Cisco 5520 Deployment Manual

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Cisco 5520 Wireless LAN Controller Deployment Guide
Cisco 5520 Wireless LAN Controller Deployment Guide 4
Introduction 4
Prerequisites 4
Product Overview 4
Cisco 5520 Controller Key Attributes 5
AP Platform Support 7
Platform Components 8
Image Specifications 16
Fault Tolerance Capability 16
Customer Replaceable Units 17
Link Aggregation (LAG) 18
Inter-Platform Mobility and Guest Anchor Support 18
Infrastructure Multicast 18
New Mobility and MC Support 19
Look and Feel of the Cisco 5520 Wireless LAN Controller 19
Out of Band Management on Service Port 26
Local EAP Support 28
Wired Guest Access Support 28
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Licensing 29
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Revised: March 23, 2016,
Cisco 5520 Wireless LAN Controller Deployment Guide
Introduction
This document introduces the Cisco 5520 Wireless LAN Controller (WLC), and provides general guidelines for its deployment. The purpose of this document is to:
Provide an overview of the Cisco 5520 WLC, and its deployment within the Cisco Unified Architecture.
Highlight key service provider features.
Provide design recommendations and considerations specific to the Cisco 5520 Controller.
Prerequisites
Requirements
There are no specific requirements for this document.
Components Used
This document is not restricted to specific software and hardware versions.
The information in this document is created from the devices in a specific lab environment. All of the devices used in this document started with a cleared (default) configuration. If your network is live, make sure that you understand the potential impact of any command.
Conventions
Refer to Cisco Technical Tips Conventions for more information on document conventions.
Product Overview
The existing Cisco 5500 series controller scales up to 500 APs, 7,000 clients, and 8 Gbps maximum throughput. The explosion of mobile clients in enterprise empowered by bring your own device (BYOD), the deployment of wireless in mission-critical applications,
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and the adoption of Wi-Fi in service provider networks enabling new business models require wireless networks to provide larger AP scale, client scale, and higher throughput.
The Cisco Unified Wireless Network Software Release 8.1 addresses these key challenges. Release 8.1 delivers the new Cisco 5520 wireless controller with support for 20 Gbps throughput, 1500 APs, and 20,000 clients to ensure better performance and scale for business critical networks.
The following table captures some of the key hardware capabilities of this new platform.
Table 1: Hardware Capabilities of Cisco 5520 WLC
5520Hardware Capabilities
1 RUChassis Height
20 GbpsThroughput
1500AP Support
20,000Client Support
2 x SFP+Data Ports
Storage Temperature
Operating Temperature
Operating Humidity
-40°C – 65°C
5 – 40°C
10 – 90% (non-condensing)
770 W ACPower Options
Cisco 5520 Controller Key Attributes
Some of the key attributes of the Cisco 5520 controller are:
High AP scale (1500 APs in 1 RU )
High client density (20,000 clients in 1 RU)
High throughput of 20 Gbps with 1 RU
Support for 1500 APs, 1500 AP groups, 1500 FlexConnect groups, and up to 100 APs per FlexConnect group
Support for 4096 VLANs
512 Interface Groups
PMK Cache size of 40,000
Support for 25,000 RFIDs tracking, and the detection and containment of up to 24,000 rogue APs, and up to 32,000 rogue clients
(over and above the RFIDs)
3,000 APs per RRM Group
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3,20,000 AVC Flows
High Availability with sub-second AP and client SSO
TrustSec SXP Support
Support of all AP modes of operation (Local, FlexConnect, Monitor, Rogue Detector, Sniffer, Bridge, and Flex+bridge)
Right to Use (RTU) licensing for ease of license enablement and ongoing licensing operations
The following table shows the Cisco Enterprise Campus Controllers comparison at a glance:
Table 2: Cisco Enterprise Campus Controllers comparison
WiSM255085520Attributes
Deployment type
Maximum Scale
AP Count Range
Power
Maximum Number of FlexConnect Groups
FlexConnect Group
Enterprise Campus and full service branch
1500 APs
20,000 clients
PSU)
1500
service branch
500 APs
7000 clients
8 x 1 G ports2 x 10 G portsConnectivity
AC (redundant PSU option)770 W AC (optional redundant
Enterprise CampusEnterprise Campus and full
