It is not clear that everything in your post can be configured together and it should be tested.
Very few devices are capable of WPA2 enterprise and not capable of 5ghz so configuring a 2.4ghz-specific SSID might not be worth doing.
There are some versions of the Intel Driver that do not work properly with high efficiency and need to be upgraded, so you might end up disabling high efficiency on 5ghz. Also, very few devices are capable of being configured with MFP or WPA3 on 5ghz, so that is not worth doing on 5ghz.
In the end, you might end up with a plain vanilla eduroam with WPA2-AES on 2.4 and 5ghz with high efficiency and 802.11r disabled (some clients have a problem with 802.11r). You would also have a seprate eduroam6 SSID on 6ghz.
What is "supported" usually takes a back seat to what works with uncontrolled clients. Having a good starting point and a lab to test all clients is the best approach.
------------------------------
Any opinions expressed here are solely my own and not necessarily that of Hewlett Packard Enterprise or Aruba Networks.
HPE Design and Deploy Guides:
https://community.arubanetworks.com/support/migrated-knowledge-base?attachments=&communitykey=dcc83c62-1a3a-4dd8-94dc-92968ea6fff1&pageindex=0&pagesize=12&search=&sort=most_recent&viewtype=card------------------------------
Original Message:
Sent: Nov 17, 2022 06:28 AM
From: Christian Kraus
Subject: Multiple network profiles (2.4, 5.0, 6 GHz): same ESSID
Dear Josef,
thank you very much for your reply.
In a perfect world,
- all of users would have current clients only with up to date firmwares and drivers
- all drivers would support WPA3 enterprise without any problems
- all drivers would never have any problems with 802.11k, 802.11w, 802.11r, ...
Unfortunately we have a campus, so in reality I need something else:
- a profile with SSID "eduroam" on 2.4 GHz,
- without High efficiency enabled, so older clients actually "see" the 802.11ax frames,
- without 802.11k, 802.11r and without 802.11w
- with WPA2-Enterprise
- a profile with SSID "eduroam" on 5.0 GHz,
- with High efficieny enabled, so more current clients could benefit from 802.11ax. I do not want to disable High Efficiency.
- still with WPA2-Enterprise as there are connectivity problems if WPA3 enterprise is enabled, unfortunately.
- without 802.11k, 802.11r and without 802.11w. Indeed, we see 802.11w problems with current Windows 10 clients.
- a profile with SSID "eduroam" on 6 GHz
- with High efficiency enabled
- with WPA3-Enterprise at is necessary for WiFi-6E to turn the 6 GHz radio on
- without 802.11k, 802.11r
So for me the question remains: Is this in general supported?