Cisco Systems Network Card OL 11567 02 User Manual

Release Notes for Cisco Wireless LAN  
Controllers and Lightweight Access Points for  
Release 3.2.171.6  
October 13, 2006  
These release notes describe open and resolved caveats for operating system release 3.2.171.6 for Cisco  
2000, 4100, and 4400 Series Wireless LAN Controllers; Cisco Wireless Services Modules (WiSM);  
Cisco Wireless LAN Controller Network Modules; and Cisco Aironet 1000, 1130, 1200, 1240, and 1500  
Series Lightweight Access Points, which comprise part of the Cisco Unified Wireless Network (Cisco  
UWN) Solution.  
Note  
Unless otherwise noted, all of the Cisco wireless LAN controllers are hereafter referred to as controllers,  
and all of the Cisco lightweight access points are hereafter referred to as access points.  
Contents  
These release notes contain the following sections:  
Co rp o ra t e He a d q u a rt e rs :  
Cis c o S ys t e m s , In c ., 1 7 0 We s t Ta s m a n Drive , S a n J o s e , CA 9 5 1 3 4 -1 7 0 6 US A  
© 2006 Cisco System s, Inc. All rights reserved.  
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Installation Notes  
Upgrading to a New Software Release  
When a controller is upgraded, the code on its associated access points is also automatically upgraded.  
When an access point is loading code, each of its lights blinks in succession.  
Caution  
Do not power down the controller or any access point during this process; otherwise, you might corrupt  
the software image! Upgrading a controller with a large number of access points can take as long as 30  
minutes. The access points must remain powered, and the controller must not be reset during this time.  
Cisco recommends the following sequence when performing an upgrade:  
1. Upload your controller configuration files to a server to back them up.  
2. Turn off the controller 802.11a and 802.11b networks.  
3. Upgrade your controller to the latest software release, following the instructions in the latest version  
of the Cisco Wireless LAN Controller Configuration Guide. Click this link to browse to that  
document:  
4. Re-enable your 802.11a and 802.11b networks.  
Note  
Controllers can be upgraded from one release to another. However, should you require a downgrade from  
one release to another, you may be unable to use the higher release configuration. The workaround is to  
reload the previous controller configuration files saved on the backup server or to reconfigure the  
controller.  
Installation Notes  
This section contains important information to keep in mind when installing your controllers and access  
points.  
Warnings  
Warning  
This warning means danger. You are in a situation that could cause bodily injury. Before you work on  
any equipment, be aware of the hazards involved with electrical circuitry and be familiar with  
standard practices for preventing accidents.  
Warning  
Only trained and qualified personnel should be allowed to install, replace, or service this equipment.  
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Installation Notes  
Warning  
Do not locate any antenna near overhead power lines or other electric light or power circuits, or  
where it can come into contact with such circuits. When installing antennas, take extreme care not  
to come in contact with such circuits, as they may cause serious injury or death. For proper  
installation and grounding of the antenna, refer to national and local codes (e.g. U.S.: NFPA70,  
National Electrical Code, Article 810, in Canada: Canadian Electrical Code, Section 54).  
Warning  
Warning  
This product relies on the buildings installation for short-circuit (overcurrent) protection. Ensure that  
the protective device is rated not greater than 120 VAC, 15A U.S. (240vac, 10A International).  
This equipment must be grounded. Never defeat the ground conductor or operate the equipment in the  
absence of a suitably installed ground connector. Contact the appropriate electrical inspection  
authority or an electrician if you are uncertain that suitable grounding is available.  
Warning  
Warning  
Warning  
Read the installation instructions before you connect the system to its power source.  
Do not work on the system or disconnect cables during periods of lightning activity.  
Do not operate your wireless network near unshielded blasting caps or in an explosive environment  
unless the device has been modified to be especially qualified for such use.  
Warning  
Warning  
In order to comply with radio frequency (RF) exposure limits, the antennas for this product should be  
positioned no less than 6.56 ft (2 m) from your body or nearby persons.  
This unit is intended for installation in restricted access areas. A restricted access area can be  
accessed only through the use of a special tool, lock and key, or other means of security.  
Safety Information  
Follow the guidelines in this section to ensure proper operation and safe use of the controllers and access  
points.  
FCC Safety Compliance Statement  
FCC Compliance with its action in ET Docket 96-8, has adopted a safety standard for human exposure  
to RF electromagnetic energy emitted by FCC certified equipment. When used with approved Cisco  
Aironet antennas, Cisco Aironet products meet the uncontrolled environmental limits found in OET-65  
and ANSI C95.1, 1991. Proper operation of this radio device according to the instructions in this  
publication results in user exposure substantially below the FCC recommended limits.  
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Installation Notes  
Safety Precautions  
Each year hundreds of people are killed or injured when attempting to install an antenna. In many of  
these cases, the victim was aware of the danger of electrocution but did not take adequate steps to avoid  
the hazard.  
For your safety, and to help you achieve a good installation, read and follow these safety precautions.  
They may save your life!  
1. If you are installing an antenna for the first time, for your own safety as well as others, seek  
professional assistance. Your Cisco sales representative can explain which mounting method to use  
for the size and type of antenna you are about to install.  
2. Select your installation site with safety as well as performance in mind. Electric power lines and  
phone lines look alike. For your safety, assume that any overhead line can kill you.  
3. Call your electric power company. Tell them your plans and ask them to come look at your proposed  
installation. This is a small inconvenience considering your life is at stake.  
4. Plan your installation carefully and completely before you begin. Successfully raising a mast or  
tower is largely a matter of coordination. Each person should be assigned to a specific task and  
should know what to do and when to do it. One person should be in charge of the operation to issue  
instructions and watch for signs of trouble.  
5. When installing an antenna, remember:  
a. Do not use a metal ladder.  
b. Do not work on a wet or windy day.  
c. Do dress properly—shoes with rubber soles and heels, rubber gloves, and a long-sleeved shirt  
or jacket.  
6. If the assembly starts to drop, get away from it and let it fall. Remember that the antenna, mast,  
cable, and metal guy wires are all excellent conductors of electrical current. Even the slightest touch  
of any of these parts to a power line completes an electrical path through the antenna and the  
installer: you!  
7. If any part of an antenna system should come in contact with a power line, do not touch it or try  
to remove it yourself. Call your local power company. They will remove it safely.  
8. If an accident should occur with the power lines, call for qualified emergency help immediately.  
Installation Instructions  
Refer to the appropriate Quick Start Guide or Hardware Installation Guide for instructions on installing  
your controllers and access points.  
Note  
To meet regulatory restrictions, all external antenna configurations must be professionally installed.  
Personnel installing the controllers and access points must understand wireless techniques and  
grounding methods. Access points with internal antennas can be installed by an experienced IT  
professional.  
The controller must be installed by a network administrator or qualified IT professional, and the proper  
country code must be selected. Following installation, access to the controller should be password  
protected by the installer to maintain compliance with regulatory requirements and ensure proper unit  
functionality.  
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Important Notes  
Important Notes  
This section describes important information about the controllers and access points.  
Service Modules Supported in the Catalyst 6500 Series Switch  
The Catalyst 6500 Series Switch chassis can support up to five Cisco WiSMs without any other service  
module installed. If one or more service modules are installed, the chassis can support up to a maximum  
of four service modules (WiSMs included).  
Access Points Fail to Join Controllers If MTU Setting Is Less Than 1500  
When the network path between access points and the controller is configured for an MTU size less than  
1500, the controller does not receive join requests from access points in local mode. (MTU settings less  
than 1500 are common when you use tunneling protocols such as IPsec VPN, GRE, and MPLS.) The  
access point join request is larger than 1500 bytes, so the request is fragmented. The size of the first  
fragment is 1500 bytes (including IP and UDP header) and the second fragment is 54 bytes (including  
IP and UDP header).  
