NETGEAR Netgear ProSafe Wireless Management Software WMS105 10000S User Manual

ProSafe 5 AP Wireless  
Management Software  
WMS105  
User Manual  
350 East Plumeria Drive  
San Jose, CA 95134  
USA  
May 2010  
202-10662-01  
v1.0  
Table of Contents  
Table of Contents | 3  
1.  
Getting Started  
1
The ProSafe 5 AP Wireless Management Software is a Wireless Management Software that  
allows you to manage up to 5 NETGEAR wireless access points on a LAN. You can use the  
Wireless Management Software to:  
Discover NETGEAR access points on the LAN.  
Optimize wireless access point performance with centralized RF management.  
Streamline security configuration tasks.  
Perform maintenance tasks including remote management and firmware updates for  
NETGEAR access points on the LAN.  
Installing the Software  
The Wireless Management System software is on the NETGEAR Resource CD.  
1. Insert the Resource CD and the Install Wizard Welcome screen displays. Click Next.  
2. Read the software license agreement, select the Agree radio button, and then click Next.  
3. Select the destination for the software, and then click Next.  
4. Select the Start Menu folder for the software, and then click Next.  
5. To install the software, click Install.  
After the software is installed, the  
icon appears on the Windows desktop and on the  
system tray at the bottom of the Windows desktop. You can click this icon to launch the  
Wireless Management System software.  
6. Click Finish to exit the wizard.  
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Logging In  
1. To log in to the Wireless Management Software, double-click the application, or  
right-click it and select Open WMS105 from System tray.  
A login prompt displays:  
2. If you are logging in for the first time, use the default user name admin and password  
(password).  
NETGEAR recommends that you change the password to a new, more secure password  
and record it in a secure location.  
The user interface opens with the Configuration tab selected. This tab is shown in the  
following section "System Settings.”  
System Settings  
When you log in, the Configuration tab displays General Settings.  
General Settings  
To navigate to this screen, on the Configuration tab select System > Basic > General:  
The General Settings page lets you configure the basic settings of your Wireless  
Management Software.  
Name: This unique value indicates the Wireless Management Software name. By default,  
the name is wms105.  
NETGEAR recommends changing the name as soon as possible after setting up. The  
name must contain only alphabetical characters, numbers, and hyphens, and must be 31  
characters or less.  
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Country/Region: This field displays the region of operation for the Wireless Management  
Software and the access points managed by the Wireless Management Software. In the  
United States, the country is preset and cannot be changed on the access points. If the  
Country/Region is not set up correctly, it could result in the access points being  
inaccessible by the Wireless Management Software.  
For products sold outside the United States, you must select a country or region. It might not  
be legal to operate the access points in a country/region not shown here. If your location is  
not listed, check with your local government agency or check the NETGEAR web site for  
more information on which channels to use.  
Time Settings  
On the Configuration tab, select System > Basic > Time Settings:  
This page lets you configure the time-related settings of your Wireless Management Software  
and managed access points. It has the following options:  
Time Zone: Select the local time zone for your region or country.  
Current time: The current time at your location.  
NTP Client: Enable this option to use a Network Time Protocol (NTP) server to  
synchronize the clock of the Wireless Management Software and managed access  
points. Disable this option if you do not want to use an NTP server.  
Use Custom NTP Server: Select this check box if you wish to use an alternate NTP  
Server. By default, the NETGEAR NTP server is used by the access point.  
Hostname / IP Address: Provide the host name or IP address of the NTP server, if you  
are using a custom NTP server.  
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Syslog Settings  
This page lets you configure the settings to connect to a Syslog server, if you have one  
configured in your network. Click the Config tab and select System > Advanced.  
Enable Syslog: Enable the Syslog settings, if you have a Syslog server on your network.  
Syslog Server IP Address: Enter the IP address to which the Wireless Management  
Software and managed access points send all SysLogs, if the SysLog option is enabled.  
Server Port Number: Enter the port number at which your Syslog server is configured to  
listen to requests. The default port number 514 is filled in when the syslog server is  
enabled.  
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2.  
Access Point Discovery  
2
You can discover supported NETGEAR access points on the LAN that can be managed by the  
Wireless Management Software. See Appendix A for a list of compatible access points. The  
Wireless Management Software supports Auto Discovery and IP Discovery.  
Auto Discovery: Use this feature if the Wireless Management Software and all access  
points on the LAN are in the same IP subnet. This is a Layer 2 discovery method.  
IP Discovery: If the Wireless Management Software and access points use different IP  
subnets, you can use IP discovery to find the access points for each subnet (one subnet  
at a time). This is a Layer 3 discovery method.  
Note: For discovery to work, each access point must have an IP address.  
If more than one access point has the same default IP address, then  
only one of them will be discovered with the model number at a time.  
