05-25-2010 12:50 PM - edited 07-03-2021 06:49 PM
Hi all,
I've found a few info on how to configure the bandselect feature, I think I have an idea how it would work, but I was looking for some literature/documentation that would explain how does BandSelect work with some detail?
Can anybody point to some documentation? Config guides, etc, I've already brwsed through but they just say how to configure and what it achieves. It doesn't specify how does it get clients to be steered to the 5GHz band.
Thanks
Gustavo
05-25-2010 03:14 PM
Evaluating Key Architectural and Operational WLAN Strategies in the Era of 802.11n
www.cisco.com/en/US/solutions/collateral/ns340/ns394/ns348/ns767/farpointWLAN_strategies_wp.pdf
Don't forget to rate useful posts. Thanks.
05-27-2010 12:53 AM
Hello, thanks for your prompt reply.
Unfortunately, I had found this document and it explains the purpose of the feature (that we all now by now) but it doesn't explain how do they achieve that.
My consideration is mostly the technology itself. Does it change beacons/probe replies in any way? How does it influence a client? Is it anything similar to AP load balancing of clients?
anyway I think I'll have to spend a bit of time labbing it up.
Thanks
Gustavo
05-27-2010 07:04 PM
There is little info on this ... I do know the controller steers clients by ignoring the probe request from clients.. So if a client has a and g enabled, the controller detects a strong signal with a and will ignore the g probes... steering it to a...
05-28-2010 01:18 AM
Hi George,
That's pretty much what I also could gather.
Thanks for replying.
Gustavo
05-28-2010 07:57 AM
btw ... Ap load balancing doesnt work only because some clients ignore reason code 17 ...
06-03-2010 02:41 AM
Hi George
what is a reason code 17 ?
Thanks in advance
06-03-2010 03:00 AM
Hi, status code 17 is actually the reason (status code) an AP can give to reject an association request.
If you check table 7-23 on 802.11-2007 document
Association denied because AP is unable to handle additional associated STAs.
When a client tries to associate, the AP can refuse its association request (a few times), hoping that the client will choose another AP to associate to.
Usually they would do that after they have reached a capacity threshold that was admin configured. Obviously they will not not refuse EVERY association request (after the third one, they'll let the client in), or else they'd be denying service.
Gustavo
06-03-2010 03:09 AM
Thanks Gustavo
Where I can found other information about check table 7-23 on 802.11-2007 document ?
Thanks.
06-03-2010 03:55 AM
Just go here:
http://standards.ieee.org/getieee802/802.11.html
THIS is heavy reading. IETF RFC's are lightweight compared to this.
06-03-2010 05:05 AM
Thanks for all Gustavo and have a good day.
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