Access points in REAP mode are not affected by this limitation, and the problem is resolved in the 4.0  
release train because the LWAPP tunnel can reassemble up to 4 fragments. The problem occurs when all  
four of these conditions exist on your network:  
Your controller runs release 3.2 or earlier  
Your controller is configured for Layer 3 LWAPP  
The network path MTU between the access point and the controller is less than 1500 bytes  
The access point is in local access point (LAP) mode (not REAP mode)  
Workarounds  
Use one of these workarounds to resolve the problem on your network:  
Upgrade to controller software release 4.0 if the controller platform supports it.  
Use 1030 series access points in REAP mode for locations reachable through low-MTU paths.  
Increase the network path MTU to 1500 bytes.  
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Important Notes  
Changing the Default Values of SNMP Community Strings  
The controller has commonly known default values of “public” and “private” for the read-only and  
read-write SNMP community strings. Using these standard values presents a security risk. Therefore,  
Cisco strongly advises that you change these values.  
Using the GUI to Change the SNMP Community String Default Values  
Follow these steps to change the SNMP community string default values through the controller GUI.  
Step 1  
Step 2  
Click Management and then Communities under SNMP. The SNMP v1 / v2c Community page appears.  
If “public” or “private” appears in the Community Name column, click Remove to delete this  
community.  
Step 3  
Step 4  
Click New to create a new community.  
When the SNMP v1 / v2c Community > New page appears, enter a unique name containing up to 16  
alphanumeric characters in the Community Name field. Do not enter “public” or “private.”  
Step 5  
In the remaining fields, enter the IP address from which this device accepts SNMP packets with the  
associated community and the IP mask, choose Read Only or Read/Write to specify the access level  
for this community, and choose Enable or Disable to specify the status of this community.  
Step 6  
Step 7  
Step 8  
Click Apply to commit your changes.  
Click Save Configuration to save your settings.  
Repeat this procedure if a “public” or “private” community still appears on the SNMP v1 / v2c  
Community page.  
Using the CLI to Change the SNMP Community String Default Values  
Follow these steps to change the SNMP community string default values through the controller CLI.  
Step 1  
Step 2  
To see the current list of SNMP communities for this controller, enter this command:  
show snmp community  
If “public” or “private” appears in the SNMP Community Name column, enter this command to delete  
this community:  
config snmp community delete name  
The name parameter is the community name (in this case, “public” or “private”).  
To create a new community, enter this command:  
Step 3  
Step 4  
config snmp community create name  
Enter up to 16 alphanumeric characters for the name parameter. Do not enter “public” or “private.”  
To enter the IP address from which this device accepts SNMP packets with the associated community,  
enter this command:  
config snmp community ipaddr ip_address ip_mask name  
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Important Notes  
Step 5  
To specify the access level for this community, enter this command, where ro is read-only mode and rw  
is read/write mode:  
config snmp community accessmode {ro | rw} name  
To enable or disable this SNMP community, enter this command:  
config snmp community mode {enable | disable} name  
To save your changes, enter save config.  
Step 6  
Step 7  
Step 8  
Repeat this procedure if you still need to change the default values for a “public” or “private” community  
string.  
Changing the Default Values for SNMP v3 Users  
The controller uses a default value of “default” for the username, authentication password, and privacy  
password for SNMP v3 users. Using these standard values presents a security risk. Therefore, Cisco  
strongly advises that you change these values.  
Using the GUI to Change the SNMP v3 User Default Values  
Follow these steps to change the SNMP v3 user default values through the controller GUI.  
Step 1  
Step 2  
Step 3  
Step 4  
Click Management and then SNMP V3 Users under SNMP.  
If “default” appears in the User Name column, click Remove to delete this SNMP v3 user.  
Click New to add a new SNMP v3 user.  
When the SNMP V3 Users > New page appears, enter a unique name in the User Profile Name field. Do  
not enter “default.”  
Step 5  
In the remaining fields, choose Read Only or Read Write to specify the access level for this user, choose  
the authentication and privacy protocols to be used, and enter a password for each.  
Step 6  
Step 7  
Click Apply to commit your changes.  
Click Save Configuration to save your settings.  
Using the CLI to Change the SNMP v3 User Default Values  
Follow these steps to change the SNMP v3 user default values through the controller CLI.  
Step 1  
Step 2  
To see the current list of SNMP v3 users for this controller, enter this command:  
show snmpv3user  
If “default” appears in the SNMP v3 User Name column, enter this command to delete this user:  
config snmp v3user delete username  
The username parameter is the SNMP v3 username (in this case, “default”).  
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Important Notes  
Step 3  
To create a new SNMP v3 user, enter this command:  
config snmp v3user create username {ro | rw} {none | hmacmd5 | hmacsha} {none | des}  
auth_password privacy_password  
where  
username is the SNMP v3 username,  
ro is read-only mode and rw is read/write mode,  
none, hmacmd5, and hmacsha are the authentication protocol options,  
none and des are the privacy protocol options,  
auth_password is the authentication password, and  
privacy_password is the privacy password.  
Do not enter “default” for the username and password parameters.  
To save your changes, enter save config.  
Step 4  
FIPS 140-2  
The Cisco 4400 Series Controllers are on the NIST FIPS 140-2 Pre-Validation List.  
Controllers Must Run Release 3.2.116.21 or Later to Support -P Regulatory  
Domain  
To support access points configured for use in Japan, you must upgrade the controller software to release  
3.2.116.21 or later. Earlier releases do not support access points configured for use in Japan (regulatory  
domain -P).  
Voice WLAN Configuration  
Cisco recommends that load balancing always be turned off in any wireless LAN that is supporting  
voice, regardless of vendor. When load balancing is turned on, voice clients can hear an audible artifact  
when roaming, and the handset is refused at its first reassociation attempt.  
Inter-Subnet Roaming  
Currently, multicast traffic cannot be passed during inter-subnet roaming.  
Operating Mesh Networks Through Switches and Routers  
In mesh networks that operate through low-speed switches and routers, access points can disconnect  
from the controller, causing the controller to generate alerts.  
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Important Notes  
Heavily Loaded Controller CPU  
When the controller CPU is heavily loaded (for example, when doing file copies or other tasks), it does  
not have time to process all of the ACKs that the NPU sends in response to configuration messages.  
When this happens, the CPU generates error messages. However, the error messages do not impact  
service or functionality.  
RADIUS Servers and the Management VLAN  
The RADIUS server can be on any subnet as long as it can be reached by the management VLAN subnet.  
The controllers can be managed via the management VLAN subnet from any other subnet that can reach  
the management VLAN subnet.  
Cisco 7920 Wireless IP Phone Support  
When using Cisco 7920 Wireless IP Phones with controllers, make sure that the phones and controllers  
are configured as follows:  
Aggressive load balancing must be disabled on a per-controller basis. Otherwise, the initial roam  
attempt by the phone may fail, causing a disruption in the audio path.  
The QoS Basis Service Set (QBSS) information element (IE) must be enabled. The QBSS IE enables  
the access points to communicate their channel usage to wireless devices. Because access points  
with high channel usage might not be able to handle real-time traffic effectively, the 7920 phone uses  
the QBSS value to determine if it should associate with another access point. Use the following  
commands to enable the QBSS IE:  
sh wlan summary  
Note  
Use this command to determine the WLAN ID number of the WLAN to which you want  
to add QBSS support.  
config wlan disable wlan_id_number  
config wlan 7920-support ap-cac-limit enable wlan_id_number  
config wlan enable wlan_id_number  
sh wlan wlan_id_number  
Note  
Use this command to verify that the WLAN is enabled and the Dot11-Phone Mode  
(7920) field is configured for compat mode.  
save config  
The Dynamic Transmit Power Control (DTPC) information element (IE) must be enabled using the  
config 802.11a dtpc enable command. The DTPC IE is a beacon and probe information element  
that allows the access point to broadcast information on its transmit power. The Cisco 7920 Wireless  
IP Phone uses this information to automatically adjust its transmit power to the same level as the  
access point to which it is associated. In this manner, both devices are transmitting at the same level.  