All AP modesAll AP modesAll AP modesOperational Modes
1000 APs
15,000 clients
100 – 100012 – 5001 – 1500
CISL basedCISL basedRight to Use (with EULA)Licensing
Internal connections to the Catalyst Backplanes
AC/DC Catalyst chassis redundant PSU option
100100
2525100Maximum Number of APs per
APs Management
Clients Management
Group
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4,0002,00024,000Maximum Number of Rogue
5,000250032,000Maximum Number of Rogue
10,0005,00025,000Maximum Number of RFID
2,0001,0003,000Maximum APs per RRM
5005001500Maximum AP Groups
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Interface Group
Clients/Max PMK Cache
Feature support unless otherwise specified will be the same as in 8510.Note
AP Platform Support
The Cisco 5520 supports the following access point models:
WiSM255085520Attributes
6464512Maximum Interface Groups
646464Maximum Interfaces per
5125124096Maximum VLANs Supported
512512512Maximum WLANs Supported
30,00014,00040,000Fast Secure Roaming
1260, 3500, 600
1600, 2600, 3600
1700, 2700, 3700
OEAP 600
702I, 702W
Cisco 891 series integrated services router and Cisco 881 series integrated services router
1530, 1552WU, 1550, 1570
1040, 1140, 1260 support extended to 8.1 with 8.0 parity
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Platform Components
Cisco 5520 WLC Front Panel View
Cisco 5520 wireless LAN controller supports several buttons, LED indicators, and a KVM connector on the front panel. It also includes a power button and Locator LED button, along with the following LEDS: System status, PSU status, Fan status, Network LED, and Temperature LED.
Power On Switch and LED Indicator
A Power Button push switch with integrated LED is located on the front panel.
Table 3: Power On Switch and LED Indicator
FunctionLED Indicator Color
Card Power StatusBi-color Yellow
(Amber)
Green
DecodeState
Card Power OffOff
Soft OffAmber On
Card Power OnGreen On
Locator Switch and LED Indicator
A Unit Identify push switch with integrated LED is available on the front panel and rear panel . Each press on the button toggles between active and non-active states.
System Status LED Indicator
The system status LED located on the front panel indicates the overall system health.
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Table 4: System Status LED Indicator
FunctionLED Indicator Color
System StatusBi-color Yellow
(Amber)
Green
Fan Status LED Indicator
The Fan status LED located on front panel indicates the fan health.
Table 5: Fan Status LED Indicator
FunctionLED Indicator Color
DecodeState
UndefinedOff
Card is in normal operating conditionGreen On
System is in a degraded operational stateAmber On
Critical fault stateAmber Blinking
(Amber)
Green
Note
Fan StatusBi-color Yellow
DecodeState
UndefinedOff
Green On
Fans are operating and no error condition has been detected
Amber On
Amber Blinking
Fans are in a degraded operational state
One of N fans has a fault
Critical fault state
Two or more fans has a fault
Adaptive fan speed to control noise issues seen with 5520 FCS hardware is introduced in release version
8.1.131.0.
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Temperature Status LED Indicator
The temperature status LED is located on the front panel and indicates whether or not the system is operating within acceptable temperature limits.
Table 6: Temperature Status LED Indicator
FunctionLED Indicator Color
Temperature StatusBi-color Yellow
(Amber)
DecodeState
Green
UndefinedOff
Green On
System is operating at normal temperature
Amber On
One or more temperature sensors reaches UCR threshold
Amber Blinking
One or more temperature sensors reaches UNR threshold
Power Supply Status LED Indicator
The power supply status LED is located on the front panel and indicates proper functioning of the power supply.
Table 7: Power Supply Status LED Indicator
FunctionLED Indicator Color
AC Power Supply StatusBi-color Yellow
(Amber)
DecodeState
Green
UndefinedOff
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Green On
Amber On
Amber Blinking
AC power supplies are operating and no error condition has been detected
One or more power supplies are in a degraded operational state
One or more power supplies are in a critical fault state
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Network Link LED Indicator
The network LED is located on the front panel and indicates if any of the on-board networking ports are connected and operating.
