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See matching posts in thread - I’ve got the WAPs connected to the controller on...
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Practice makes perfect - let's get together to walk through the Aruba Mobility Access Switches product in real-time to better understand all the configuration, monitoring and reporting options available. In this session you will be able to gather practical knowledge on how to use Mobility Access Switch features such as tunneling traffic to a Mobility Controller, enabling IP routing, zero-touch activation, role based authentication and more
Requirement: AOS Mobility Controller and ArubaOS Switch Solution: In the following example, OSPF routing is configured on an AOS mobility controller and an ArubaOS switch. Configuration: -- OSPF Router and Interface Mobility Controller Configuration -- (Standalone-VMC) ^[mynode] (config) #router ospf (Standalone-VMC) ^[mynode] (config) #router ospf area 0.0.0.0 (Standalone-VMC) ^[mynode] (config-submode)#interface vlan 108 (Standalone-VMC) ^[mynode] (config-submode)#ip ospf area 0.0.0.0 (Standalone-VMC) ^[mynode] (config-submode)#write memory -- OSPF Router and Interface Switch Configuration -- Core-Switch# show running-config router ospf Running configuration: router ospf area backbone redistribute static enable Core-Switch# show running-config vlan 108 Running configuration: vlan 108 name "Standalone-VMC" tagged 9 ip address 10.0.108.1 255.255.255.0 ip ospf 10.0.108.1 area backbone Verification -- OSPF Neighbor and Interface Mobility Controller Verification -- (Standalone-VMC) [mynode] #show ip ospf interface Vlan 108 is up, line protocol is up Internet Address 10.0.108.100, Mask 255.255.255.0, Area 0.0.0.0 Router ID 1.1.1.1, Network Type BROADCAST, Cost: 1 Transmit Delay is 1 sec, State DR, Priority 1 Designated Router id 1.1.1.1, Interface Address 10.0.108.100 Backup designated Router id 2.2.2.2, Interface Address 10.0.108.1 Timer intervals configured, Hello 10, Dead 40, Retransmit 5 Neighbor Count is 1 Tx Stat: Hellos 86 DbDescr 3 LsReq 1 LsUpdate 3 LsAck 4 Pkts 97 Tx Err: BufNull 0 BufCorrupt 0 NoMem 0 SendFail 0 Rx Stat: Hellos 77 DbDescr 2 LsReq 1 LsUpdate 5 LsAck 3 Pkts 88 LoopSend 0 RxVirtualLink 0 Rx Err: DisCd 0 BadVer 0 BadNet 0 BadArea 0 BadDstAdr 0 BadAuType 0 BadAuth 0 BadNeigh 0 BadPckType 0 BadVirtLink 0 IntfDown 0 MySource 0 Legal 0 (Standalone-VMC) [mynode] #show ip ospf neighbor OSPF Neighbor Table -- Neighbor ID Pri State Address Interface -- -- -- -- -- 2.2.2.2 1 FULL/BDR 10.0.108.1 Vlan 108 -- OSPF Neighbor and Interface Switch Verification -- Core-Switch# show ip ospf interface OSPF Interface Status IP Address Status Area ID State Auth-type Cost Pri Passive -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 10.0.108.1 enabled backbone BDR none 1 1 no Core-Switch# show ip ospf neighbor OSPF Neighbor Information Router ID Pri IP Address NbIfState State QLen Events Status -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 1.1.1.1 1 10.0.108.100 DR FULL 0 6 None -- Static Routes Configured on the Core-Switch -- Core-Switch(config)# show ip route static IP Route Entries Destination Gateway VLAN Type Sub-Type Metric Dist. -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 10.0.40.0/24 192.168.0.2 192 static 1 1 10.34.8.0/22 15.250.96.1 1000 static 1 1 -- OSPF Routes Received on the Standalone Mobility Controller -- (Standalone-VMC) [mynode] #show ip route Codes: C - connected, O - OSPF, R - RIP, S - static, B - Bgw peer uplink M - mgmt, U - route usable, * - candidate default, V - RAPNG VPN/Branch I - Ike-overlay, N - not redistributed Gateway of last resort is Imported from DHCP to network 0.0.0.0 at cost 10 Gateway of last resort is Imported from CELL to network 0.0.0.0 at cost 10 Gateway of last resort is Imported from PPPOE to network 0.0.0.0 at cost 10 Gateway of last resort is 10.0.108.1 to network 0.0.0.0 at cost 1 S* 0.0.0.0/0 [0/1] via 10.0.108.1* S 10.34.0.0/16 [0/1] via 15.250.96.1* O 10.34.8.0/22 [0/10] via 10.0.108.1* <===== O 10.0.40.0/24 [0/10] via 10.0.108.1* <===== C 10.0.108.0/24 is directly connected, VLAN108
Advanced Aruba Mobility Access Switch Workshop from Airheads Community Advanced Aruba Mobility Access Switch Workshop: Practice makes perfect - let's get together to walk through the Aruba Mobility Access Switches product in real-time to better understand all the configuration, monitoring and reporting options available. In this session you will be able to gather practical knowledge on how to use Mobility Access Switch features such as tunneling traffic to a Mobility Controller, enabling IP routing, zero-touch activation, role based authentication and more
Requirement: AOS Mobility Controller and ArubaOS Switch Solution: In the following example, IPV6 routing is configured on an AOS mobility controller and an ArubaOS switch
Configuring tunnel node on Mobility Access Switch (MAS) to Mobility Controller Summary Tunneled Node is one of the key elements which differentiates the Mobility Access Switch in the Enterprise access switch market
Answer- The tracing feature is important for debugging the sequence of events that occur inside a process or protocol, for example message processing, state machine transitions, configuration change events, or timer events. You can enable or disable trace options for various modules such as...
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