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Important Notes  
The 7920 phones and the controllers do not currently use compatible fast roaming mechanisms. The  
phone uses CCKM while the controllers use proactive key caching (PKC). To minimize roaming  
latency, static WEP is the recommended security mechanism.  
When configuring WEP, there is a difference in nomenclature for the controller and the 7920 phone.  
Configure the controller for 104 bits when using 128-bit WEP for the 7920.  
Client Channel Changes  
Cisco access points are known to go off channel for up to 30 seconds while identifying rogue access  
point threats. This activity can cause occasional dropped client connections.  
Exclusion List (Blacklist) Client Feature  
If a client is not able to connect to an access point and the security policy for the WLAN and/or client  
is correct, the client has probably been disabled. In the controller GUI, you can view the client’s status  
on the Monitor > Summary page under Client Summary. If the client is disabled, click Remove to clear  
the disabled state for that client. The client automatically comes back and, if necessary, reattempts  
authentication.  
Automatic disabling happens as a result of too many failed authentications. Clients disabled due to failed  
authorization do not appear on the permanent disable display. This display is only for those MACs that  
are set as permanently disabled by the administrator.  
Maximum MAC Filter Entries  
The controller database can contain up to 2048 MAC filter entries for local netusers. The default value  
is 512. To support up to 2048 entries, you must enter this command in the controller CLI:  
config database size MAC_filter_entry  
where MAC_filter_entry is a value from 512 to 2048.  
Cisco Aironet 1030 Remote Edge Lightweight Access Points and WPA2-PSK  
Cisco Aironet 1030 Remote Edge Lightweight Access Points do not support WPA2-PSK in REAP  
standalone mode.  
RADIUS Servers  
This product has been tested with the following RADIUS servers:  
CiscoSecure ACS v3.2  
Funk Odyssey Client v1.1 and 2.0  
Funk Steel-Belted RADIUS release 4.71.739 and 5.03 Enterprise Edition  
Microsoft Internet Authentication Service (IAS) release 5.2.3790.1830 on Windows 2003 server  
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Important Notes  
Management Usernames and Local Netuser Names  
Management usernames and local netuser names must be unique because they are stored in the same  
database. That is, you cannot assign the same name to a management user and a local netuser.  
802.1x and Microsoft Wireless Configuration Manager  
Clients using the Microsoft Wireless Configuration Manager and 802.1x must use WLANs configured  
for 40- or 104-bit key length. Configuring for 128-bit key length results in clients that can associate but  
not authenticate.  
Cisco Aironet 1030 Remote Edge Lightweight Access Point Default Operation  
When a controller reboots, dropped Cisco Aironet 1030 Remote Edge Lightweight Access Points  
attempt to associate to any available controller. If the access points cannot contact a controller, they  
continue to offer 802.11a/b/g service on WLAN 1 only.  
Using the Backup Image  
The controller bootloader (ppcboot) stores a copy of the active primary image and the backup image. If  
the primary image becomes corrupted, you can use the bootloader to boot with the backup image.  
With the backup image stored before rebooting, be sure to choose Option 4: Change Active Boot Image  
from the boot menu to set the backup image as the active boot image. Otherwise, when the controller  
resets, it again boots off the corrupted primary image.  
After the controller boots, the active boot image can be changed to the backup image using the config  
boot backup command.  
Home Page Retains Web Auth Login with IE 5.x  
Due to a caching issue in the Internet Explorer 5.x browser, the home page retains the web authentication  
login. To correct this issue, clear the history or upgrade your workstation to Internet Explorer 6.x.  
Ad-Hoc Rogue Containment  
Client card implementations may mitigate the effectiveness of ad hoc containment.  
RLDP Enable/Disable  
The RLDP protocol detects rogues on your wired network. When RLDP is enabled, the controller reports  
a threat alarm for each rogue detected on the wired network. When RLDP is disabled, rogues detected  
on the wired network are shown in the Alert state.  
Disabling RLDP stops the controller from detecting rogues on the wired network. Rogues can be  
manually contained by changing the status of the detected rogues. When rogues are being contained, you  
must manually disable containment for each rogue individually.  
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Important Notes  
Apple iBook  
Some Apple operating systems require shared key authentication for WEP. Other releases of the  
operating system do not work with shared key WEP unless the client saves the key in its key ring. How  
you should configure your controller is based on the client mix you expect to use. Cisco recommends  
testing these configurations before deployment.  
Features Not Supported on 2000 Series Controllers  
These hardware features are not supported on 2000 series controllers:  
Power over Ethernet  
Service port (separate out-of-band management 10/100-Mbps Ethernet interface)  
These software features are not supported on 2000 series controllers:  
VPN termination (such as IPSec and L2TP)  
Termination of guest controller tunnels (Origination of guest controller tunnels is supported)  
External web authentication web server list  
Layer 2 LWAPP  
Spanning tree  
Port mirroring  
Cranite  
Fortress  
AppleTalk  
QoS per-user bandwidth contracts  
IPv6 pass-through  
Some Clients See Only 64 Access Point MAC Addresses (BSSIDs) at a Time  
In a crowded RF environment, clients may not be able to detect the desired SSID because of internal  
table limitations. Sometimes disabling and then enabling the client interface forces a rescan. Your RF  
environment needs to be controlled. Cisco UWN rogue access point detection and containment can help  
you to enforce RF policies in your buildings and campuses.  
Pinging from Any Network Device to a Dynamic Interface IP Address Is Not  
Supported  
Clients on the WLAN associated with the interface pass traffic normally.  
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Important Notes  
2006 Image Not Supported for 3504 Controllers  
The 2006 controller image is supported for use with only 2000 series controllers. Do not install the 2006  
image on a 3504 controller. Otherwise, errors may occur. Install only the 3504 image on a 3504  
controller.  
Running a 3504 Image on a 2000 Series Controller  
It is possible to run a 3504 controller image on a 2000 series controller, but Cisco Aironet 1130, 1200,  
and 1240 series access points will not be able to connect to the controller.  
Cisco Lightweight Access Points Fail to Join Cisco Controllers  
When a Cisco lightweight access point is connected to a terminal server port and reboots because of a  
join failure or timeout, this sequence repeats until the access point returns to the boot prompt and  
remains there. This condition occurs when there is no telnet session to the access point’s console port  
and when the controller is not responding to the access point’s join response.  
Workaround: Disconnect the access point’s console port from the terminal server. Reprogram the  
controller to have it respond to the access point’s join request. Power cycle the access point to force a  
restart.  
Upgrading External Web Authentication  
When upgrading a controller from operating system release 2.0 or 2.2.127.4 to release 3.2.116.21 or  
later, update the external web authentication configuration as follows:  
1. Instead of using a preauthentication ACL, the network manager must configure the external web  
server IP address using this command:  
config custom-web ext-webserver add index IP-address  
Note  
IP-address is the address of any web server that performs external web authentication.  
