Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Understanding Roaming

It’s probably safe to say that most people understand the concept of roaming at a high level. You want to move from your desk to the conference room. The conference room is on the other side of the building, but you are in the middle of a large upload. You don’t sweat it because you are on a wireless network and wireless is...“everywhere”!

That sounds nice, and that’s what wireless networks have to offer, but how does wireless get “everywhere”? From what you have learned so far, you know that a wireless signal can’t travel “everywhere” because of absorption, refraction, scattering, and more. You’ve also learned a little about roaming and how an AP needs some overlap to facilitate the process. But there is still more to it. If you step back and look at the big picture, you start to see that the controller has to be involved in this lightweight AP deployment. How is the controller involved? To understand that, you need to understand mobility groups.


Understanding Mobility Groups

In simple terms, a mobility group is a setting on a controller that defines the controller as a member of a group. Other controllers would also be members of that group. These controllers share information about the clients that are roaming. In Figure 12-1, two controllers are in the same mobility group. They can exchange information about the client that is roaming. Figure 12-2 shows a network with three controllers. Controller1 and Controller2 are in the same mobility group, and Controller3 is in a different one. When this scenario occurs, the three controllers are considered to be in the same mobility domain. A controller can be aware of another controller in a different mobility group as long as they are in the same mobility domain. This allows them to exchange information regarding their clients. This allows clients in different mobility groups to roam between the different mobility domains. If the controllers were in different mobility groups and did not have knowledge of each other, roaming could not occur. To provide this knowledge, you as an administrator need to enter the MAC address and management IP address of the other controller in the first controller, and vice versa. In other words, Controller2 needs to be configured with Controller3’s MAC and management IP addresses, and Controller3 needs to be configured with Controller2’s MAC and IP addresses.

To set this up in the controller, first you need to configure the controller’s mobility domain. Remember that multiple controllers share the same mobility group, and controllers in different mobility groups can communicate with each other if they are part of the same mobility domain. To configure the mobility domain using the controller web interface, choose CONTROLLER > General.

A controller can be in only one mobility group and one mobility domain. To configure the mobility group, choose CONTROLLER > Mobility Management. Controllers that are in the same mobility group have the same virtual gateway IP address. You can add these controllers by clicking New and then adding the IP address, MAC address, and mobility group of the other controller, as shown in Figure 12-3. In Figure 12-3, Controller2 is added to Controller1. If you have more than one controller to add, you can do it all at once.


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