You will have to add the access point to the managed list, change its  
IP address and then run discovery again to discover the next access  
point with the default IP.  
Auto Discovery  
Use Auto Discovery if the Wireless Management Software and all access points on the LAN  
are in the same IP subnet. The process of Auto Discovery depends on how your access  
points are configured.  
Chapter 2: Access Point Discovery  
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To use Auto Discovery:  
1. On the Configuration tab select Access Point Discovery.  
2. Click Search.  
The Wireless Management Software searches for NETGEAR products on the LAN  
based on MAC address, and identifies which are access points.  
The access points located through discovery are displayed on the screen.  
3. Check the discovery results to make sure that all the access points are listed. See  
IP Discovery  
Use IP discovery to discover access points in a different IP network than the Wireless  
Management Software. You can search for a maximum of 255 IP addresses at a time.  
NETGEAR recommends that you split up your search if you have access points in multiple  
networks.  
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To use IP Discovery:  
1. On the Configuration tab, select Access Point Discovery, and then click the IP Discovery  
tab:  
2. To specify the range of IP addresses, fill in the Start IP and End IP fields.  
3. Click Search.  
The Wireless Management Software locates devices on the LAN within the range of  
IP addresses that you specified.  
The devices are displayed in a list.  
4. Check the discovery results to make sure that all the access points are listed. See  
Discovery Results  
The effectiveness of the discovery feature depends in part on how the access points on your  
LAN are set up. If each access point is configured with a unique IP address and is running  
current firmware, then discovery is usually simple.  
If the discovery results are not what you expect, check the following:  
Access points already managed by the Wireless Management Software will not be shown  
in the discovery list.  
If two or more access points still have their factory default settings, their IP addresses  
might be identical. If this is the case, the Wireless Management Software discovers one  
of these access points. Add that access point, change its IP address, and then use  
discovery to find the next access point.  
If discovery results show unknown access points, it could be due to these reasons:  
-
The access point is running an older version of firmware. Upgrade firmware as  
needed so that discovery can locate the access point.  
-
The Wireless Management Software located a NETGEAR access point that is not  
supported or located a NETGEAR device that is not an access point.  
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For a list of compatible access point models and their supported firmware, see "Access  
If a new NETGEAR access point is not discovered, it might have a MAC address that the  
Wireless Management Software does not recognize, though this is not common. See  
Adding Access Points  
After the Wireless Management Software discovers the access points, add them so they can  
be managed by the Wireless Management Software.  
1. On the Access Point Discovery page, select the access point and click Add.  
2. Enter a password for the access point.  
12 | Chapter 2: Access Point Discovery  
     
3.  
Wireless Configuration  
3
You can configure centralized RF management and specify wireless settings in the Basic RF  
Management page. If you use access point groups, you can use the Advanced Wireless Settings  
page to customize wireless settings for each group.  
Configuring Centralized RF Management  
In this screen you can specify RF Management settings. RF Management, when run,  
optimizes the channel allocation for access points based on clients, user data traffic, and  
observed nearby RF environment of access points.  
1. On the Configuration tab, select Wireless:  
This field  
applies only  
to model  
WNDAP330.  
2. Specify the Centralized RF Management:  
Centralized RF Management: Selected by default, this Enable radio button allows  
the Wireless Management Software to allocate access point channels based on the  
access point performance in the local environment. For example, if an access point  
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experiences interference on a channel, the Wireless Management Software allocates  
a different channel to that access point.  
Client aware RF Management: If this Enable radio button is selected, the Wireless  
Management Software will not modify the channel for an access point with associated  
clients that would be impacted by the channel change. The Wireless Management  
Software will wait for the next scheduled channel allocation to adjust the channel.  
Usage-aware RF Management: If this Enable radio button is selected, the Wireless  
Management Software will not modify the channel for an access point that is  
switching more than 1Mbps of wireless data traffic.  
Run Channel Allocation at: Specify at what time of the day the channel allocation  
can modify access point RF configuration.  
Run Channel Allocation every: Specify weekly schedule for running channel  
allocation.  
Run Channel Allocation now: Press button to run channel allocation immediately.  
3. Enter the Custom RF Settings:  
Mode Settings: Specify the radio mode preference to set on the access points.  
Most access points are configured with the fastest mode by default. You can use the  
Mode Settings field to change this. For example, you could specify that an access  
point that supports wireless-n mode run in b/g mode in order to support clients that do  
not support wireless n technology.  
2.4GHz or 5GHz band selection: This selection affects only dual band access points  
that can only be set to one band at a time such as the WNDAP330. You can use this  
field to specify which band the access point should use.  
Note: For dual concurrent access points, both radio modes are enabled by  
default.  
4. Click Apply so that your changes take effect.  
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Advanced Wireless Settings  
This page is for advanced users who wish to control the WLAN settings of the access points  
manually. On the Configuration tab, select Wireless > Advanced.  