2. The network manager must use the new login_template shown here:  
<html>  
<head>  
<meta http-equiv="Pragma" content="no-cache"> <meta HTTP-EQUIV=”Content-Type”  
CONTENT="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> <title>Web Authentication</title> <script>  
function submitAction(){  
var link = document.location.href;  
var searchString = "redirect=";  
var equalIndex = link.indexOf(searchString);  
var redirectUrl = "";  
var urlStr = "";  
if(equalIndex > 0) {  
equalIndex += searchString.length;  
urlStr = link.substring(equalIndex);  
if(urlStr.length > 0){  
redirectUrl += urlStr;  
if(redirectUrl.length > 255)  
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Important Notes  
redirectUrl = redirectUrl.substring(0,255);  
document.forms[0].redirect_url.value = redirectUrl;  
}
}
document.forms[0].buttonClicked.value = 4;  
document.forms[0].submit();  
}
function loadAction(){  
var url = window.location.href;  
var args = new Object();  
var query = location.search.substring(1);  
var pairs = query.split("&");  
for(var i=0;i<pairs.length;i++){  
var pos = pairs[i].indexOf('=');  
if(pos == -1) continue;  
var argname = pairs[i].substring(0,pos);  
var value = pairs[i].substring(pos+1);  
args[argname] = unescape(value);  
}
//alert( "AP MAC Address is " + args.ap_mac);  
//alert( "The Switch URL is " + args.switch_url);  
document.forms[0].action = args.switch_url;  
// This is the status code returned from webauth login action  
// Any value of status code from 1 to 5 is error condition and user  
// should be shown error as below or modify the message as it suits  
// the customer  
if(args.statusCode == 1){  
alert("You are already logged in. No further action is required on your  
part.");  
}
else if(args.statusCode == 2){  
alert("You are not configured to authenticate against web portal. No further  
action is required on your part.");  
}
else if(args.statusCode == 3){  
alert("The username specified cannot be used at this time. Perhaps the user is  
already logged into the system?");  
}
else if(args.statusCode == 4){  
alert("Wrong username and password. Please try again.");  
}
else if(args.statusCode == 5){  
alert("The User Name and Password combination you have entered is invalid.  
Please try again.");  
}
}
</script>  
</head>  
<body topmargin="50" marginheight="50" onload="loadAction();"> <form method="post">  
<input TYPE="hidden" NAME="buttonClicked" SIZE="16" MAXLENGTH="15" value="0"> <input  
TYPE="hidden" NAME="redirect_url" SIZE="255" MAXLENGTH="255" VALUE=""> <input  
TYPE="hidden" NAME="err_flag" SIZE="16" MAXLENGTH="15" value="0">  
<div align="center">  
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0"> <tr> <td>&nbsp;</td></tr>  
<tr align="center"> <td colspan="2"><font size="10" color="#336699">Web  
Authentication</font></td></tr>  
Release Notes for Cisco Wireless LAN Controllers and Lightweight Access Points for Release 3.2.171.6  
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Caveats  
<tr align="center">  
<td colspan="2"> User Name &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<input type="TEXT" name="username"  
SIZE="25" MAXLENGTH="63" VALUE=""> </td> </tr> <tr align="center" > <td colspan="2">  
Password &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<input type="Password" name="password"  
SIZE="25" MAXLENGTH="24"> </td> </tr>  
<tr align="center">  
<td colspan="2"><input type="button" name="Submit" value="Submit" class="button"  
onclick="submitAction();"> </td> </tr> </table> </div>  
</form>  
</body>  
</html>  
Caveats  
This section lists resolved and open caveats for Cisco controllers and lightweight access points.  
Resolved Caveats in Software Release 3.2.171.6  
CSCsg22555—Cisco Aironet 1000 series access points may disconnect from the controller because  
the controller fails to decrypt LWAPP control traffic. If the default access point heartbeat value of  
30 seconds is used, all access points disconnect from the controller every 120 hours. This problem  
pertains to the following controllers:  
4400 series controllers with serial number FOC102xxxxx or higher (FOC103xxxxx,  
FOC104xxxxx, and so on)  
2000 series controllers with serial number FTX1035xxxx or higher (FTX1036xxxx,  
FTX1037xxxx, and so on)  
Cisco WiSMs using controller software release 3.2.150.6 or later  
The controller network module within all Cisco 28/37/38xx Series Integrated Services Routers  
All Catalyst 3750G Wireless LAN Controller Switches  
Resolved Caveats in Software Release 3.2.171.5  
CSCsb75736—The WLANs and the number of clients may not appear correctly in the Top WLANs  
list on the Monitor > Summary page of the controller GUI.  
CSCsb87264—If WLAN ID 1 is not configured on the controller, a REAP access point broadcasts  
the “Airespace” SSID after entering standalone mode. Clients can access this unsecured SSID and  
use the REAP access point to access the network.  
CSCsb88424—Access points in REAP mode may fail to join the controller due to a  
certificate-processing error in the Join request.  
CSCsc05495—Controllers intermittently send a state attribute 24 in an access-request packet.  
CSCsc34060—IPSec clients enter the run state but do not communicate.  
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Caveats  
CSCsc44326—A 4400 series controller running software release 3.1.105.0 may fail to respond to  
ARP requests for the ap-manager2 interface’s IP address when the ARP request is addressed at the  
MAC layer to the unicast MAC address of the interface rather than to the broadcast MAC address.  
As a result, there may be sporadic interruptions in connectivity at ARP refresh time, resulting in the  
periodic loss of associations for access points associated through the ap-manager2 interface.  
CSCsc72899—An access point in REAP mode reboots if packets are being processed in the access  
point by one task while discovery is occurring.  
CSCsd18145—If you disable proxy ARP on the controller, the ARPs still go to the controller CPU.  
CSCsd19801—A 4000 series controller sometimes hangs while it is booting up.  
CSCsd27529—Static WEP does not operate properly for a REAP access point in standalone mode.  
CSCsd54712—An access point may reboot when it is connected to a 2000 series controller and an  
N900iL handset associated to the access point tries to place a call after the user idle timeout setting  
has expired.  
CSCsd55009—The access point may suddenly lose its connection to the controller. When this  
condition occurs, the access point periodically sends out DHCP requests, and the access point Alarm  
LED lights.  
CSCsd59700—The default AP1000/1200 settings for external antenna gain are incorrect. The  
4000/4100 controller should show this value as “0” but instead shows it as “11.”  
CSCsd65251—The Session Timeout parameter for WLANs on the controller GUI may not operate  
correctly. The value of this parameter appropriately changes to 1800 seconds when you choose the  
802.1X option for Layer 2 security; however, it does not return to 0 seconds if you then choose a  
different Layer 2 security option.  
CSCsd76868—When you enable the Rogue Location Discovery Protocol (RLDP) to detect rogues  
but do not create WLAN ID 1, the controller reports minor alarms when critical alarms should be  
reported.  
CSCsd85859—The Refresh button does not operate properly on some of the controller GUI pages.  
CSCsd87382—Bridging functionality for REAP devices is not available on OEM builds of  
controller software.  
CSCsd90392—The idle timeout may not work correctly for an access point in REAP mode.  
CSCsd91051—An “Incorrect input!” message appears when you enter the show wlan mobility  
command in the controller CLI.  
CSCsd95992—When IGMPv3 is enabled on the controller, a significant amount of packet loss  
occurs. The packet loss is even greater when there is an active multicast stream.  
CSCsd99725—An access point restarts when you change its mode of operation from urgent mode  
to REAP mode.  
CSCse03869—When AP Authentication Policy is enabled on a 2006 controller, any connected  
access points may reboot when a client associates.  
CSCse11202—WCS logs an “Incorrect WEP Key” error for wireless clients running TKIP.  
CSCse14889—The controller does not generate traps for ad-hoc rogues.  
CSCse15889—The controller may reboot after running for many days due to a failure with the  
sshpmReceiveTask software watchdog.  
CSCse20190—When the controller is running software release 3.2.116.21, Spectralink phones fail  
shared key authentication.  
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Caveats  
CSCse26437—After a communication breakdown occurs between a controller and an access point,  
the access point does not send a subsequent request to join the controller.  
