01-23-2016 05:31 AM - edited 07-05-2021 04:31 AM
Hello!
i have vWLC v 8.0.121.0 my quastion is how max bandwidth Mbps per virtual controller speed can i get with this WLC ??
BR
OKA
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01-23-2016 07:18 AM
There is really no answer for this.
You know the backplane of the WLC platforms because of how many ports they have, the vWLC depends on you VM host and its network connection. You also have to understand it software vs hardware now. If you design it right, it will work for you. Majority uses hardware based, but you have some that are successful with vWLC.
-Scott
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01-23-2016 07:18 AM
There is really no answer for this.
You know the backplane of the WLC platforms because of how many ports they have, the vWLC depends on you VM host and its network connection. You also have to understand it software vs hardware now. If you design it right, it will work for you. Majority uses hardware based, but you have some that are successful with vWLC.
-Scott
*** Please rate helpful posts ***
01-23-2016 03:36 PM
Thanks for answer ,
i use it in my home and i have 2 AP and just one switch and all trafik is in the same vlan , when i test my internet from my pc with wireless i get 450 Mbit/s but when i use cable i get 980 Mbit/s , my AP suport up to 1300Mbit/s , so why i get just 450 Mbit/s?
my channel 108
80 MHz Width
5GHz Band
AC mode
1300 Mbps
01-23-2016 03:40 PM
What AP do you have joined to the vWLC? Wireless is half duplex so what every your devices shows it is negotiated to, you cut that in half and that is your theoretical throughout. You also have to look at what the link is from the AP to the switch and the switch to the vWLC.
-Scott
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01-23-2016 03:58 PM
the link between switch and AP is a-full a-1000
01-23-2016 03:58 PM
Again, wireless is half duplex. What the dataset shows the the max throughout but overall device throughout will be half depending on the negotiated speed between the client and AP. Channel overlap, interference, RSSI and SNR will influence the end result. What your seeing is about right since its half of what your getting from the wired side.
-Scott
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01-23-2016 04:04 PM
Look at the negotiated speed on the client device and divide that in half. That is the theoretical max you will see. If your AP's are overlapping channels with each other or any other 802.11a channels from your neighbors, that will affect your speed. If you see something like 900 Mbps on your client, your max would be 450 Mbps.
-Scott
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01-23-2016 04:21 PM
TX rate 867 Mpbs
RSSI -51 dBm
Noise -93 dBm
i dont have any overlapping
01-23-2016 04:26 PM
Well that right then because you cut 867 in half. That's the theoretical max.
-Scott
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01-23-2016 04:32 PM
thanks
01-23-2016 04:39 PM
No problem. The marketing manufacturers do to promote 802.11a, g, n and now AC does make it seem that one should be able to obtain those speeds. If I were to deploy AC in a downtown building in Chicago for example, I would deploy it with 20 MHz channel width because of all the other wireless from adjacent tenants. You would never deploy 80 MHz in those areas and 40 MHz is even risky due to channel overlap.
-Scott
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01-24-2016 09:02 AM
But why overlap ? 20 Mhz is more use , all my neighbor have 20 or 40 just me 80 mhz,
why u use 20 Mhz if the AC is give u more speed , if i change to 20 Mhz i get just 40 Mpbs and when i use 80 i get 450Mpbs is big different
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