5 Select the Location History tab to view wher e the user has been r oaming. These statistics indicate whether in terference pr oblems ar e occurring in specific ar eas of the WLA N. Monitor a Gro up [...]

  • Page 168

    168 C HAPTER 7: M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK 4 Select the RF Environment tab. Statistics ar e displayed. High values for Noise can indicate a problem. Also, view the Utilization statistics. If utilization is very high, this could prevent new users from gaining access to the WLAN. T o view trends 1 Click on the Monitor option in the main[...]

  • Page 169

    Monitoring Exampl es 169 Monitor a Rogue MAP radios automatically scan th e RF spectrum for other devices transmitting in the same sp ectrum. The RF scans discover other 3Com radios, as well as thir d-party , non-3Com transmitters. MSS considers the non-3Com transmitters to be potentia l rogues, and places them on a rogue list. A rogue access point[...]

  • Page 170

    170 C HAPTER 7: M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK T o locate a rogue 1 Click on the Rogue Detection option in the main 3WXM tool bar . The current r ogue list is displayed. 2 View statistics on a single rogue. Select a rogue fr om the Filtered List, then select the Activity Log tab. The number of listeners (other M APs) that detected the rog[...]

  • Page 171

    Monitoring Exampl es 171 Configuring Countermeasures Y ou can enable MSS to use countermeasures against rogues. Countermeasures consist of packets that inte rfer e with a client’ s ability to use the rogue. Countermeasures ar e disabled by default. When you enable them, all devices of interest that are not in the known devices list become viable [...]

  • Page 172

    172 C HAPTER 7: M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK 4 Select Radio Profiles . 5 In the T ask List panel, click on Create Radio Pr ofile . The Crea te Radio Profile wizar d appears. 6 In the Name box, type the name of th e radio pr ofile (1 to 16 characters, with no spaces or tabs), and click Next . The Radio Profile Members page appears.[...]

  • Page 173

    Monitoring Exampl es 173 7 Select the MAP radios on which you want to enable countermeasures from the A vailable Members column, and click Move to move the radios to the Current Members column. 8 Click Next . The Radio Profile Servic e Selection pa ge appears. 9 T o map the radio profile to a service pr ofile, select the service pr ofile in the Ava[...]

  • Page 174

    174 C HAPTER 7: M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK 12 T o enable countermeasures against r ogues detected by radios managed by this profile, select one of the following fr om the Countermeasures Mode pull-down list:  None—Radios do not use countermeasures. This is the default.  All—Radios use countermeasures agai nst devices classif[...]

  • Page 175

    Monitoring Exampl es 175 13 T o disable active scanning for rogue devices, deselect Enable Active Scan. When active scan is enabled, radios send probe any requests (probe requests with a null SSID name), to solicit pr obe r esponses from other access points. Radios also passively scan by listening for beacons and probe r esponses. When active scan [...]

  • Page 176

    176 C HAPTER 7: M ANAGING AND M ONITORING Y OUR N ETWORK[...]

  • Page 177

    O PTIMIZING A N ETWORK P LAN Optimizing your network is a post- deployment tec hnique. Y ou can optimize your WLAN by importing RF measurement data to corr ect RF attenuatio n obstacle informat ion in your network plan. Y ou optimize your network plan because:  Y ou have a reported coverage pr oblem in your network  Y ou want to verify your n[...]

  • Page 178

    178 C HAPTER 8: O PTIMIZING A N ETWORK P LAN The following sections describe ho w to import RF measurements from your network, or how to import RF measurements from an Ekahau site survey . Using RF Measur ements from MAPs Y ou can apply the RF measurements derived from the MAPs in your WLAN (which regularly monitors the RF envir onment) to your net[...]

  • Page 179

    Using RF Measurements fro m an Ekahau Site Survey 179 Using RF Measur ements from an Ekahau Site Survey RF measurements come from a site su rvey file generated by the Ekahau Site Survey tool. T o perform a site survey:  In 3WXM—View your RF coverage area.  In 3WXM—Generate a site survey wo rk or der , specifying the area you want to surve[...]

  • Page 180

    180 C HAPTER 8: O PTIMIZING A N ETWORK P LAN Generating an Ekahau Site Survey Wor k Ord er The site survey order contains the locations and MAC addresses of the MAPs for use when conducting a site survey , and also provides a JPEG image of the floor . T o generate a site survey order 1 Display the floor plan in the Content panel. 2 In the T ask Lis[...]

  • Page 181

    Using RF Measurements fro m an Ekahau Site Survey 181 4 Select the scope for which you want generate a site survey order . Y ou can specify the Network Plan, an individual site, an individual buildi ng, or an individual floor . 5 Select the language: English or German 6 T o change the ou tput dir ectory for the report, click on the button next to o[...]

  • Page 182

    182 C HAPTER 8: O PTIMIZING A N ETWORK P LAN 10 Browse to the output directory and locate the JPEG file. Copy this file an d import it into your Ekahau Site Survey tool. Pr ocee d with yo ur site survey .[...]

  • Page 183

    Using RF Measurements fro m an Ekahau Site Survey 183 Importing RF Measurements fr om the Ekahau Site Survey After you complete the site survey , you import the csv file containing the RF measur ements fr om the Ekahau Si te Survey tool into your network plan. After you import y our RF measur ements, you optimize to correct attenua tion for obstac [...]