CSCse27890—Access points in REAP mode send deauthentication frames to wireless clients  
without waiting for a PS poll.  
CSCse29193—The controller marks a RADIUS server as dead if a single request is not responded  
to after five retries and switches to a backup server.  
CSCse29686—After you upgrade from software release 3.2.78 to 3.2.116.21 or later, clients  
experience packet loss and a significant number of packet retransmissions on the AP1000. This  
condition is related to the antenna setting of the access point.  
CSCse30397—If you enter 24 characters for the username and password during the initial controller  
configuration, the “Routine system resource notification” error message may appear repeatedly.  
CSCse32639—Client exclusion may not operate properly when web authentication is enabled on the  
controller. If a wireless client becomes “excluded,” it never disassociates from the access point and  
may be unable to log in again.  
CSCse33667—A controller running software release 3.2.116 with ssh disabled may crash without a  
crash dump.  
CSCse36426—Controllers with AP-group VLANs configured sometimes cause WCS to hang when  
the controllers are added to WCS.  
CSCse40350—During WPA2 client association, the access point sometimes sends a Reason 1  
Deauthentication frame to the client, causing the client to disconnect and reassociate.  
CSCse43767—The show client username command shows only one client even when several  
clients are associated with the same username.  
CSCse46717—Access points sometimes reboot.  
CSCse47024—Clients sometimes lose their connection to the access point.  
CSCse47645—Controllers sometimes use an invalid IP address when sending pings.  
CSCse48743—When the idle timeout expires for a client, the controller sometimes displays this  
error message: “Got an idle-timeout message from an unknown client.”  
CSCse49083—Access points in REAP mode sometimes send a deauthentication packet at the end  
of phone calls on some handsets.  
CSCse50111—The controller’s active port sometimes becomes disabled when traffic is pumped  
from a wireless client to a wired client.  
CSCse51940—WCS sometimes displays this error message when you change the WLAN  
encryption type from WPA-PSK to WEP: “SNMP operation to device failed.”  
CSCse53252—Controllers sometimes reboot due to an issue with the time server.  
CSCse55473—The 5-GHz radios on access points sometimes remain enabled even when disabled  
on the controller.  
CSCse58258—Access points sometimes reboot during an Assert software task.  
CSCse59150—SVP packets through controllers have inconsistent timing, resulting in poor voice  
quality.  
CSCse64508—A controller running software release 3.2.116.21 does not allow a Nortel VPN client  
using Contivity to connect until the date on the controller is changed from 2006 to 2005.  
CSCse66940—When the primary port on a controller fails and the controller switches traffic to a  
backup port, all configured WLANs are deactivated.  
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Caveats  
CSCse70081—An SNMP trap is required to alert users that either the RADIUS server is not  
responding to a specific client or that it is not responding at all and a failover is required.  
CSCse72853—Access points in REAP mode sometimes fail to act independently from the controller  
when the controller fails.  
CSCse78542—When the AutoRF feature causes the controller to select wrong channels for the  
country configured, the show ap config 802.11a summary command causes high CPU usage and  
eventual reboot of the controller.  
CSCse84879—When a primary, secondary, and tertiary controller are defined for an access point  
and the primary controller fails, the access point attempts to join the secondary controller even if  
that controller is carrying its maximum number of access point associations. The access point that  
needs to rejoin a controller never tries the tertiary controller; instead it reboots and attempts to join  
the secondary controller repeatedly.  
CSCse86585—Some controllers suffer a memory leak after 65 hours of operation.  
CSCse91528—Access points in REAP mode that have lost connection to a controller sometimes  
reboot when a client attempts to associate.  
CSCse93986—Pre-authentication ACLs sometime fail.  
CSCse99813—Some 1000 series access points use a transmit power level that is lower than normal.  
CSCsf01648—Web authentication sometimes fails for client devices using WPA-PSK.  
CSCsf01759—RADIUS class attributes are discarded after a stop record is sent.  
Open Caveats  
These caveats are open in software releases 3.2.171.6 and 3.2.171.5.  
CSCar14535—When configuring a mobility group anchor that is not part of the mobility member  
list, the controller displays an “Invalid Parameter Provided” error message.  
Workaround: Make sure that the anchor controller is a mobility group member.  
CSCsa95763—The controller GUI cannot display more than 80 local net users on the Security >  
AAA > Local Net Users page.  
Workaround: Use the controller CLI to view all the Local Net User entries.  
CSCsb01980—When the operator enters incorrect data for the management interface in the  
controller web configuration wizard, error messages are shown only at the end of the wizard, and  
the user must return to the Management Interface page for correction. The data entered on the  
Management Interface page, such as the port number, are not validated immediately but at the end  
of the wizard. As a result, any error messages are shown only at the end.  
Workaround: This problem can cause some inconvenience, and the user may prefer to use the CLI  
configuration wizard instead to avoid it.  
CSCsb01983—The controller web configuration wizard is not reachable after making repeated  
invalid entries for the management interface port. If an operator connects to the wizard on address  
192.168.1.1 and enters an invalid port number on the Management Interface page, the operator is  
redirected at the end of the wizard to the Management Interface page to correct the port. If the  
operator enters an incorrect port and submits, the wizard becomes inaccessible.  
Workaround: Reboot the controller through the CLI to access the wizard again.  
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Caveats  
CSCsb07168—The AP1000 802.11a radio experiences a very low receive packet count when the  
receive RSSI is –75 dBm.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsb20269—On the WiSM, when the service VLAN is configured as one of the VLANs on a data  
port, it does not operate correctly.  
Workaround: Do not configure the service VLAN as one of the VLANs on a data port.  
CSCsb34149—Disabling or deleting a wireless LAN on which a large number of clients exists may  
not result in all clients being deleted. This generally occurs when several thousand clients are using  
the wireless LAN.  
Workaround: Make sure that wireless LANs with a large number of clients associated are not deleted  
or disabled.  
CSCsb38486—The Cisco Aironet 1500 Series Lightweight Outdoor Access Point Bridge CLI does  
not accept 10-character bridge group names.  
Workaround: Use 9-character bridge group names.  
CSCsb52557—Cisco access points do not connect to the 4400 series controller if the time is not set  
first.  
Workaround: Set the time on the controller before allowing the access points to connect to the  
controller.  
CSCsb55597—The access point’s output power may change after you modify a mandatory data rate.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsb55937—VLAN-tagged large ICMP packets that need to be fragmented are not sent by Cisco  
Aironet 1000 series access points in direct-connection mode. Ping replies never come back when the  
access point sends requests to a gateway from a wireless client using large 1500-byte packets and  
with RADIUS override configured with any 1p tag. This condition exists for 4400 series controllers  
using direct-connect mode, with RADIUS override enabled, the override parameter set to 1p with  
any VLAN number, and Cisco Aironet 1000 series access points.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsb71060—Internal LAG errors occur when the management interface is changed from tagged  
to untagged.  
Workaround: Leave the WiSM management interface as tagged or untagged.  
CSCsb77595—When logging out from Telnet/SSH sessions, the session always prompts the user to  
save changes, even when no changes have been made.  
Workaround: Ignore the prompt and exit as usual.  
CSCsb85113—When users download the code image to WiSM using the CLI, associated access  
points are sometimes disconnected.  
Workaround: Download new code images to the WiSM at times when there are no clients to be  
affected.  
CSCsb88588—Incorrect power levels are reported for access points when the controller is set to  
country code SG.  
Workaround: None for this release.  
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Caveats  
CSCsc01221—When downstream test data is sent from the wired endpoint to four wireless clients  
at different priority levels (voice, video, background, and best effort), the Cisco Aironet 1000 series  
access points crash.  
Workaround: None for this release.  
