Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] 802.11k and 802.11r in BYOD

2016-04-20 Thread Tony Skalski
>This says that OS X has supported 802.11r starting with Mavericks 10.9. Ha! I even double-checked on Apple's site to see if this had changed recently. I guess they're too busy to let people know (or they don't care so much about OS X these days). ajs On Wed, Apr 20, 2016 at 2:18 PM, Bruce Curti

Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] 802.11k and 802.11r in BYOD

2016-04-20 Thread Bruce Curtis
> On Apr 20, 2016, at 8:42 AM, Tony Skalski wrote: > > > We've had 802.11k enabled for a few years. The only issue we've had was with > some Intel wireless chipsets. To work around this we disabled the Quiet > Information Element which appears in beacons and probes as part of 802.11k. > If y

Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] 802.11k and 802.11r in BYOD

2016-04-20 Thread Tony Skalski
We've had 802.11k enabled for a few years. The only issue we've had was with some Intel wireless chipsets. To work around this we disabled the Quiet Information Element which appears in beacons and probes as part of 802.11k. If you search for Intel and Quiet Information Element you can find lots mo

Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] 802.11k and 802.11r

2014-11-06 Thread Francisco J. Medina Jimenez
Hi, In theory, with AireOS 8.0 you can mix legacy clients with 802.11r capable clients: "Support is added for the 802.11r mixed mode. You do not have to create a separate WLAN for 802.11r support. You can specify the non-802.11r clients to associate with an SSID that is enabled with 802.11r.

Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] 802.11k and 802.11r

2014-11-06 Thread Mike King
Tony Any client that does not have an *understanding* of 802.11r, will not be able to associate. I think the 802.11 header format changed, and the client will not understand the association packet anymore. You'll have to run a separate SSiD for 802.11r to mitigate any compatibility issues. Mik