Table 8: Network Link LED Indicator
FunctionLED Indicator Color
Network Link StatusSingle Color
Green
DecodeState
UndefinedOff
Link on any of the ports, but no activityGreen On
Activity on any of the portsGreen Blinking
Front Panel KVM Break-out Connector
A single female connector provides access to video, two USB ports for keyboard and mouse, and an RS-232C console serial port.
An external breakout connector to industry standard interfaces is required. The following figure shows an example cable.
The interfaces for the cable are:
1
Front panel KVM/Console connector
2
DB9 serial port connector
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Dual Type-A USB 2.0 connectors
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DB15 Video connector
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Cisco 5520 WLC Rear Panel View
The rear panel has the following interfaces:
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Two Type A 3.0 USB ports
2
IMC port 10/100/1000 Base-T
To setup the CIMC interface:
Connect the CIMC cable.
To enable DHCP to set the IP, use the command imm dhcp enable.
If DHCP is not available, use the command imm address <ip address> <net mask> <gateway ip>.
To view the IP and details, use the command imm summary.
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Note
CIMC web interface is for advanced debugging for TAC and escalation use only. Changing of settings in the CIMC by customer can cause adverse impact on controller software and functionality.
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SerialCOM connector Standard RS-232 Serial COM port using RJ-45 connector
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Ethernet service port (SP) Management 10/100/1000 Base-T
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Redundancy Port (RP)
FunctionLED Indicator Color
Management Interface Port SpeedBi-color Yellow
(Amber)
Green
FunctionLED Indicator Color
DecodeState
Link Speed = 10 MbpSOff
Link Speed = 100 MbpSAmber On
Link Speed = 1 GbpSGreen On
Management Interface Port StatusBi-color Yellow
(Amber)
Green
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VGA Connector Rear panel has a standard VGA port using a female D-Sub-15 Connector
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ID Switch and LED
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Two 1/10 G Management and Network ports
DecodeState
No LinkOff
LinkGreen On
Traffic PresentBlinking
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Functional DefinitionLED
LED: (Amber) On indicates power is goodPwr OK
10 G
LED: (Amber) On indicates 10 G mode
LED: Off indicates 1 G mode
Port-n Link Status
Green OnLink is up in 10Gbe Mode
Amber OnLink is up in 1 Gbe Mode
OffLink status is down
LED: (Green) blinking indicates link activityPort-n Link Activity
Switching Between 10 G and 1 G
If there is nothing installed in port 1, the board will be configured for 10 G mode by default. Therefore, to switch to 1 G mode,
an SFP module must be installed in port 1 and the system needs to be rebooted.
Conversely, if an SFP module is installed and the user wants to switch to 4 x 10 G mode, then an SFP+ module must be installed
in port 1 and the WLC rebooted.
Thus, Online Insertion and Removal (OIR) of SFP and SFP+ between 10 G and 1 G is not possible.
OIR of 10 G to 10 G and 1 G and 1 G is possible.
Note
It is recommended to have all ports as either 10 G or 1 G. In case they are different, port 1 SFP determines the mode of operation and functionality on the other SFPs may not work.
Table 9: Functionality of Cisco 5520 WLC when OIR occurs
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RemarksPort2Port1Hot Swap of SFP/SFP+
YesNo1G to 1G
Cisco 5520 WLC requires reboot for Port1 OIR in 1G
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RemarksPort2Port1Hot Swap of SFP/SFP+
NoNo1G to 10G
NoNo10G to 1G
SFP Support
Network ports for 5520 WLC support the following Cisco SFP/SFP+ modules:
GLC-T
SFP-10G-SR
SFP-10G-LR
SFP-10G-LRM
SFP-H10GB-CU1M
SFP-H10GB-CU2M
SFP-H10GB-CU2-5M
Cisco 5520 WLC requires reboot between 1G and 10G
Cisco 5520 WLC requires reboot between 10G and 1G
No reboot requiredYesYes10G to 10G
SFP-H10GB-CU3M
SFP-H10GB-CU5M
SFP-H10GB-ACU7M
SFP-H10GB-ACU10M
SFP-10G-AOC7M
SFP-H10GB-CU1-5M
SFP-10G-AOC3M
SFP-10G-AOC1M
SFP-10G-AOC2M
SFP-10G-AOC5M
SFP-10G-AOC10M
GLC-LH*
GLC-EX-SMD*
GLC-SX-MMD*
SFP-10G-SR-S
SFP-10G-LR-S
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*Needs GLC-T on Port 1.Note
Image Specifications
Cisco 5520 WLC supports all the features of release 8.1.
