That was exactly it. I was on the phone with TAC when your response
through and they gave me the same answer. Thanks for your quick
response.

 

With the data rates enabled, it connected immediately.

 

Thanks,

Jeremy L. Shoemaker
Systems Administrator
Dakota Wesleyan University
605-995-2147

[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 

Strategic - WOO - Maximizer - Achiever - Learner

 

From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Landon Fisher
Sent: Thursday, June 24, 2010 9:55 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Wii, NAC, and WLC

 

I have only seen Wii wireless connectivity problems similar to what you
have described when the low wireless data rates have been disabled (i.e.
1,2 Mbps). Could that be the case? That may not solve your problem, but
that will at least give you something else to look at. ;)

 

Landon Fisher

Network Services Specialist

Angelo State University

 

From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jeremy Shoemaker
Sent: Thursday, June 24, 2010 9:43 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [CLEANACCESS] Wii, NAC, and WLC

 

I am not entirely sure this is a NAC problem, but I was wondering if
anyone has seen this. 

 

We are having a problem getting a Wii console connected to our wireless
network. The connection test fails every time with one of the following
errors: 51330, 51331, 51332. The WLC never reports that the console gets
past the START or probing stage. The console does not get an address
from DHCP and does not communicate if it is given a static IP. We have
tried different SSIDs (on managed and non-managed vlans) with the same
result. Both SSIDs are open networks with MAC filtering on one and the
NAC behind the other. We have also tried moving to a different building
with a different model of AP.

 

We believe and are working on confirming that Wii consoles have been
able to connect to our wireless network in the past. No recent changes
have been made to the NAC or to the wireless network. The console in
question was tested with a home wireless network and with our wired
network and functioned correctly in both cases. It is running software
version 4.3U. We are not having issues with any other wireless clients
or game systems.

 

We are using a Cisco WLC 4410 with Aironet 1140, 1142, and 1240 APs for
wireless. We are using Cisco NAC 4.7.2 in band for the wireless network
using the in band server as the DHCP for the managed subnet. There is an
"Allow" filter in the NAC for the console.

 

Thanks,

Jeremy L. Shoemaker
Systems Administrator
Dakota Wesleyan University
605-995-2147

[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 

Strategic - WOO - Maximizer - Achiever - Learner

 

Reply via email to