CSCsc02741—In the bootloader mode, users are unable to exit or return to the main prompt. If users  
make mistakes while entering values, they cannot quit the step and are unable to go back and change  
existing values.  
Workaround: Reset the system through IOS or power the device off and on if necessary.  
CSCsc02860—When users download the code image to a WiSM for the first time, the WiSM fails  
to download the new image to flash memory.  
Workaround: Download new code images to the WiSM a second time.  
CSCsc03072—Cisco lightweight access points do not always produce complete logs.  
Workaround: None for this release.  
CSCsc11660—The current country screen is not 100% accurate for all deployment scenarios, which  
may cause confusion in some instances.  
Workaround: None for this release.  
CSCsc14045—VPN passthrough should not be able to be combined with web policy.  
Workaround: Do not assign VPN passthrough along with web policy.  
CSCsc22084—Error messages and traps are not triggered when a PoE controller with CDP causes  
Cisco Aironet 1200 series access points to disable their radios.  
Workaround: Disabling CDP resolves this issue.  
CSCsc22663—Deleting a mobility member mapped to a controller as an anchor removes the  
anchor’s entry as well, but the Auto Anchor knob remains enabled even though only the mobility  
anchor mapping is deleted.  
Workaround: Before deleting a mobility member, first delete the controller to which it is mapped  
from the WLAN.  
CSCsc35784—The transmit power control adjustment levels 3, 4, and 5 are not supported on Cisco  
Aironet 1500 Series Lightweight Outdoor Access Points in the 5745-to-5825-MHz band. The  
transmit power control adjustment levels 4 and 5 are not supported on Cisco Aironet 1500 series  
access points that operate in the 5500-to-5700-MHz band and at 2.4 GHz.  
These levels correspond to -6, -9, and (in the case of 5500 to 5700 MHz) -12 dB from the maximum  
power, respectively. Power levels 1, 2, and (in the case of 5500 to 5700 MHz) 3 are supported, which  
correspond to maximum power for the particular data rate and channel, and -3 dB relative to this  
maximum, at which these adjustment levels provide little or no further reduction in transmit power  
output.  
Workaround: Set the transmit power level to either 1 or 2 for 5745 to 5825 MHz. Set the transmit  
power level to either 1, 2, or 3 for all other bands.  
CSCsc40648—Rooftop access points are displayed in the web interface as poletop access points for  
more than four minutes, which prevents them from being configured.  
Workaround: Configure the access point as a rooftop access point using the controller CLI.  
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Caveats  
CSCsc41313—The Cisco Aironet 1500 Series Lightweight Outdoor Access Points are configured  
by default to allow old bridges. When this configuration is enabled, the shared secret key set on the  
controller is not passed to the access points, so a few access points might be running on the old key.  
If these access points reset or new access points are waiting to join the running network, they may  
take a very long time to connect to the network or might not join at all. The default value has been  
changed to not allow old bridges to authenticate.  
Workaround: Configure the controller using this command: config network allow-old-bridge-aps  
disable.  
CSCsc68154—The controller’s error log repeatedly displays the “Got an idle-timeout message from  
an unknown client” error message for some unknown reason.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsc70484—Most IPSec VPN clients start using the new security association (SA) immediately  
upon rekeying. However, the Cisco VPN Client continues to use the old SA for some time before  
switching to the new one, which results in packet loss until the client switches over.  
Workaround: Use these WLAN settings on the controller to ensure that the client controls when the  
rekey process takes effect and the controller responds to the client for the phase 1 SA rekey:  
Session Timeout: 0 seconds  
Layer 3 Security: IPsec  
IPsec Authentication: HMAC SHA1  
IPsec Encryption: AES (If you choose 3DES, configure the IPsec lifetime to a value greater than  
the expected duration of the client session.)  
IKE Phase 1: Aggressive  
Lifetime: 43200 to 57600 seconds (12 to 16 hours)  
IKE Diffie Hellman Group: Group 2 (1024 bits)  
CSCsc75351—The controller CLI command debug mac addr client_mac_address, which is  
designed to limit debug output to the specified client, is not filtering client traffic.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsc77157—Multiple 4100 series controllers may simultaneously reset without crash files or  
message log entries being generated.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsc92354—The Security > MAC Filtering page on the controller GUI shows MAC address filters  
in this format: XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX, which differs from the Cisco standard format of  
XXXX:XXXX:XXXX.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsc98897—The SecureCRT application cannot open an SSH session on the controller.  
Workaround: Use PuTTy, the SSH client on Windows, or SSH in Linux.  
CSCsd04684—The 4100 series controller ports do not work when the Gateway Load Balancing  
Protocol (GLBP) is configured on the management interface VLAN.  
Workaround: Do not configure GLBP on the management interface VLAN. For redundancy, Hot  
Standby Router Protocol (HSRP) can be used on the management interface VLAN.  
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Caveats  
CSCsd25491—The management IP address of a controller incorrectly sends an ARP request for a  
client IP address on a WLAN subnet over the wired interface. The ARP request is not answered  
because the management IP address and the client WLAN are on different subnets.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsd34555—The PC350 client adapter is unable to pass traffic when the access point is not in  
protection mode.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsd38979—When you set the QoS WLAN parameter to Platinum (voice), Internet Control Message  
Protocol (ICMP) requests from the client are not being marked for voice.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsd39873—The controller may report a WEP key encryption error for Intel 2200BG clients  
operating with OEM driver version 9.0.1.9, 9.0.2.5, or 9.0.3.9 and using some form of EAP  
authentication (PEAP, LEAP, EAP-FAST, or EAP-TLS).  
Workaround: None at this time. However, the client will attempt to reauthenticate and upon  
successful EAPOL key exchange will communicate in a normal, encrypted fashion.  
CSCsd50369—When radio resource management (RRM) is enabled on the controller, an access  
point in monitor mode may not send an acknowledge packet in response to a reassociation request.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsd52292—The controller does not accept uppercase MAC addresses from the WCS templates.  
Workaround: Do not use uppercase characters for MAC addresses in the WCS templates.  
CSCsd52483—When you make changes in the boot loader of a 2006 controller or a Controller  
Network Module, the bootup process may halt, and the controller may stop responding.  
Workaround: None at this time. The controller must be returned for repair through the RMA process.  
CSCsd65307—When radio resource management (RRM) is enabled on the controller, 1000 series  
access points sometimes fail to send an acknowledge packet (or send the packet after a delay) in  
response to a reassociation request. As a result, a wired IP phone cannot call an N900iL handset until  
the handset resends a reassociation request to the access point.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsd67332—If you have Telnet enabled and then disable it, the change does not take effect until  
you reboot the Cisco WiSM.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsd69158—After a RADIUS session timeout expires, the access point does not send a unicast  
key to the client.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsd75245—The management packet for the UserIdleTimer is incorrect on access points in REAP  
mode.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsd82363—Channel utilization is incorrectly reported in radio utilization reports on the  
controller and in WCS. Channel utilization may appear as zero when there is active client traffic or  
as an aggregate of client transmit and receive traffic.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
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Caveats  
CSCsd83743—Authentication fails if you enter a RADIUS-server key with more than 31 characters  
on the ACS server and a 4400 series controller.  
Workaround: Do not enter more than 31 characters for the RADIUS-server key.  
CSCsd93784—Setting the Channel/Power Update (RRM) parameter on the WCS does not change  
the channel or power settings on the controller.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCse02235—Access points occasionally delay the transmission of beacons by 0.1 or 0.2 seconds.  
This condition occurs when the access points do not have any associated clients.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCse04495—The Cisco WiSM controller may become stuck in a strange state after it is powered  
down and back up.  
Workaround: Reset the controller.  
CSCse04713—The controller detects a rogue access point, but it may not acknowledge it as a  
“Rogue on Wired Network” access point on WCS.  