To manually specify the WLAN parameters for access points:  
1. Disable the Central RF Management feature from the Basic > RF Management page.  
This prevents the Wireless Management Software from automatically using RF  
management and adjusting power and channel settings for the access point group.  
3. Click Apply so that your changes take effect.  
Table 1. Advanced Wireless Settings  
Field or Setting  
Description  
Turn Radio On  
Disable this option to disable wireless access for the selected mode.  
To disable all wireless access through this access point, you must  
turn off the 802.11b/g/n, as well as the 802.11a/n radios.  
Wireless Mode  
Specify the wireless mode for the access points. Access points use  
the mode enabled for the group, unless the access point does not  
support the group setting. In that case, the access point uses the  
mode providing highest performance.  
• The default setting is 802.11ng mode.  
• If you specify 802.11b or 802.11bg mode, both 802.11n- and  
802.11g-compliant devices can be used with this access point.  
However, 802.11b devices will not be able to connect.  
• If you select this option and other settings on this screen are  
disabled, then you must select the Turn Radio On radio button to  
enable available options on this screen.  
Data Rate  
Select the available transmit data rates of the wireless network.  
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Table 1. Advanced Wireless Settings (Continued)  
Field or Setting  
Description  
Channel Width (11n only)  
Select the available channel width of the access point. A wider  
channel improves the performance, but some legacy devices can  
only operate on either 20 MHz or 40 MHz.  
Guard Interval (11n only)  
Output Power  
Select the value that protects transmissions from interference. A  
shorter guard interval improves performance, but some legacy  
devices can only operate with a long guard interval.  
Select the available transmit power of the access point. This option  
sets the transmit signal strength of the access point. Increasing the  
power improves performance, but if two or more access points are  
operating in the same area, on the same channel, it can cause  
interference.  
RTS Threshold (0-2347)  
The transmission mechanism (CSMA/CA or CSMA/CD) for the  
packets. If the packet size is equal to or less than this threshold, the  
data frame is transmitted immediately. However, if the packet size is  
larger than the specified value, the transmitting station must send out  
an Request to Send Threshold (RTS) packet to the receiving station,  
and must wait for the receiving station to send back a CTS (Clear to  
Send) packet before sending the actual packet data.  
Fragmentation Length  
(256-2346)  
The maximum packet size used for fragmentation of data packets.  
Packets larger than the specified fragmentation length are broken  
into smaller packets before being transmitted. The fragmentation  
length must be an even number.  
Beacon Interval (100-1000)  
The interval time for each beacon transmission that allows the  
access point to synchronize the wireless network.  
Aggregation Length  
(1024-65535, 11n only)  
The length that defines the maximum length of Aggregated MAC  
Protocol Data Unit (AMPDU) packets. Larger aggregation lengths  
might sometimes lead to better network performance. Aggregation is  
a mechanism used to achieve higher throughput.  
AMPDU (11n only)  
Allow the aggregation of several MAC frames into a single large  
frame to achieve higher throughput. Enabling AMPDU might  
sometimes lead to better network performance.  
RIFS Transmission (11n only)  
DTIM Interval (1 and 255)  
Preamble Type (11b/bg only)  
Enable Reduced Interframe Space (RIFS) option to allow  
transmission of successive frames at different transmit powers.  
Enabling RIFS might lead to better network performance.  
Enter the desired DTIM or the data beacon rate. This indicates the  
beacon delivery traffic indication message period in multiples of  
beacon intervals.  
A long transmit preamble might provide a more reliable connection or  
a slightly longer range. A short transmit preamble gives better  
performance. The Auto settings automatically handles both long and  
short preambles. The default is Auto.  
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Configuring QoS  
You can use QoS to enable WMM for both upstream traffic from the station to the access  
point and downstream traffic from the access point to the client station.You can use Basic  
QoS settings for access points or Advanced QoS Settings for access point groups These  
settings are applied only to NETGEAR ProSafe access points that support QoS.  
WMM defines the following four queues in decreasing order of priority:  
Voice: The highest priority queue with minimum delay, which makes it ideal for  
applications like VOIP and streaming media.  
Video: The second highest priority queue with low delay is given to this queue. Video  
applications are routed to this queue.  
Best Effort: The medium priority queue with medium delay is given to this queue. Most  
standard IP applications will use this queue.  
Background: Low priority queue with high throughput. Applications, such as FTP, which  
are not time-sensitive but require high throughput can use this queue.  
With WMM enabled, QoS prioritizes and coordinates wireless medium access. QoS settings  
on the access point control downstream traffic to client station (AP EDCA parameters) and  
the upstream traffic from the station to the access point (station EDCA parameters).  