Feature Not Supported on 5520 Controller Platform
The following features are not supported on the 5520 controller platform:
Local Authentication (where the controller acts as the authentication server)
Internal DHCP server
Wired Guest
Fault Tolerance Capability
The Cisco 5520 supports the stateless N+1 redundancy model . The N+1 HA architecture provides redundancy for controllers across geographically separate data centers with low cost of deployment. A single backup controller can be used to provide backup for multiple primary WLCs.
For more information on this model of redundancy, refer to
http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/wireless/technology/hi_avail/N1_High_Availability_Deployment_Guide/N1_HA_Overview.html.
AP and Client SSO
High Availability Stateful Switchover (SSO) model provides a Box-to-Box redundancy with one controller in active state and a second controller in hot standby state. The SSO model monitors the health of the active controller via a redundant (HA) port. Cisco 5520 wireless LAN controller has a failover RP Port.
The configuration on the active controller is synched to the standby controller via the redundant port. In HA, both controllers share the same set of configuration including the IP address of the management interface. The AP's CAPWAP state (for APs in RUN state) is also synched. As a result, APs do not go into Discovery state when the active controller fails. Furthermore, a client's information is synced to the standby WLC when the client associates to the WLC or the clients parameters change. Fully authenticated clients, that is, the ones in Run state, are synced to the standby. Thus, client re-association is avoided on switchover, making the failover seamless for the APs as well as for the clients, resulting in zero client service downtime and no SSID outage.
For more information on the SSO feature and the supported topologies, refer to the High Availability deployment Guide.
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Connecting Cisco 5520 SSO Pair to the Wired Network
It is recommended to connect to a VSS pair and spread the links in each port-channel between the two physical switches to prevent a WLC switchover upon a failure of one of the VSS switches.
Customer Replaceable Units
Cisco 5520 wireless LAN controller has a minimal amount of separate orderable items, including all of the following:
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Power supply
SSD Hard Disk Drive (HDD)
Option to add a redundant power supply on the Cisco 5520 WLC
The power supply units are field replaceable.Note
Link Aggregation (LAG)
A single LAG across the 2 x 10 G interfaces is supported in software versions 8.1 and later. LACP and PAgP are not supported on the controller.
Inter-Platform Mobility and Guest Anchor Support
Guest anchor capability with:
Cisco WLC 2504/5508 / 8510 / 7510 / WISM2 running as a foreign controller (EOIP Tunnel)
Cisco 5520 / 8540 WLC running as a foreign controller (EOIP Tunnel)
Cisco 5760 WLC running as a foreign controller with new mobility turned on (CAPWAP Tunnel)
Foreign controller to a guest anchor which is a:
Cisco WLC 2504/5508 / 8510 / 7510 / WISM2 (EOIP Tunnel)
Cisco 5520 / 8540 WLC (EOIP Tunnel)
Cisco 5760 WLC with new mobility turned on (CAPWAP Tunnel)
CAPWAP has native management plane encryption and optional data payload encryption.
Infrastructure Multicast
Multicast support is enabled in the Cisco 5520 controller with the following restrictions:
If all APs on the 5520 controller are configured in Local mode, Multicast-Multicast will be the default mode and all features
are supported (for example, VideoStream).
If the APs are configured as a mix of Local mode and FlexConnect mode:
If IPv6 is required on the FlexConnect APs:
Disable Global Multicast Mode and change to Multicast-Unicast mode.