Workaround: You can try to resolve this problem by downgrading your controller software to a  
release prior to 3.2.78.0.  
CSCse06509—The 4400 series controller sends out an undersized frame when it connects to certain  
Catalyst switches (2970, 3560, or 3750).  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCse07836—An access point may experience a system restart after a fail over.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCse08725—A Vocera badge running MS-PEAP fails when trying to associate to an AP1010. This  
problem occurs because the controller is dropping the packets.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCse09235—UDP traffic drops in both directions when per-user bandwidth is set for real-time  
traffic.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCse15932—The 4404 controller may reboot if the TimerTickTask software fails.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCse17260—WPA clients may receive an error message indicating that the WEP key may be  
configured incorrectly on the client.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCse18855—RADIUS accounting cannot be disabled on an individual WLAN. Once a RADIUS  
accounting server is defined globally, WLANs fall back to the global RADIUS accounting server if  
no RADIUS accounting server is selected in the WLANs.  
Workaround: Create a fictitious RADIUS accounting server and assign it to the WLAN for which  
RADIUS accounting is not required.  
CSCse30452—After the secondary DHCP server provides an IP address to an access point, the  
access point shows “(tNetTask): arpresolve” and then reboots.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
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Caveats  
CSCse30514—When an LWAPP-enabled AP1100 or AP1200 first connects to a controller, the  
secondary controller name on the All APs > Details page in the controller GUI is not blank. The  
output of the show ap config general command also shows that the secondary controller name is  
not blank.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCse30696—The controller does not refresh the access point’s IP address correctly when the  
admin status for that access point is disabled.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCse32656—The 4402 controller supports an enhanced security module (ESM) card only in slot  
1, not in slot 2. Slot 2 is reserved for 4404 controllers.  
Workaround: Use slot 1, which is the slot closest to the power outlet, for an ESM card in the 4402  
controller.  
CSCse40636—The foreign controller incorrectly forwards multicast traffic onto the auto-anchor  
WLAN.  
Workaround: Configure the WLAN on the foreign controller to map to an invalid VLAN.  
CSCse52143—IPSec authentication with certificates may not always operate properly.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCse60689—The controller may reboot due to a failure with the sshpmAddIPv4IpsecRules  
software.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCse72413—The controller may reboot due to a failure with the debugMaintask software.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCse80636—Under heavy traffic conditions, the VPN module may reach capacity and fail to  
accept additional packets.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsf10167—The controller may reboot due to a failure with the pemReceiveTask software  
watchdog.  
Workaround: None at this time.  
CSCsf11862—Controllers sometimes reboot during a software upgrade.  
Workaround: Download the software image twice. On the second try, the controller successfully  
loads the new image.  
CSCsg10391—When you use the remote-debug enable command on the controller CLI to enable  
remote debugging on an access point, debugging stops when your CLI session times out.  
Workaround: Open a new CLI session, disable remote debugging (enter remote-debug disable), and  
re-enable remote debugging.  
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Troubleshooting  
If You Need More Information  
If you need information about a specific caveat that does not appear in these release notes, you can use  
the Cisco Bug Toolkit to find caveats of any severity. Click this URL to browse to the Bug Toolkit:  
(If you request a defect that cannot be displayed, the defect number might not exist, the defect might not  
yet have a customer-visible description, or the defect might be marked Cisco Confidential.)  
Troubleshooting  
For the most up-to-date, detailed troubleshooting information, refer to the Cisco TAC website at  
Click Product Support > Wireless. Then choose your product and Troubleshooting to find information  
on the problem you are experiencing.  
Documentation Updates  
This section lists updates to user documentation that has not yet been added to either printed or online  
documents.  
Omissions  
The Package Contents section in the Quick Start Guide: Cisco 4400 Series Wireless LAN Controllers  
should be updated to include this item, which is included with the 4400 series controller:  
DB-9 to DB-9 null modem cable  
Related Documentation  
For additional information on the Cisco controllers and lightweight access points, refer to these  
documents:  
The Quick Start Guide for your particular controller or access point  
Cisco Wireless LAN Controller Configuration Guide  
Cisco Wireless LAN Controller Command Reference  
Cisco Wireless LAN Controller Online Help  
Cisco Wireless Control System Configuration Guide  
Cisco Wireless Control System Online Help  
You can access these documents from this link:  
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Obtaining Documentation  
Obtaining Documentation  
Cisco documentation and additional literature are available on Cisco.com. This section explains the  
product documentation resources that Cisco offers.  
Cisco.com  
You can access the most current Cisco documentation at this URL:  
You can access the Cisco website at this URL:  
You can access international Cisco websites at this URL:  
Product Documentation DVD  
The Product Documentation DVD is a library of technical product documentation on a portable medium.  
The DVD enables you to access installation, configuration, and command guides for Cisco hardware and  
software products. With the DVD, you have access to the HTML documentation and some of the  
PDF files found on the Cisco website at this URL:  
The Product Documentation DVD is created monthly and is released in the middle of the month. DVDs  
are available singly or by subscription. Registered Cisco.com users can order a Product Documentation  
DVD (product number DOC-DOCDVD= or DOC-DOCDVD=SUB) from Cisco Marketplace at the  
Product Documentation Store at this URL:  
Ordering Documentation  
You must be a registered Cisco.com user to access Cisco Marketplace. Registered users may order  
Cisco documentation at the Product Documentation Store at this URL:  
If you do not have a user ID or password, you can register at this URL:  
Documentation Feedback  
You can provide feedback about Cisco technical documentation on the Cisco Technical Support &  
Documentation site area by entering your comments in the feedback form available in every online  
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Cisco Product Security Overview  
Cisco Product Security Overview  
Cisco provides a free online Security Vulnerability Policy portal at this URL:  
From this site, you will find information about how to do the following:  
Report security vulnerabilities in Cisco products  
Obtain assistance with security incidents that involve Cisco products  
Register to receive security information from Cisco  
A current list of security advisories, security notices, and security responses for Cisco products is  
available at this URL:  
To see security advisories, security notices, and security responses as they are updated in real time, you  
can subscribe to the Product Security Incident Response Team Really Simple Syndication (PSIRT RSS)  
feed. Information about how to subscribe to the PSIRT RSS feed is found at this URL:  
Reporting Security Problems in Cisco Products  
Cisco is committed to delivering secure products. We test our products internally before we release  
them, and we strive to correct all vulnerabilities quickly. If you think that you have identified a  
vulnerability in a Cisco product, contact PSIRT:  
For emergencies only[email protected]  
An emergency is either a condition in which a system is under active attack or a condition for which  
a severe and urgent security vulnerability should be reported. All other conditions are considered  
nonemergencies.  
For nonemergencies[email protected]  
In an emergency, you can also reach PSIRT by telephone:  
1 877 228-7302  
1 408 525-6532  
Tip  
We encourage you to use Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) or a compatible product (for example, GnuPG) to  
encrypt any sensitive information that you send to Cisco. PSIRT can work with information that has been  
encrypted with PGP versions 2.x through 9.x.  
Never use a revoked encryption key or an expired encryption key. The correct public key to use in your  
correspondence with PSIRT is the one linked in the Contact Summary section of the Security  
Vulnerability Policy page at this URL:  
The link on this page has the current PGP key ID in use.  
If you do not have or use PGP, contact PSIRT to find other means of encrypting the data before sending  
any sensitive material.  
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Product Alerts and Field Notices  
Product Alerts and Field Notices  
Modifications to or updates about Cisco products are announced in Cisco Product Alerts and Cisco Field  
Notices. You can receive Cisco Product Alerts and Cisco Field Notices by using the Product Alert Tool  
on Cisco.com. This tool enables you to create a profile and choose those products for which you want to  
receive information.  