Disabling WMM deactivates QoS control of station EDCA parameters on upstream traffic  
flowing from the station to the access point. With WMM disabled, you can still set some  
parameters on the downstream traffic from the access point to the client station (AP EDCA  
parameters).  
QoS for Managed Access Points  
To specify QoS settings:  
1. On the Configuration tab select Wireless > Basic > QoS Settings:  
2. Select either the 802.11b/bg/ng or 802.11a/na tab.  
3. Select the Enable Wi-Fi MultiMedia (WMM) and WMM Powersave options.  
4. Click Apply.  
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4.  
Security Configuration  
4
Security Profiles List  
Details of each wireless network are contained in a security profile. This page lets you edit up  
to eight Security Profiles per managed access point, depending on the number of profiles  
each access point supports. Separate profiles are applied to 802.11 b/bg/ng and 802.11a/na  
mode radios.  
To view or change security profiles:  
1. On the Configuration tab, select Security > Basic > Profile Settings.  
2. Each Security Profile specifies:  
Name: The unique Profile name, up to 31 alphanumeric characters.  
SSID: The SSID associated with this profile.  
VLAN: The VLAN ID associated with this security profile.  
Security: The security standard, such as WPA-PSK, associated with the profile.  
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3. Select the Enable checkbox to enable (or disable) the corresponding profile.  
4. To change the settings of a security profile, select the profile and click the Edit button.  
Editing a Security Profile  
This lets you change the Security Profile settings of the profile that you selected on the Profile  
Settings page.  
Name: A unique name for the Security Profile, up to 32 alphanumeric characters. Use  
meaningful names instead of the default names. The default profile names are Profile1,  
Profile2, and so on.  
Wireless Network Name (SSID): The name of the wireless network associated with this  
profile.  
Broadcast Wireless Network Name (SSID): Enabled by default. If set to Yes, the SSID  
is broadcast. If you disable broadcast of the SSID, only devices that have the correct  
SSID can connect to the access point.  
Network Authentication: The authentication type to be used. See Table 2 on page 20.  
Data Encryption: The data encryption type to be used. The options available for data  
encryption depend on the Network Authentication settings. See Table 2 on page 20.  
Wireless Client Security Separation: If enabled, the associated wireless clients will not  
be able to communicate with each other. This feature is intended for hot spots and other  
public access situations.  
VLAN: The default VLAN ID to be associated with this security profile. This must match  
the VLAN ID used by other network devices.  
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The following table shows the data encryption options based on network authentication.  
Table 2. Network Authentication and Data Encryption  
Network Authentication Data Encryption  
Description  
Open  
None  
WEP  
No encryption.  
Shared Key  
WEP  
64-bit WEP encryption uses 40/64  
bit encryption.  
128-bit WEP encryption uses  
104/128 bit encryption.  
152-bit WEP is a proprietary mode  
that will only work with other  
wireless devices that support this  
mode.  
Legacy 802.1x  
WPA with RADIUS  
WPA2 with RADIUS  
Select the WPA2 option only if all All require RADIUS configurations.  
clients support WPA2. If selected,  
you must use AES.  
WPA/WPA2 with RADIUS allows  
clients to use either WPA (with  
TKIP) or WPA2 (with AES). If  
selected, you must use TKIP +  
AES encryption.  
WPA-PSK  
WPA2-PSK  
TKIP or TKIP +AES and a WPA  
passphrase (network key)  
Standard encryption method for WPA2.  
WPA2-PSK  
AES and TKIP + AES  
Some clients might support AES with  
WPA, but this is not supported by this  
access point.  
WPA and WPA2  
TKIP + AES encryption and enter the  
WPA passphrase (network key).  
Clients can use either WPA (with TKIP)  
or WPA2 (with AES).  
WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK  
TKIP + AE  
Broadcast packets use TKIP. For  
unicast (point-to-point) transmissions,  
and WPA clients use TKIP, and WPA2  
clients use AES.  
Rogue Access Points  
Unidentified access points that use the SSID of a legitimate network can present a serious  
security threat. Rogue Access Point Detection is enabled by default on managed access  
points. To detect rogue access points, the Wireless Management Software or access point  
scans the wireless environment on all available channels, looking for unidentified access  
points.  
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1. On the Configuration tab select Security > Basic > Rogue Access Points:  
The Wireless Management Software can support up to 512 total rouge access points  
from the Known and Unknown lists combined.  
2. Enter the following information:  
Import AP List from a file. This field allows you to import a list of approved access  
points from a saved file. This file must be a simple text file with one MAC address per  
line.  
Merge. The current list is maintained and the access points in the imported list is  
added to the approved list and the Known AP List.  
Known AP List. Approved access points. To remove an access point from this list,  
select its checkbox and click Delete.  
Unknown AP List. Detected unidentified access points.  