IPv6 / GARP will work on FlexConnect and Local mode APs, but Multicast data and the VideoStream feature will be
disabled.
IPv6 / GARP is not required on FlexConnect APs:
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Change the mode to Multicast-Multicast and enable Global Multicast Mode and IGMP / MLD snooping.
IPv6, GARP, Multicast Data, and VideoStream are supported on local mode APs.
New Mobility and MC Support
Cisco 5520 supports the new mobility functionality to be compatible with inter-platform IRCM and guest anchor functionality. This platform will not function as an MC.
Look and Feel of the Cisco 5520 Wireless LAN Controller
The Cisco 5520 controller enables console redirect by default with baud rate 9600, simulating a VT100 terminal with no flow control. The 5520 Controller has the same boot sequence as existing controller platforms.
Boot Up and Initial Configuration
Initial Boot Sequence
Boot Options
Loading the OS and Boot Loader
Loading Controller Services
Initial Controller Configuration
Configuration Wizard As with all other controller platforms, initial boot up requires configuration using the Wizard menu.
WLAN Express Setup As with all other controller platforms, 5520 WLC also supports the Express WLAN Setup over wired Ethernet connection.
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Monitoring and Best Practices
This platform supports the Monitoring Dashboard and the Upgrade audit workflow view.
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The following screenshot is the Best Practices Audit workflow page.
Management Web UI
The management web interface has the same look and feel as existing Cisco wireless LAN controllers.
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Out of Band Management on Service Port
Starting release 8.2 the Service Port capability on the Cisco 5520 Wireless LAN Controller has been enhanced to support the following management services:
HTTP/HTTPS web-based access
SNMP polling v2 and v3
Syslog
SSH or Telnet
Transfer download and upload
These services shall be supported in a non-HA topology only in this release
Service Port
The service port is a 10/100/1000 Base-T management port located on the rear panel. Port 4 in the figure below shows the Service Port on the Cisco 5520 Wireless LAN Controller.
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Service Port Configuration
The IP address assigned to the service port must be in a non-routable subnet different from the Management subnet. It can be assigned dynamically or statically as shown in the configuration below. There is no change in the service port configuration itself and the commands below are for your reference.
Use the following commands to define the Service port interface with an IPv4 address:
Dynamic assignment of IPv4 address on the Service Port:
To configure the DHCP server:
config interface dhcp service-port enable
To disable the DHCP server:
config interface dhcp service-port disable
To configure a static IPv4 address on the Service Port use the following command:
config interface address service-port ip-address netmask
To add an IPv4 route to allow out-of-band management of the controller from a remote workstation:
config route add network-ip-address ip-netmask gateway
To remove the IPv4 route on the controller:
config route delete network-ip-address
Use the following commands to define the Service port interface with an IPv6 address:
To configure the service port using slacc:
config ipv6 interface slacc service-port enable
To disable the service port using slacc:
config ipv6 interface slacc service-port disable
To configure the IPv6 address:
config ipv6 interface address service-port ipv6-address prefix-length
To add an IPv6 route to allow out-of-band management of the controller from a remote workstation:
config ipv6 route add network_ipv6_address prefix-length ipv6_gw_addr
To remove the IPv4 route on the controller:
config ipv6 route delete network_ipv6_address
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To verify the status of the service port after configuration
show interface detailed service-port
Limitations
RADIUS, TACACS+ and NMSP to MSE via Service Port not supported in release 8.2
SP Port OOB Management cannot be enabled when the WLC is in an SSO Pair.
Local EAP Support
Starting Software release 8.2, Cisco 5520 Wireless LAN Controller supports the Local EAP functionality natively on the controller.
Local EAP is an authentication method that allows users and wireless clients to be authenticated locally on the controller. It is designed for use in remote offices that want to maintain connectivity to wireless clients when the backend system becomes disrupted or the external authentication server goes down. When you enable local EAP, the controller serves as the authentication server and the local user database, so it removes dependence on an external authentication server. Local EAP retrieves user credentials from the local user database or the LDAP backend database to authenticate users. Local EAP supports LEAP, EAP-FAST, EAP-TLS, PEAPv0/MSCHAPv2, and PEAPv1/GTC authentication between the controller and wireless clients.
