Creating a Network That Uses a Pre-Shared Key
You can create a network that requires users to enter a pre-shared key (PSK).
- From the navigation pane, click Wireless Networks.
- Click
Add Network.
The Add Network dialog box is displayed.
- Complete the settings on the
Network Details page.
- Network Name: Enter a name (up to 32 characters) that you want assign to the network.
- Description: Enter a description (up to 64 characters) to help you identify the network using.
- Network Type: Click Pre-Shared Key.
When the network type is selected, a structure diagram of a PSK type of network displays. - Click
Next.
The PSK Settings page is displayed.
- Complete the settings on the
PSK Settings page.
- Passphrase: Enter a passphrase that you want users to provide before they can access the network.
- SAE Passphrase: Enter a SAE passphrase that you want users to provide before they can access the network. This option is available only when the security protocol is WPA3 or WPA3/WPA2 mixed mode.
- Security Protocol: Select the security protocol that you want this network to use. The default security protocol is WPA2, Other options include WPA, WPA3, WPA3/WPA3 mixed mode, and WEP.
- Click
Next.
The Venues page is displayed.
- Select the venues in which you want to activate this network:
- To activate the network in all of your venues, click Activate in all venues.
- To activate the network in a specific venue, locate the venue from the list, and set the switch to ON in the Activated column.
- The Select APs on venuevenue-name page is displayed.
- In the
Select APs on venue
venue-name page, you have two choices for defining how the network will be activated:
- Click the All APs button to activate this network on all current and future APs at this venue. You can also choose a radio band of 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, or both.
- Click the
Select specific AP groups button to activate this network on specific AP groups including any AP that is added to selected AP groups in the future. The
APs not assigned to any group option is displayed. After APs not assigned to any group is selected, two more options are displayed:
- In the VLAN option, click the edit (pencil) icon to edit the VLAN number. The default is VLAN 1.
- In the Radios option, select a radio band of 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, or both.
- Click the clock icon under
Schedule to configure the schedule for the network in the selected venue.
The Schedule for Network <network-name> in Venue <venue-name> dialog appears.
- Check one of the Network Availability options:
- 24/7: Network is available 24/7.
- Custom schedule: Network schedule is customized as per the your requirement. You can configure the schedule for Monday through Sunday and from midnight to midnight (from 00:00 hours through 23.59 hours).
- Click
OK.
Returns to Add Network dialog box.
- Click
Next.
The Summary page is displayed.
- Review the settings that you configured. To display the passphrase in plain text, click the eye icon.
- Select the Advanced tab. The Advance tab is displayed.
- (Optiona) Toggle the VLAN Pooling to turn it ON . By default, it is set to OFF.
- In VLAN ID: Type the VLAN ID number (default is 1) that you want to assign to this network. The valid range is from 0 to 4096.
- (Optiona) Toggle the Proxy ARP to turn it ON. By default, it is set to OFF.
- In Max.
Number of Devices: (Only for Captive Portal Host Approval and
Self Sign In networks) Select the maximum number of devices that can connect to
the network. The drop-down list allows up to 10 devices.
- In User
Connection Settings (Default): (Only for Captive Portal networks
except Click-Through)
- Allow the user to stay connected for: Select Minutes or Hours from the drop-down arrow box and then use the up/down arrows to select the number of minutes or hours of connection time after which the client is disconnected.
- Do not redirect to the portal when reconnecting within: You can set the grace period which sets the number of minutes during which previously authenticated clients that disconnect from the network can rejoin the network without going through the authentication process again. The default grace period is 60 minutes, but this time cannot be longer than the allowed user connection period.
- In User
Connection Settings (Time Limited): (Only for Captive Portal
Click-Through networks) If you have clicked the Change to Time limited
connection option.
- Allow users to connect for: Enter an aggregated time period after which the user is disconnected. The default is 24 hours.
- After that time, don't allow to reconnect for: Sets a lock-out time during which users are not allowed to sign-in again. The default is 2 hours.
- In the Load Control section:
- Max
rate: There are three options:
- Unlimited—no limits on bandwidth allocation.
- Per AP—The max bandwidth allocation limit of all connections to that specific network on the AP. If selected, two other options appear, Upload Limit and Download Limit. If either (or both) boxes are checked, a sliding scale appears and you can drag your cursor along the line to choose the Mbps limits.