3. Adjust the Known AP List.  
You can click Refresh to scan for other access points in the vicinity whose details are  
not in the Known AP List. If such access points are found, they are added to this list.  
To move an access point from the Unknown AP list to the Known AP list, select its  
checkbox and click Move.  
4. When you are finished making changes, click Apply.  
MAC Authentication  
This lets you block the network access privilege of the specified stations with the Wireless  
Management Software-managed access point. The settings are applied only to managed  
NETGEAR ProSafe access points.  
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To set up MAC Authentication:  
1. On the Configuration tab, select Security > Basic > MAC Authentication:  
A maximum of 512 MAC addresses can be supported.  
2. Select the Apply to all groups checkbox to apply the settings to all managed access points  
regardless of group.  
3. Select the Turn Access Control On checkbox if you want the access point to interact only  
with stations present in the Trusted Wireless Stations table. This provides an additional layer  
of security.  
4. Select one of the following databases:  
Local MAC Address Database: The access point uses the local MAC address table  
for access control.  
Remote MAC Address Database: The access point uses the MAC address table on  
an external Radius server on the LAN for access control.  
5. Make sure the correct wireless stations are in the Trusted Wireless Stations list. If you are  
using access control, only these stations are allowed access to the network through this  
access point.  
To remove a wireless station from this table, click Delete.  
To add a wireless station to this table, enter a MAC address and click Add.  
To move a wireless station from the Available Wireless Stations list to the Trusted  
Wireless Stations list, select it, and click Move.  
6. Click Apply so that your changes take effect.  
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Radius Server Settings  
If you are using a Radius server in your network for authentication, you must configure  
Radius settings. You can configure four types of servers:  
Primary Authentication Server: The main Radius server used for authentication.  
Secondary Authentication Server: A Secondary Authentication Server can be  
configured for use if the Primary Authentication Server fails or is unreachable.  
Primary Accounting Server: This server is used for accounting on the network.  
Secondary Accounting Server: A Secondary Accounting Server can be configured to  
use if the Primary Authentication Server fails or is unreachable.  
To configure Radius Server Settings:  
1. Click the Configuration tab and select Security > Basic > Radius Server Settings:  
The primary server is used by default. If it fails, the secondary server is used, if  
configured.  
2. Fill in the IP Address, Port, and Shared Secret fields for each Radius server.  
The IP Address, Port, and Shared Secret information is required to communicate with  
the Radius server.  
The Shared Secret is shared between the wireless access point and the Radius  
server while authenticating the wireless client.  
3. Enter the Authentication Settings.  
Re-authentication Time (Seconds): This is the time interval in seconds after which  
the supplicant will be authenticated again with the RADIUS server. The default  
interval is 3600 seconds.  
Update Global Key Every (Seconds): Enable this option to have the Global Key  
changed according to the time interval specified. If enabled, enter the desired time  
interval. The default is enable, and the default interval is 1800 Seconds.  
4. Click Apply so that your changes take effect.  
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Configuring Guest Access  
Guest access settings are useful when you are configuring a public access point. The guest  
access feature is not a captive portal. You can use guest access to:  
Redirect the user to a guest portal that you specify.  
Allow users to see a splash screen from the wi-fi provider or ask users to enter simple  
information such as an email address.  
To set up guest access:  
1. On the Configuration tab, select Guest Access > Config:  
2. Specify the following settings:  
Enable: Enable this if you want all HTTP (TCP, port 80) requests to be routed to the  
URL you specify in the next field.  
Redirect URL: Enter the URL of the Web server that you want all HTTP requests to  
be redirected to.  
3. Click Apply so that your changes take effect.  
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5.  
Monitoring  
5
Summary  
The Monitoring Summary screen displays a read-only summary of the current managed  
access point status, rogue access points detected, current wireless stations connected,  
Wireless Management Software system Information and network usage. Clicking on the  
individual windows will lead to a new screen showing greater detail.  
Access Point Summary  
This section displays the status of managed access points.  
Total Configured: Total number of managed access points.  
Down: Number of managed access points that cannot be pinged.  
Critical: The Wireless Management Software can ping these managed access points, but  
either cannot log in or has detected that the device is different from the one that was  
configured.  
Major: Number of managed access points whose configuration differs from the one set  
on the Wireless Management Software. This is most likely due to an access point running  
old firmware or because the Wireless Management Software did configuration changes  
when the access point was down or offline.  
Healthy: Managed access points running properly.  
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Wireless Stations  
This section displays the count of the wireless stations currently associated with managed  
access points.  
open: Wireless stations connected to managed access points using security profiles  
configured with open mode.  
wep: Wireless stations connected to managed access points using security profiles  
configured with WEP.  
wpa: Wireless stations connected to managed access points using security profiles  
configured with WPA security.  
wpa2: Wireless stations connected to managed access points using security profiles  
configured with WPA2 security.  