To access the Product Alert Tool, you must be a registered Cisco.com user. (To register as a Cisco.com  
user, go to this URL: http://tools.cisco.com/RPF/register/register.do) Registered users can access the  
Obtaining Technical Assistance  
Cisco Technical Support provides 24-hour-a-day award-winning technical assistance. The  
Cisco Technical Support & Documentation website on Cisco.com features extensive online support  
resources. In addition, if you have a valid Cisco service contract, Cisco Technical Assistance Center  
(TAC) engineers provide telephone support. If you do not have a valid Cisco service contract, contact  
your reseller.  
Cisco Technical Support & Documentation Website  
The Cisco Technical Support & Documentation website provides online documents and tools for  
troubleshooting and resolving technical issues with Cisco products and technologies. The website is  
available 24 hours a day at this URL:  
Access to all tools on the Cisco Technical Support & Documentation website requires a Cisco.com  
user ID and password. If you have a valid service contract but do not have a user ID or password, you  
can register at this URL:  
Note  
Use the Cisco Product Identification Tool to locate your product serial number before submitting a  
request for service online or by phone. You can access this tool from the Cisco Technical Support &  
Documentation website by clicking the Tools & Resources link, clicking the All Tools (A-Z) tab, and  
then choosing Cisco Product Identification Tool from the alphabetical list. This tool offers three search  
options: by product ID or model name; by tree view; or, for certain products, by copying and pasting  
show command output. Search results show an illustration of your product with the serial number label  
location highlighted. Locate the serial number label on your product and record the information before  
placing a service call.  
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Obtaining Technical Assistance  
Tip  
Displaying and Searching on Cisco.com  
If you suspect that the browser is not refreshing a web page, force the browser to update the web page  
by holding down the Ctrl key while pressing F5.  
To find technical information, narrow your search to look in technical documentation, not the entire  
Cisco.com website. On the Cisco.com home page, click the Advanced Search link under the Search box  
and then click the Technical Support & Documentation.radio button.  
To provide feedback about the Cisco.com website or a particular technical document, click Contacts &  
Feedback at the top of any Cisco.com web page.  
Submitting a Service Request  
Using the online TAC Service Request Tool is the fastest way to open S3 and S4 service requests. (S3 and  
S4 service requests are those in which your network is minimally impaired or for which you require  
product information.) After you describe your situation, the TAC Service Request Tool provides  
recommended solutions. If your issue is not resolved using the recommended resources, your service  
request is assigned to a Cisco engineer. The TAC Service Request Tool is located at this URL:  
For S1 or S2 service requests, or if you do not have Internet access, contact the Cisco TAC by telephone.  
(S1 or S2 service requests are those in which your production network is down or severely degraded.)  
Cisco engineers are assigned immediately to S1 and S2 service requests to help keep your business  
operations running smoothly.  
To open a service request by telephone, use one of the following numbers:  
Asia-Pacific: +61 2 8446 7411  
Australia: 1 800 805 227  
EMEA: +32 2 704 55 55  
USA: 1 800 553 2447  
For a complete list of Cisco TAC contacts, go to this URL:  
Definitions of Service Request Severity  
To ensure that all service requests are reported in a standard format, Cisco has established severity  
definitions.  
Severity 1 (S1)—An existing network is “down” or there is a critical impact to your business operations.  
You and Cisco will commit all necessary resources around the clock to resolve the situation.  
Severity 2 (S2)—Operation of an existing network is severely degraded, or significant aspects of your  
business operations are negatively affected by inadequate performance of Cisco products. You and  
Cisco will commit full-time resources during normal business hours to resolve the situation.  
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Obtaining Additional Publications and Information  
Severity 3 (S3)—Operational performance of the network is impaired while most business operations  
remain functional. You and Cisco will commit resources during normal business hours to restore service  
to satisfactory levels.  
Severity 4 (S4)—You require information or assistance with Cisco product capabilities, installation, or  
configuration. There is little or no effect on your business operations.  
Obtaining Additional Publications and Information  
Information about Cisco products, technologies, and network solutions is available from various online  
and printed sources.  
The Cisco Product Quick Reference Guide is a handy, compact reference tool that includes brief  
product overviews, key features, sample part numbers, and abbreviated technical specifications for  
many Cisco products that are sold through channel partners. It is updated twice a year and includes  
the latest Cisco channel product offerings. To order and find out more about the Cisco Product Quick  
Reference Guide, go to this URL:  
Cisco Marketplace provides a variety of Cisco books, reference guides, documentation, and logo  
merchandise. Visit Cisco Marketplace, the company store, at this URL:  
Cisco Press publishes a wide range of general networking, training, and certification titles. Both new  
and experienced users will benefit from these publications. For current Cisco Press titles and other  
information, go to Cisco Press at this URL:  
Packet magazine is the magazine for Cisco networking professionals. Each quarter, Packet delivers  
coverage of the latest industry trends, technology breakthroughs, and Cisco products and solutions,  
as well as network deployment and troubleshooting tips, configuration examples, customer case  
studies, certification and training information, and links to scores of in-depth online resources. You  
can subscribe to Packet magazine at this URL:  
Internet Protocol Journal is a quarterly journal published by Cisco Systems for engineering  
professionals involved in designing, developing, and operating public and private internets and  
intranets. You can access the Internet Protocol Journal at this URL:  
Networking products offered by Cisco Systems, as well as customer support services, can be  
obtained at this URL:  
Networking Professionals Connection is an interactive website where networking professionals  
share questions, suggestions, and information about networking products and technologies with  
Cisco experts and other networking professionals. Join a discussion at this URL:  
Release Notes for Cisco Wireless LAN Controllers and Lightweight Access Points for Release 3.2.171.6  
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Obtaining Additional Publications and Information  
“What’s New in Cisco Documentation” is an online publication that provides information about the  
latest documentation releases for Cisco products. Updated monthly, this online publication is  
organized by product category to direct you quickly to the documentation for your products. You  
can view the latest release of “What’s New in Cisco Documentation” at this URL:  
World-class networking training is available from Cisco. You can view current offerings at  
this URL:  
This document is to be used in conjunction with the documents listed in the “Related Documentation” section.  
CCVP, the Cisco Logo, and the Cisco Square Bridge logo are trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc.; Changing the Way We Work, Live, Play, and Learn  
is a service mark of Cisco Systems, Inc.; and Access Registrar, Aironet, BPX, Catalyst, CCDA, CCDP, CCIE, CCIP, CCNA, CCNP, CCSP, Cisco,  
the Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert logo, Cisco IOS, Cisco Press, Cisco Systems, Cisco Systems Capital, the Cisco Systems logo, Cisco Unity,  
Enterprise/Solver, EtherChannel, EtherFast, EtherSwitch, Fast Step, Follow Me Browsing, FormShare, GigaDrive, GigaStack, HomeLink, Internet  
Quotient, IOS, IP/TV, iQ Expertise, the iQ logo, iQ Net Readiness Scorecard, iQuick Study, LightStream, Linksys, MeetingPlace, MGX, Networking  
Academy, Network Registrar, Packet, PIX, ProConnect, RateMUX, ScriptShare, SlideCast, SMARTnet, StackWise, The Fastest Way to Increase  
Your Internet Quotient, and TransPath are registered trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the United States and certain other  
countries.  
All other trademarks mentioned in this document or Website are the property of their respective owners. The use of the word partner does not imply  
a partnership relationship between Cisco and any other company. (0609R)  
Any Internet Protocol (IP) addresses used in this document are not intended to be actual addresses. Any examples, command display output, and  
figures included in the document are shown for illustrative purposes only. Any use of actual IP addresses in illustrative content is unintentional and  
coincidental.  
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.  
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