- Per Client—The max bandwidth allocated for a device connected to this network. If selected, two other options appear, Upload Limit and Download Limit. If either (or both) boxes are checked, a sliding scale appears against each option and you can drag your cursor along the line to choose the Mbps limits.
- Max clients per radio: Limit the number of clients that can associate with this network per AP radio (default is 100).
- Enable load balancing between 2.4GHz & 5GHz radios: Select this check box to enable load balancing between the 2.4GHz and 5GHz radios. Load balancing helps improve network performance by helping to spread the client load between the two radios on the AP.
- Enable load balancing between APs: Select this check box to spread the client load between nearby access points, so that one AP does not get overloaded while another sits idle.
- Max
rate: There are three options:
- Navigate to the Access Control section.
- Click Set up a
Policy corresponding to Device Connection
Policy. The Device Connection Policy dialog box is displayed.By default, the Allow Connections only from MAC addresses listed below option (green) is enabled. You can choose to change this to Block Connections from MAC addresses listed below by clicking the option (red) provided.
- Click Add to add a MAC address. The Add MAC address dialog box is displayed.
- Enter the MAC address and click Add.
- Click Clear list to clear the MAC address list.
- Click OK to
return to the Edit Network screen. Note: As an admin user, you can assign a single policy of each type to the network as the default policy or as part of the Network and Venue activation. This action overrides the default network policy.
- Configure a user traffic policy by clicking the Set up a Policy link. The Traffic Policy dialog box is displayed.
By default, the Allow Traffic option (green) is enabled. You can choose to change this to Block Traffic by clicking the option (red) provided. - Click Set up a
Policy corresponding to Device Connection
Policy.
- To create a new traffic rule,
click the Add
Rule link. The Add Traffic Access
Rule dialog box is displayed. You can create rules only for
up-stream traffic. Note: L3/L4 traffic policy rules will not be applied to traffic between clients attached to the same WLAN on the same AP.
- Enter a description for the rule in the text field provided.
- You can create a rule to allow or block up-stream traffic by clicking and selecting the Allow Traffic or Block Traffic option, respectively.
- Select the protocol which you
wish to use for the new traffic rule, from the Protocol
drop down list. Following are the list of protocols available for use.
- TCP: Transmission Control Protocol
- UDP: User Datagram Protocol
- UDPLITE: Lightweight User Datagram Protocol, which is a connectionless protocol that allows even a damaged data payload to be delivered rather than being discarded.
- ICMP (ICMPV4): Internet Control Message Protocol, which is an error-reporting protocol used by network devices to generate error messages to the source IP address, when issues in the network prevent delivery of IP packets.
- IGMP: Internet Group Management Protocol, which is a communications protocol used by hosts on IPv4 networks to establish multicast group memberships.
- ESP: Encapsulating Security Payload is a protocol which provides the authentication, integrity, and confidentially of network packets in IPv4 and IPv6 networks.
- AH: Authentication Header protocol, which is used to authenticate SNMP.
- SCTP: Stream Control Transmission Protocol is a communications protocol which operates at the transport layer.
- Specify the source address in the Source field. You can either specify a range (a network address and a Subnet Mask, in the field provided) or you an specify a source IP address in the field provided. Also, specify a port number or a range of ports (for example, 22-34) for the source, in the field provided.
- Specify the destination address
in the Destination field. You can either specify a range (a
network address and a Subnet Mask, in the field provided) or you an
specify a source IP address in the field provided. Also, specify a port
number or a range of ports (e.g: 22-34) for the destination, in the
field provided. Note: If you choose the ICMP protocol in the previous step, you do not need to specify ports for the source and the destination. Hence, the option to select ports will not be presented to you.
- Click Save. The rule
which you created appears in the Traffic Control
Policy dialog box. Note: The rule which you initially create appears in a row with priority set a "1", by default. When you create a second rule, it appears in the row with priority "1" and the previous rule which you created appears as second in the row, with priority "2". When you have multiple rules created, you can use the "up" and "down" arrows available at the end of each row, to shift respective rows up or down in the order, to set the desired priority.
The edit and delete links available at the end of each row allow you to edit and delete respective rules. Each time you click the edit button, the Add Traffic Access Rule dialog box is displayed. where you can edit any of the rule properties.