Access Point Status  
On the Monitoring tab select Summary > Advanced > Access Point Status:  
The access point status screen displays a read-only status summary of managed access  
points. Each access point entry specifies:  
Status: Access point connection and configuration status.  
Access Point: Netbios name of the access point.  
IP address: Management IP address used by the Wireless Management Software to  
connect to the access point.  
Model: The access point model.  
B/G channel: The b/g/n mode channel configured on the access point  
A channel: The a/n mode channel configured for the access point.  
B/G clients: The number of client stations connected to the access point using the  
2.4GHz channel  
A clients: The number of client stations connected to the access point using the 5GHz  
channel.  
Click Refresh to update the displayed status of access points. Click Details to display  
detailed status of specific managed access points.  
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Access Point Status Details  
From the Access Point Status screen,  
click the Details button to view this  
page.  
You can use the Refresh button to  
update statistics and information.  
The Access Point Status screen shows  
configuration settings, current wireless  
settings, current clients and current  
traffic statistics.  
Access Point Name: The access  
point’s NetBIOS name.  
Model: The managed access  
point’s model.  
Group: The configured group of  
managed access point.  
IP Address: The IP Address of  
managed access point.  
Ethernet MAC Address: The Ethernet MAC address of managed access point.  
2.4 GHz Channel: 2.4 GHz channel configured on access point; set to -NA- if not  
available.  
5 GHz Channel: 5 GHz channel configured on access point; set to -NA- if not available.  
Load Balancing: Load balancing enable/disable status for access point.  
Profile Information  
The section displays configured and enabled security profiles on the access point.  
Type: 802.11 b/bg/ng or 802.11 a/na mode for security profile.  
SSID: Wireless Network SSID.  
Security: The mode of security configured for the profile.  
VLAN: VLAN configured for the security profile.  
Client Information  
This section displays access point client station information.  
MAC: Wireless MAC of the access point client.  
SSID: Wireless SSID configured on the managed access point to which the client  
connects.  
Channel: The channel which client is using to connect.  
Mode: The mode (802.11 b/bg/ng or 802.11 a/na) for the security profile.  
Auth: The authentication mode (open, WEP, WPA, or WPA2) of security.  
Chapter 5: Monitoring  
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27  
   
ProSafe 5 AP Wireless Management Software WMS105  
Rogue Access Points  
This section displays rogue or neighboring access points detected by the managed access  
point.  
Rogue Access Points Reported.  
Rogue Access Points in same channel.  
Rogue Access Points in interfering channels.  
Client Status  
On the Monitoring tab select Summary > Advanced > Client Status:  
The Client Status list specifies detailed information about each client node currently  
associated with managed access points.  
Use the Refresh button to update the list of available wireless stations.  
Use the Details button to get details of a selected wireless station.  
Monitoring Rogue Access Points  
On the Monitoring tab you can view rogue or unknown access points.  
To display unknown access points, select Rogue Access Point> Unknown:  
You can click Refresh to update the access point list or click Export to save the list to a file.  
28 | Chapter 5: Monitoring  
     
ProSafe 5 AP Wireless Management Software WMS105  
To display the list of known rogue access points, on the Monitoring tab select Rogue Access  
Point > Known:.  
You can click Refresh to update the access point list or click Export to save the list to a file.  
Chapter 5: Monitoring  
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29  
6.  
Maintenance  
6
Changing Passwords  
This page lets you to change the access point administrator’s password.  
Note: If you changed the password and do not remember what it is,  
reinstall the Wireless Management System software.  
From the Maintenance tab select Password:  
To change the password:  
1. Type the old password. (The default password for the user name admin is password)  
2. Type a new password, then type it again in the Repeat New Password field to confirm it.  
3. Be sure to record it in a secure location.  
4. Click Apply so that your changes take effect or click Cancel to keep the current password.  
Chapter 6: Maintenance  
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30  
     
ProSafe 5 AP Wireless Management Software WMS105  
Reset  
The Reset screen lets you reboot managed access points.  
1. On the Maintenance tab select Reset > Access Points > Reboot:  
2. Select the Yes radio button.  
3. Click Apply to reboot the access points.  
SNMP  
You can use SNMP for the Wireless Management Software. Enable SNMP to allow the  
SNMP network management software, such as HP OpenView, to monitor the Wireless  
Management Software by using SNMPv1/v2 protocol.  
On the Maintenance tab, select Remote Management > System > SNMP:  
SNMP checkbox: Enable SNMP for the Wireless Management Software.  
Read-Only Community Name: The community string to allow the SNMP manager to  
read the WMS105 MIB objects.  
Read-Write Community Name: The community string to allow the SNMP manager to  
read and write the WMS105 MIB objects.  
Trap Community Name: The community name which is associated with the IP address  
to Receive Traps.  
