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AP Maintenance Cycle

AP Maintenance Cycle

Ronald_Dvorak
Honored Contributor

https://extremeportal.force.com/ExtrArticleDetail?an=000089011

No sure why someone want to reboot his APs every day but here my scenario.

Upgrade a controller pair to a newer release - set APs to controlled upgrade - so the APs don't upgrade to the new version and there is no service outage.
Then disable controlled upgrade and enable "AP Maintenance Cycle" so the APs reboot during the night (off-peak hours) to load the new software.

I've tried it in my lab and I don't like/unterstand the behavior.

In my lab setup I have only 15APs and only one with clients connected.
So in "phase#1" (= reboot APs with no connected clients) 14 of the APs reboot.
Before the APs were loaded with the new image and up&running also the AP with clients connected started the reboot.

Could you please explain it in more detail.
I.e. why the duration of 1-6 hours.
A AP need about 2 minutes to reboot and connect again to the controller.

Let's assume a C5210 with 900APs.
In phase#1 (no clients connected) let's say 1/3 have no clients and restart.

Then without any waiting time phase#2 is started and 100APs are in this category and reboot.

Next phase#3, my channel plan is 1/6/11 which would mean 3 groups with a 2minute waiting time between the groups.

Result is that all APs have restarted in timeframe of 10minutes.

My expection was that if I set the duration to 1hour that for example 15minutes are reserved for phase#1 - if some clients roam to another AP and so the AP has no clients connected.
Then another 15minutes to wait whether a AP would fit in phase#2 and the rest is for phase#3.

The conclusion is that this function is not useful in my scenario.

Or is my setup to small to see the "real" behavior of the feature.
Any whitepapers that explain the details/timers.

Thx,
Ron

6 REPLIES 6

Doug
Extreme Employee
More details on the feature....
  • Maintain all APs without any clients and remove these APs from list of APs to maintain, APs that are removed will restart
  • Sleep 120 seconds
  • Retrieve AP stats
  • Compare the new wired traffic stats with the stored one and divide it by 60 seconds
  • Maintain APs with traffic less than 1kb/sec and remove these APs from list of APs to maintain, APs that are removed will restart
  • Sleep 120 seconds
  • For the remaining APs, walk through their radio stats and group the APs by a combination of frequencies. With correct deployments of APs, each point of the coverage area will be covered by more than one AP on a different channel, so grouping APs by frequencies will ensure that during the maintenance window, the whole area should still be covered even when some APs are restarted.
  • Maintain each group of APs and sleep 120 seconds after each maintain.
What other options would you like to see to minimize downtime of the WLAN-Service versus a force reboot of all the access points at once?
Doug Hyde
Director, Technical Support / Extreme Networks

Jeremy_Gibbs
Contributor
You have to set the time to something other than never. Also, starting at the time, ex: 22:00 on Monday, it will reboot all of the APs in a 6 hour window. Rebooting APs that have no users and low throughput first. I agree, I don't like it either. They could improve it A LOT.
GTM-P2G8KFN