ā07-25-2019 02:34 PM
At one of our sites we have 1 AP250 that is having trouble with network passthrough. Every device should be configured with a standard the previous tech should have put in place but I found that every device is configured independently from the actual radio profile.
This device in particular didn't have the Native VLAN values needed...which after I entered, every device was able to finally get an IP and work!
Now devices that are connected to it will stay connected but seem to lose any network access (can't reach internet, company shares etc...)
This AP has apparently been a problem for the users near it for a couple years and IT is now finding out about it..... the application guys have just been telling the users to reboot a million times.
Looking at immediate errors or diagnostics show nothing but good values...
Any help would be great! Thanks!
ā07-26-2019 02:59 PM
You would want to set the APs Native VLAN in the device specific settings of the AP to a VLAN that had a DHCP server on your backend.
ā07-26-2019 02:57 PM
How should the AP be setup to use OUR backend DHCP properly?
ā07-26-2019 02:50 PM
Since the DHCP probe is working, I'd like to see a packet capture taken while a client tries to get an IP from this AP. That will show us which DHCP packets are getting through, and that would narrow down where the issue is. This guide reviews how to set up a remote sniffer packet capture using HiveManager: https://thehivecommunity.aerohive.com/s/article/Packet-Capture-in-NG
ā07-26-2019 02:44 PM
Also, i can run the - test DCHP from the AP and it always has a green success response.... so i'm not sure...
ā07-26-2019 02:42 PM
For a DHCP server on your backend, you would just want to set the right VLAN in the user profile. The clients will send a DHCP request on the VLAN you set in the user profile, and the DHCP server should respond to begin the DHCP handshake.
As for the interference, environmental factors that we want to avoid most for wireless environments are metal, glass, and water. All of these tend to fragment the wireless signal, leading to those high retries. If you can't avoid the metal, glass, or water, it's best to have many APs with a very low power settings.