IP address to Receive Traps: The IP address of the SNMP manager to receive traps  
sent from the Wireless Management Software.  
Chapter 6: Maintenance  
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ProSafe 5 AP Wireless Management Software WMS105  
Trap Port: The default port on which SNMP manager receives traps sent from the  
Wireless Management Software is 162.  
SNMP Manager IP: Restrict access to specified SNMP manager for doing SNMP v1/v2.  
Set this as 255.255.255.255 to allow any SNMP manager to access.  
When you are finished making changes, click Apply to save your settings.  
Remote Management  
You can enable SSH or Telnet to remotely log in to the controller. From the Maintenance tab  
select Remote Management > System > Remote Console:  
1. Select the radio button for SSH or Telnet:  
Secure Shell (SSH): If set to Enable, the Wireless Management Software allows  
remote access by using Secure Shell.  
Telnet: If set to Enable, the Wireless Management Software allows remote access by  
using Telnet.  
2. Click Apply to save your settings.  
Upgrading Access Point Firmware  
You can install a new firmware for the access points using the Access Point Upgrade page.  
WARNING!  
In some cases, such as a major upgrade, you might need to erase  
the configuration of your access point after upgrading it.  
See the Release Notes included with the software to find out if you need to reconfigure the  
access point. Reconfiguring access points already managed by the Wireless Management  
Software requires only the IP address to be set manually. The Wireless Management  
Software restores configuration for already managed access points running supported  
software version.  
32 | Chapter 6: Maintenance  
         
ProSafe 5 AP Wireless Management Software WMS105  
To upgrade the access point software:  
1. Go to the NETGEAR web site at www.NETGEAR.com customer service downloads  
section to get new versions of the access point software for supported models. After  
downloading an upgrade file, you might need to unzip (uncompress) it before upgrading  
the access point.  
WARNING!  
Once you click Upload do NOT interrupt the process of sending  
the software to the access point and restarting the access point.  
2. Download the new software for a specific access point model to upgrade.  
3. If not done automatically, uncompress the downloaded file. If included, read the Release  
Notes before continuing.  
4. On the Maintenance tab select Upgrade > Access Point Upgrade:  
5. Make sure that status of the managed access point to be upgraded is healthy. Select the  
managed access point model from the drop-down list; only models of managed access  
points are in this list.  
6. Click Browse.  
7. Locate and select the file you just downloaded.  
8. Click Upload to send the software to the access point.  
This loads the new software into the access point and causes the access point to restart.  
WARNING!  
Do not try to go online, turn off the access point, shut down the  
computer or the Wireless Management Software or do anything  
else to the access point or the Wireless Management Software  
until the access point finishes restarting! When the Test light  
turns off, wait a few more seconds before doing anything.  
9. Check the firmware version on the Upgrade page to verify that your access point now has  
the new software installed.  
Chapter 6: Maintenance  
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ProSafe 5 AP Wireless Management Software WMS105  
Backing up Configuration Settings  
Once you have the Wireless Management Software working properly, you should back up the  
information to have it available if something goes wrong. When you back up the settings, they  
are saved as a file on your computer.  
To back up the Wireless Management Software settings:  
1. On the Maintenance tab select Upgrade > Backup:  
2. Click the Backup button to create a backup file of the current settings:  
3. If you do not have your browser set up to save downloaded files automatically, then find a  
location where you want to save the file, and rename it if you like.  
If your browser is set up to save downloaded files automatically, the file is saved to your  
browser’s download location on the hard disk  
4. Click Backup.  
Restoring Settings from a File  
To restore settings from a backup file:  
1. On the Maintenance tab select Upgrade > Restore Settings:  
2. Click Browse.  
3. Locate and select the previously saved backup file, then click Apply.  
After restoring previous settings, the Wireless Management Software restarts. This takes  
about one minute.  
WARNING!  
Do not try to go online, turn off the Wireless Management  
Software, shut down the computer or do anything else until it  
finishes restarting! When the Test light turns off, wait a few more  
seconds before doing anything with the Wireless Management  
Software.  
34 | Chapter 6: Maintenance  
       
ProSafe 5 AP Wireless Management Software WMS105  
Downloading Wireless Management Software Logs  
Maintenance logs allow backup of the logs collected on the Wireless Management Software.  
In the event of a problem or failure, these logs along with backed up configuration settings  
help developers determine the cause.  
To download logs:  
1. On the Maintenance Tab, select Logs.  
2. Click Backup to create a backup file of the current logs.  
3. If you do not have your browser set up to save downloaded files automatically, then locate  
where you want to save the file, rename it if you like.  
If your browser is set up to save downloaded files automatically, the file will be saved to  
your browser’s download location on the hard disk  
4. Click Backup.  
Diagnostic Ping Window  
This window provides a way to verify ping connectivity from the Wireless Management  
Software to a managed access point. A managed access point can be selected from the  
Access Point drop-down list. The IP address of the access point to be pinged is displayed in  
the IP Address field.  
