I have a Cisco Aironet 1100 that whenever I connect to the network, the network is brought to it's knees with apparent broadcast packets.
I connected the AP to one end of a Fluke NetTool and the other end to the switch. The activity lights on the side of the tool that the switch was plugged into was solid green. The side plugged into the Aironet showed what I considered to be normal activity. The NetTool reported FCS errors on the side of the Cisco switch.
So I took the AP and plugged it into a spare, unconfigured switch that we had. Same results. I swapped the cables on the NetTool and the problem followed the switchport. Same FCS errors. I swapped the AP with a laptop and the errors ceased.
I tried this both with my current config on the AP and also with the AP reset to factory defaults. Same results both times.
I have yet to see a bad Aironet AP. But it sounds like may be the ethernet interface is bad? I have tried different cables, etc and get the same results.
If the AP is bad, why do I see FCS errors and steady data on the switch side of the equation? And insight or advice is greatly appreciated!
Tony
I connected the AP to one end of a Fluke NetTool and the other end to the switch. The activity lights on the side of the tool that the switch was plugged into was solid green. The side plugged into the Aironet showed what I considered to be normal activity. The NetTool reported FCS errors on the side of the Cisco switch.
So I took the AP and plugged it into a spare, unconfigured switch that we had. Same results. I swapped the cables on the NetTool and the problem followed the switchport. Same FCS errors. I swapped the AP with a laptop and the errors ceased.
I tried this both with my current config on the AP and also with the AP reset to factory defaults. Same results both times.
I have yet to see a bad Aironet AP. But it sounds like may be the ethernet interface is bad? I have tried different cables, etc and get the same results.
If the AP is bad, why do I see FCS errors and steady data on the switch side of the equation? And insight or advice is greatly appreciated!
Tony