09-13-2011 04:28 AM - edited 07-03-2021 08:45 PM
Only fifteen users are allowed to connect on the WLAN Controller WLANs provided on the 600 series at any one time. A sixteenth user cannot authenticate until one of the first clients de-authenticates or a timeout occurred on the controller.
Note: This number is cumulative across the controller WLANs on the 600 series.
For example, if two controller WLANs are configured and there are fifteen users on one of the WLANs, no users will be able to join the other WLAN on the 600 series at that time. This limit does not apply to the local private WLANs that the end user configures on the 600 series designed for personal use and clients connected on these private WLANs or on the wired ports do not affect these limits.
This is from the Configuration Guide for teh 600 series Office Extend AP. Is this count per AP or total per WLC? If I have 10 APs deployed to our remote users, can each AP support two simultaneous users? Would I need to use separate WLANs for each OEAP?
09-13-2011 04:53 AM
That count should be per AP. The 600 is really designed for SOHO remote sites that don't have more than a few users.
Sent from Cisco Technical Support iPad App
09-13-2011 04:55 AM
I agree. That makes the most sense anyway. I'm piloting these APs for a customer, however, and need to be sure that's the case.
09-13-2011 06:25 AM
The APs support a total of 15 users across all WLANs (except the personall ssid) on each AP. They also support 4 wired clients per Remote LAN using port 4.
I've found the easiest way is to configure AP groups and allocate WLANs and RLANs to each group as required.
09-13-2011 06:50 AM
So the limit is 15 users per AP for "corporate" WLANs?
I'm creating an AP group that contains one corporate WLAN and one corporate Remote LAN and assignign that too all of my OEAPs. Assuming that number goes over 15, based on what you said, that configuration should still work, correct?
Thanks.
09-13-2011 07:00 AM
Yep. the limit is across all 'corporate' wlans on each individual AP and doesn't include the RLANs which are limited to four MAC addresses each. As the text in the original post explains: if you have two corporate wlans and there are 15 users on one SSID then no one can join the other one until someone disassociates.
It doesn't matter how many 600s you have, the limit is per AP (note, this doesn't apply to 1140 or 3500 APs in OE mode.)
09-13-2011 08:12 AM
I thought I would chime in ... Ive been running OE for a few months and it is based on AP not oveall WLAN.
NIce work Jason +5
09-13-2011 08:45 AM
Great. Thanks.
09-09-2013 04:31 PM
Is there any limitation on MAC entries for local LAN ports or personal SSID clients ?
I understand 15 clients max for Corporate SSIDs & 4 client max for Remote-LAN port.
Rasika
03-31-2012 09:13 PM
Hello,
For More information on OEAP-600, please watch the "Community Tech-Talk Series" Cisco Office Extend Access Point OEAP-600
Thanks,
Vinay Sharma
Community Manager - Wireless
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide