ā07-03-2018 10:05 PM
Solved! Go to Solution.
ā07-05-2018 09:39 PM
Are you able the ping the MGT interfaces? Can you lookup the MACs in an arp table on a connected router? Are the MACs showing up in the correct VLAN on your switches?
Best,
BJ
ā07-05-2018 09:39 PM
Are you able the ping the MGT interfaces? Can you lookup the MACs in an arp table on a connected router? Are the MACs showing up in the correct VLAN on your switches?
Best,
BJ
ā07-05-2018 09:23 PM
Hi David, and thanks for your response.
Yes this is an on-premises setup and yes the WI-FI clients can pass traffic.
I will try what you've suggested however this won't be until Monday as this setup is on a ship and its out of port just now.
I'll let you know how it goes.ā
ā07-05-2018 05:06 PM
Hello,
Is this for an On-Premise setup? If so, please continue.
If I haven't captured your issue in my response, please advise, and I'm happy/ready to assist.
-----
Is it true that the Wi-Fi Clients can connect and pass traffic?
If So, let's see if the APs can communicate with Hivemanager. Can you SSH into an AP, and run the command:
show capwap client
This should tell you if the APs can communicate with Hivemanager. If so, and even if CAPWAP is disconnected, maybe you can SSH from an AP with this command:
exec ssh-client server <string> user <string>
If unreachable still, Rebooting the Hivemanager On-Premise should not effect Client Connectivity at all.
Hope this helps,
David Souri
HiveCommunity Moderator
ā07-04-2018 09:51 PM
Any thoughts on how I can access this without rebooting the hardware? I'm reluctant to do that incase the wi-fi networks don't come back up [ie is the hardware failing]?ā