The configuration of Local EAP remains the same as on existing WLCs. A Local EAP Server Configuration Example can be found at http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/wireless-mobility/wlan-security/91628-uwn-loc-eap-svr-config.html%23maintask1
Wired Guest Access Support
Starting Software release 8.2, Cisco 5520 Wireless LAN Controller supports the Wired Guest Access functionality.
A growing number of companies recognize the need to provide Internet access to its customers, partners, and consultants when they visit their facilities. IT managers can provide wired and wireless secured and controlled access to the Internet for guests on the same wireless LAN controller. Guest users must be allowed to connect to designated Ethernet ports and access the guest network as configured by the administrator after they complete the configured authentication methods. Wireless guest users can easily connect to the WLAN Controllers with the current guest access features. This provides a unified wireless and wired guest access experience to the end users.
Wired guest ports are provided in a designated location and plugged into an access switch. The configuration on the access switch puts these ports in one of the wired guest Layer 2 VLANs.
Two separate solutions are available to the customers:
A single WLAN controller (VLAN Translation mode)–the access switch trunks the wired guest traffic in the guest VLAN to the WLAN controller that provides the wired guest access solution. This controller carries out the VLAN translation from the ingress wired guest VLAN to the egress VLAN.
Two WLAN controllers (Auto Anchor mode) - the access switch trunks the wired guest traffic to a local WLAN controller (the controller nearest to the access switch). This local WLAN controller anchors the client onto a Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) Anchor WLAN controller that is configured for wired and wireless guest access. After a successful handoff of the client to the DMZ anchor controller, the DHCP IP address assignment, authentication of the client, and so on are handled in the DMZ WLC. After it completes the authentication, the client is allowed to send and receive traffic.
The configuration of Wired Guest Access remains the same as on existing WLCs. A Wired Guest Access Configuration Example can be found at http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/wireless-mobility/wireless-lan-wlan/99470-config-wiredguest-00.html
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Licensing
5520 wireless LAN controller supports Right to Use (RTU) licensing model similar to the Cisco Flex 7500 and Cisco 8500 series controllers. This is an Honor-based licensing scheme that allows AP licenses to be enabled on supported controllers with End User License Agreement (EULA) acceptance. The RTU license scheme simplifies addition, deletion, or the transfer of AP adder licenses in the field by eliminating the need for an additional step, additional tools, or access to Cisco.com for PAK license or return materials authorization (RMA) transfers.
Evaluation licenses are valid for 90 days. Notifications will be generated to inform you to buy a permanent license starting 15 days prior to the evaluation license expiration.
If you have more APs connected than those purchased, the licensing status for the controller tracked within the Cisco Prime Infrastructure will turn red.
For more information on the RTU License model, refer to the Cisco Right to Use Licensing (RTU) document.
Smart Licensing is also available, for more information refer to http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/wireless/technology/mesh/8-2/
b_Smart_Licensing_Deployment_Guide.html
License Types
These are the three license types:
Permanent licenses—The AP count is programmed into NVM while manufacturing. These licenses are transferable.
Adder access point count licenses—Can be activated through the acceptance of the EULA. These licenses are transferable.
Evaluation licenses—Used for demo and/or trial periods, are valid for 90 days, and default to the full capacity of the controller.
The evaluation license can be activated at any time using a CLI command.
Licensing Model Features
Two Base Bundle SKUs: AIR-CT5520-K9 and AIR-CT5520-50-K9
Portability of licenses between 5520 and 8540 wireless LAN controllers
No separate HA-SKU UDI
Table 10: 5520 – Primary SKUs / PIDs
Top level SKU for 5520 AP adder licensesLIC-CT5520-UPG
Cisco 5520 wireless controller 1 AP adder licenseLIC-CT5520-1A
CommentsDescriptionSKU / PID
Base and HA SKUCisco 5520 wireless controller w/rack mounting kitAIR-CT5520-K9
50 AP Bundle SKUCisco 5520 wireless controller supporting 50 APs w/rack kitAIR-CT5520-50-K9
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©
2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
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