  • Page 184

    184 C HAPTER 8: O PTIMIZING A N ETWORK P LAN 8 Click Next . The import progress is displayed. When the import is done, check the T otal valid RF measurements found line in the progr ess messages.  If the number is greater than 0, 3WXM successfully imported measurem ents.  If the number is 0, no measurements wer e imported. T ry the import aga[...]

  • Page 185

    Optimizing the RF Coverage Model 185 After you import your RF measurem ents, you correct the attenuation factors for the floor . Go to “Optimizing the R F Coverage Model” next for information about this topic. Optimizing the RF Coverage Model An attenuation library is a set of a ttenuation values for the RF obstacles on a floor . After you impo[...]

  • Page 186

    186 C HAPTER 8: O PTIMIZING A N ETWORK P LAN  The T otal number of RF measurements that did not intersect any object line lists the number of measur em ents that d id not experience attenuation due to an RF obstacle in the path between them. If the measurements came from a site surv ey file, they ar e measurements between the deployed MAPs and t[...]

  • Page 187

    Locating and Fix ing Coverage Holes 187 Locating and Fixing Coverage Holes After you import RF measurements and rebuild the attenuation librar y , you can look for coverage holes by displaying coverage. T o locate coverage holes:  Display the optimized RF coverage area to vi ew the r esults of the corrected attenuation data.  Lock down deploy[...]

  • Page 188

    188 C HAPTER 8: O PTIMIZING A N ETWORK P LAN 6 On the to olbar , click the radi o type ( A, B, or G) for whic h you want to display coverage. Coverage for the selected scope(s) is displayed. This examp le shows 802.11a coverage, by transmit data ra te, for the coverage area CoverA. Locking Down MAPs T o prevent 3WXM from moving a MAP on your networ[...]

  • Page 189

    Locating and Fix ing Coverage Holes 189 Fixing a Coverage Hole After you import RF measurements, rebuild the attenuation library , and display coverage, you can observe an y wireless coverage holes in the network. T o fix a coverage hole, us e either of the fo llowing methods:  Lock the MAPs in place, and use the Comp ute and Place task to recom[...]

  • Page 190

    190 C HAPTER 8: O PTIMIZING A N ETWORK P LAN 8 In the Organizer panel, click on Objects to Place . A list of the MAPs you created is displayed in the panel. 9 Click on the MAP icon, then click on th e location wher e you installed the MAP . The MAP icon moves from the Ob jects T o Place panel to its location on the floor . What’ s Next? Y ou can [...]

  • Page 191

    A O BTAINING S UPPORT FOR YOUR P R ODUCT Register Y our Product W arranty and other service benefits start from the date of purchase, so it is important to register your product quickly to ensure you get full use of the warranty and other service benefits available to you. W arranty and other service benefits are enabled thr ough product re gistrat[...]

  • Page 192

    192 C HAPTER A: O BTAINING S UPPORT FOR YOUR P RODUCT T roubleshoot Online Y ou will find support tools posted on the 3Com web site at http://www.3com.com/ 3Com Knowledgebase helps you troubleshoot 3Com products. This query-based interactive tool is located at http://knowledgebase.3com.com and contains thousands of technical solutions written by 3C[...]

  • Page 193

    Contact Us 193 T o send a product directly to 3Com for repair , you must first obtain a return authorization number (RMA). Pr oducts sent to 3Com, without authorization numbers clearly marked on the outside of the package, will be returned to the sender unopened, at the sender’ s expense. If your product is r egistered and under warranty , you ca[...]

  • Page 194

    194 C HAPTER A: O BTAINING S UPPORT FOR YOUR P RODUCT From the following countries, you may use the numbers s hown: Austria Belgium Denmark Finland France Germany Hungary Ireland Israel Italy 01 7956 7124 070 700 770 7010 7289 01080 2783 0825 809 622 01805 404 747 06800 12813 1407 3387 1800 945 379 4 199 161346 Luxembourg Netherlands Norway Poland [...]

  • Page 195

    I NDEX Numbers 3WXM software r equir ements 14 3WXM client 16 connecting to 3WXM monito ring service 18 ha rdwa re re qui rem ent s 13 installing 17 installing, resource allocation 16 installing, stan dalone mode 16 software r equir ements 14 3WXM GUI overview 21 3WXM monitoring service configuring 19 ha rdwa re re qui rem ent s 14 installing 17 in[...]

  • Page 196

    196 I NDEX HTTPS, enabling 156 I image files distributing 157 image repository adding image 157 deleting image 157 using 157 importing floor plans 126 importing configurations 159 installa tion software r equir ements 14 installin g 16 3WXM 17 equipment 151 ha rdw are 40 L local ch anges deploying 153 scheduling deploy ment 154 M manage services 15[...]

  • Page 197

    I NDEX 197 RADIUS attributes 3Com specific 58 VSAs 58 RADIUS servers configuring 56 rep ort in g overview 45 types of reports 45 RF Auto-T uning configuring, initial WX switch c onnectivity 96 defining 95 description of 29 uploading WX switch configur ation 96 RF Auto-T un ing with Modelling adding MAPs 116 adding RF obstacles 106 adding sites 104 [...]

  • Page 198

    198 I NDEX locating 164 monitoring groups 167 placing on a watch list 163 viewing long-term statistics 165 V vendor -specific attributes. Se e VSAs (vendor -specific attributes) verification rogue countermeasures 175 VLAN-Name attribute description 58 VLANs configuring 64 Vo W I P configuring 81 VSAs (vendor -specific attributes) Encryption-T ype 5[...]