1. Specify the number of pings to be tried in the Ping Count field.  
2. Click Start to begin pinging the selected access point.  
3. When you are finished, click Cancel to stop the pinging.  
Chapter 6: Maintenance  
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ProSafe 5 AP Wireless Management Software WMS105  
Using Discovery OUI  
The Wireless Management Software discovers NETGEAR access points on the LAN from  
the OUI (Organizationally Unique Identifier) of their unique MAC addresses. The first half of  
the MAC address is the OUI. Usually, this happens without incident during discovery. OUIs  
are allocated to businesses that produce products with MAC addresses.  
Discovery OUI is not often needed, but is useful in the following circumstances:  
There is a new NETGEAR access point that has a new OUI.  
The WMS105 controller is running older firmware that does not recognize the new OUI.  
You do not want to update the WMS105 firmware.  
You can use Discovery OUI to register and discover the access point. Click the System tab  
and select Advanced > Discovery OUI:  
To change the settings:  
1. Click Add to add a OUI to the list or click Delete to remove it.  
Note: OUIs already allocated for NETGEAR devices are preconfigured  
and cannot be deleted  
2. Click the Apply button to save your changes.  
36 | Chapter 6: Maintenance  
     
A.  
Access Point Compatibility  
A
Access Point Supported Firmware Versions  
Access Point  
Model  
Supported  
Firmware  
Security Profiles Auto Channel  
per Radio  
WNDAP330  
WNDAP350  
WNAP210  
WG302v2  
WG103  
WNDAP330_V3.0.4  
WNDAP350_V2.0  
WNAP210_2.0.8  
5.2.3  
8
8
8
8
8
1
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
No  
WG103_2.0  
WN802Tv2  
WN802Tv2_V3.1.2  
Limited to channel distribution  
without neighbor map  
WG602v4  
V1.1.0  
1
Limited to channel distribution  
without neighbor map  
For the latest firmware images, visit the NETGEAR support web site:  
Appendix A: Access Point Compatibility  
|
37  
         
ProSafe 5 AP Wireless Management Software WMS105  
Software Features and Access Point Compatibility  
Access  
Point  
Model  
Topology VLAN  
Config  
Rogue  
Access  
Points  
Remote Guest  
Client  
Separation  
Syslog  
NTP  
(Time  
Server)  
Access  
SSH  
Access  
Telnet  
WNDAP330 Yes  
WNDAP350 Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
No  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
No  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
No  
No  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
No  
Yes  
Yes  
SNS  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
No  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
No  
Yes  
Yes  
No  
WNAP210  
WG302v2  
WG103  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
Yes  
No  
WN802Tv2 No  
WG602v4 No  
No  
No  
No  
No  
38 | Appendix A: Access Point Compatibility  
 
Index  
A
G
access point  
General settings 1-6  
WLAN settings 3-15  
guest access 4-24  
access point discovery 2-9  
IP discovery 2-10  
I
access points  
adding 2-12  
IP discovery 2-10  
discovery results 2-11  
passwords 2-12  
L
rogue 4-20, 5-26  
status 5-25, 5-26, 5-27  
supported firmware A-37  
logging in to the Wireless Management System 1-6  
logs, system 6-35  
access, guest 4-24  
adding access points 2-12  
authentication, MAC 4-21  
Auto Discovery 2-9  
M
MAC authentication 4-21  
monitoring  
access point summary 5-25  
client status 5-28  
B
backing up 6-34  
O
C
OUI discovery 6-36  
centralized RF management 3-13  
clients, status 5-28  
P
configuration settings  
backing up 6-34  
restoring 6-34  
passwords 1-6  
changing 6-30  
passwords for access points 2-12  
Ping 6-35  
D
diagnostics, Ping 6-35  
Q
discovering access points 2-9  
Auto Discovery 2-9  
IP discovery 2-10  
QoS for managed access points 3-17  
results 2-11  
Discovery OUI 6-36  
R
Radius server configuration 4-23  
F
rebooting 6-31  
firmware  
remote console 6-32  
access point supported A-37  
upgrading 6-32  
remote management 6-32  
resetting 6-31  
restoring settings from a file 6-34  
Index | 39  
 
New Templates  
RF management, centralized 3-13  
rogue access points 4-20, 5-26  
S
Security Profiles, editing 4-19  
SNMP 6-31  
status  
access point details 5-27  
access points 5-25, 5-26  
client 5-28  
wireless stations 5-26  
Syslog 1-8  
system logs 6-35  
T
time, setting 1-7  
U
upgrading firmware 6-32  
W
wireless  
access points 3-15  
centralized RF management 3-13  
wireless stations status 5-26  
40 | Index  

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