- Click OK in the
Traffic Policy dialog box, once you have
all the required rules added. You are navigated back to the Advanced Network Settings dialog box, where are can click the Traffic Policy toggle button to "ON" or "OFF", activating or de-activating the traffic policy which you created, respectively. The Edit option allows you to navigate to the Traffic Control Policy dialog box, where you can edit the policy which you created. The Clear button allows you to delete the traffic policy.
- To add a device and OS access
policy, toggle the Device & OS Access
Policy option to ON.
- Choose a device and OS access policy from the Select policy drop down.
- Click Add to add a device and OS access policy. The Add Device & OS Access Policy dialog box appears.
- Complete the following:
- Policy Name: Enter the name of the policy.
- Description: Enter description for the policy.
- Default Access: Select either Allow or Block.
- Click Add Rule and then complete the following:
- Rule Name: Enter the name of the rule.
- Action: Select either Allow Devices or Block Devices.
- Device Type: Select a device type from the list of devices.
- OS Vendor: Select the OS vendor for the devices.
- Rate Limit: Configure the late limit using the sliders: From client and To client.
- VLAN: Enter the VLAN ID.
- Click ADD to add the rule to the device and OS access policy for the network .
- Toggle the Wi-Fi Calling option to ON and click
Select
Profiles to select a Wi-Fi calling profile. By default, the Wi-Fi Calling is set to OFF
- In Enable Client Isolation: Select this check box to prevent clients on the same network from communicating with each other.
- In Force
DHCP: Select this check box to force clients to obtain a valid IP
address from a DHCP server. This prevents clients configured with a static IP
address from connecting to the network. If a client performs Layer 3 roaming between different subnets, in some cases the client sticks to the former IP address. This mechanism optimizes the roaming experience by forcing clients to request a new IP address.
- In Hide SSID: Select this check box if you do not want the ID of this network advertised at any time. This will not affect performance or force the network user to perform any unnecessary tasks.
- In Enable OFDM only (Disables 802.11b): Enabling this option disables CCK rates of 1, 2, 5.5, and 11 Mbps, so no 802.11b-only clients can connect. Beacons and probe responses will be transmitted at 6 Mbps, and data frames at 6, 9, 18, 24, 36, 48, and 54 Mbps. Enforcing higher minimum data rates increases overall network throughput capacity, but reduces the distance at which clients are able to remain connected.
- In Enable logging client data to external syslog: Select this check box to allow client data to be logged in all venues that have the external syslog server enabled. The box is unchecked by default. Refer to the Configuring the Syslog Server for a Venue page for details about configuring the external syslog server for a venue.
- In BSS Min Rate: Use this option to configure the minimum transmission rate supported by the network. If OFDM Only is enabled, the only valid options are 12 Mbps and 24 Mbps, with Mgmt Tx frames fixed at 6 Mbps. This option can also be used to prevent 11b clients from connecting, and to allow greater client density with higher data rates.
- In Mgt Tx Rate: This option is only available if both OFDM Only and BSS Min Rate are disabled. (Otherwise, the Mgmt Tx Rate is defined by those settings.) Use this setting to configure the rate at which management frames are sent. The default is 6 Mbps.
- Enable 802.11k neighbor reports: Enhances roaming by providing a list of neighbor APs to the client device.
- Enable 802.11r Fast BSS Transition: 802.11r Fast BSS Transition fast roaming protocol.
- Client Inactivity Timeout: Client will be disconnected from the network if it is inactive for more than the time interval specified. The timeout period can range from 60 through 1000 seconds.
- Airtime Decongestion: Toggle the switch to ON to activate the airtme decongestion feature.
- RSSI Threshold: Toggle the switch to ON and then cofigure the threshold value.
- Transient Client Management: Toggle the switch to ON and the configure parameters for Join Wait Time, Join Expire Time, and Join Wait Threshold.
- Optimized Connectivity Experience (OCE): Toggle the switch to ON and then and confiture parameters for Broadcast Probe Response Delay and RSSI-Based Association Rejection Threshold.
- Click Reset to defaults button in the lower left side of the screen to reset all the advanced settings back to their defaults.
- Click Save to save your settings.
- Click Save in the Advanced Network Setting dialog box and you return to the Add Network dialog box. Click the Create button to create the Wi-Fi network. The newly created Wi-Fi network is displayed in the Networks window, with the Overview tab displaying an overview diagram of the Wi-Fi network with various network properties. To view and edit all the network settings that you entered while creating the network, click the Edit Network link on the top-right corner of the Network page. You can make the required changes and click the Save button to enable the edits.