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With enterprise-class wireless LANs well on the way to becoming the preferred -- if not default -- network access method for organizations across all industries, it's imperative that the software available to manage WLAN gear is up to the task.
Read part 2 of this series.
Read the transcript from Craig Mathias's live chat where he answered readers' questions about wireless LAN management.
Historically, management software provided by individual vendors has been the vehicle of choice for almost all installations. WLAN vendors have made significant investments in their management tools, but they can certainly do more. Moving forward, we believe, WLAN management will become the key differentiator between otherwise competitive WLAN products.
Exactly what should go into a WLAN management system, and how the resulting functionality should be presented to the user, remains a matter of some debate. Most products allow some form of policy-based definition of services available to a given user, usually by grouping users into classes and then defining privileges for these classes based on such variables as traffic priority, user location, time of day, and even class of subscriber unit.
Most products implement some degree of management services in a WLAN switch or controller, but the preferred approach is to use management software running as an application on a server or ideally an appliance. Given the large number of functional units required to construct enterprise-scale WLAN infrastructure, a centralized implementation of management functionality is essential.
Because vendors use diverse combinations of management capabilities in their product offerings, it is difficult to generalize specific classes of functionality. But the following are key system management functions that should already be included in your WLAN bundle.
1.) WLAN planning tools
Most WLAN management systems allow for the importation of building layouts via .dxf or similar files, and some, most notably Bluesocket's Wireless LANPlanner, Trapeze's RingMaster, and Motorola's LANPlanner (no relation to Bluesocket's product), allow radio-propagation properties to be assigned to elements in the resulting virtual structure. Simulations, often including 3D analysis rather than simple 2D studies of radio performance, allow for the automated placement of access points.
Comments (5)
Meru is in process of trying to get validationBy Anonymous on October 28, 2008, 12:22 pmSee here... http://csrc.nist.gov/groups/STM/cmvp/inprocess.html Isn't it a little deceiving for the company to state that they are FIPS compliant when they haven't...
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technologyBy Anonymous on October 2, 2008, 2:54 amvery good news
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Craig I didn't find MeruBy compughter on September 26, 2008, 12:35 amCraig I didn't find Meru listed at the NIST list: this is where it should be listed with a certificate validating the FIPS compliance. Meru may have interim approval...
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Check here...By Craig Mathias on September 25, 2008, 6:55 pmhttp://www.merunetworks.com/technology/security/fips140-2.phpTrapeze also has a 140-2 certified release. Thx. Craig.
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Craig... Meru's products are not FIPS 140-2 validatedBy DHSwireless on September 22, 2008, 9:32 pmAs a Federal techie, I looked into several wireless vendors that (based on marketing materials) claimed compliance with FIPS 140-2. Meru is not FIPS compliant,...
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