Intermec 6710 User Manual

Page 103

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SECTION 4

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Configuration

6710 Access Point User’s Guide 4-37

Setting

Description

Disabled

(default)

No special action is taken when an ARP is

received. Multicast ARP requests are

subject to the Ethernet filters and the flood-

ing settings. The Disabled setting is useful

when a system has no IP radio traffic or has

stations that do not register IP addresses.

No Flooding

ARP server converts ARPs from multicast to

the unicast address of the destination sta-

tion. No Flooding is the most efficient con-

figuration, since multicast ARPs are never

forwarded. Use of this setting requires sta-

tions to register IP addresses with the access

point. Use No Flooding or Disabled if wire-

less stations do not need to respond to ARPs.

Delay Flooding

ARP server converts ARPs from multicast to

the unicast address of the destination sta-

tion. If the destination address is unknown,

the initial ARP request is not forwarded. If

the requesting device retries the ARP

request, second and subsequent ARP re-

quests are forwarded. ARP requests from

wireless stations are flooded inbound.
Delay Flooding is the preferred option when

wireless stations should respond to ARPs,

but are not capable of registering their IP

addresses with the access point.

Normal Flooding ARP server converts ARPs from multicast to

the unicast address of destination station. If

the destination address is unknown, the

ARP request is flooded according to the mul-

ticast flood level settings. ARP requests

from wireless stations are flooded inbound.
Normal Flooding is useful when wireless

stations need to respond to ARP requests,

but are not capable of registering IP address-

es with the access point. Normal Flooding

sends more unnecessary ARPs over wireless

links then delay flooding. Normal Flooding

does not introduce occasional delays in ARP

responses as Delay Flooding does.

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