
All contents are Copyright © 1992–2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public Information. Page 2 of 10
CiscoWorks WLSE Express also provides an integrated and embedded user Authentication and Authorization server, making it an ideal solution
for remote branch-office deployments with limited WAN bandwidth. It supports popular Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) types
including Cisco LEAP, Protected EAP (PEAP), EAP Flexible Authentication via Secure Tunneling (EAP-FAST), and EAP- Transport Layer
Security (EAP-TLS). It supports up to 500 users on the standard CiscoWorks WLSE Express, or up to 1000 users on the license-upgraded
version of CiscoWorks WLSE Express, which supports 100 Cisco Aironet access points.
CiscoWorks WLSE also supports Voice over WLANs by enabling the deployment of voice with call admission control. This enables access
points to prioritize/optimize WLAN bandwidth for voice traffic. It also monitors the health of the voice network, including calls with degraded
QoS and jitter/loss.
Figure 1. CiscoWorks WLSE Express Location View: Rouge Access Point Location
CiscoWorks WLSE Express provides dynamic RF management through self-healing, which adjusts a Cisco Aironet access point’s cell coverage
area automatically when an adjacent access point becomes disabled or fails. It also helps optimize performance by detecting and locating RF
interference while proactively monitoring usage and faults.
CiscoWorks WLSE Express’ deployment wizard enables efficient access point deployment through contextual configurations that are
automatically applied to access points as they are plugged into the network. Specific access-point configurations can be applied depending on
flexible deployment criteria. This reduces access-point deployment times, increases security and configuration consistency, while reducing
user-caused configuration errors.
CiscoWorks WLSE Express may be transparently integrated with other network management systems, operational support systems, and
CiscoWorks applications through syslog messages, Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) traps, and an Extensible Markup Language
(XML) interface. Its secure HTML-based user interface provides access anywhere, including through firewalls.
Kommentare zu diesen Handbüchern