A device profile contains specific guest access (captive portal), DHCP, server and RADIUS server configurations supported by the controller, service platform, or access point's own internal resources. These can be overriden at the device level.
To override a profile's services configuration at the device level:
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A blue override icon (to the left of a parameter) defines the parameter as having an override applied. To remove an override go to the Basic Configuration section of the device and click Clear Overrides. This removes all overrides from the device.Captive portals are access policies that provide guests temporary and restrictive access to the managed network.
A captive portal is a browser-based authentication mechanism that forces unauthenticated users to a web page. Captive portals capture and re-direct a wireless user's web-browser session to a captive portal login page where the user must enter valid credentials to access the wireless network. Once logged into the captive portal, additional Acknowledgment, Agreement, Welcome, No Service and Fail customized pages enhance screen flow and user experience.
Select an existing captive portal policy or click the Create link to create a new configuration that can be applied to this profile. For more information, see Captive Portal Policies.
For legacy WiNG 802.11ac APs, running WiNG 7.2.1 OS, select an Application policy from those listed on the screen. To create a new policy click, Create and the define the Application policy settings. For information on creating Application policies, see Create an Application Policy.
For 802.11ax APs, running WiNG 7.1.2 or later version of the WiNG 7 OS, select a Purview Application policy. To create a new policy click, Create and the define the Application policy settings. For information on creating Purview Application policies, refer to the WiNG 7.2.1 CLI Reference guide.
Use this option to enforce RADIUS change of authorization (CoA) in the profile configuration context. when enforced, successfully authenticated users are reauthenticated and the attributes of their active AAA session changed based on the rules defined by the application policy.
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) allows hosts on an IP network to request and be assigned IP addresses as well as discover information about the network where they reside.
DHCPv6 is a networking protocol for configuring IPv6 hosts with IP addresses, IP prefixes, or other configuration attributes required on an IPv6 network. DHCP in IPv6 works in with IPv6 router discovery. With the proper RA flags, DHCPv6 works like DHCP for IPv4. The central difference is the way a device identifies itself if assigning addresses manually instead of selecting addresses dynamically from a pool.
Bonjour provides a general method to discover services on a local area network (LAN). It allows users to set up a network without any configuration. Services such as printers, scanners and file-sharing servers can be found using Bonjour. Bonjour only works within a single broadcast domain. However, with special DNS configuration, it can be extended to find services across broadcast domains.
From the Forwarding Policy drop-down menu, select the Bonjour Gateway forwarding policy.
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For information on creating location policies, see Location Policy.For information on enabling support for SES-imagotag‘s ESL tags on WiNG APs with USB interfaces, seeSetting the Imagotag Policy.
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For information on creating Netflow policy, see Netflow Policy Configuration.