Ad-hoc, Authentication, Ad-hoc -6 – Symbol Technologies VC5090 User Manual

Page 82: Authentication -6

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4 - 6

VC5000 Vehicle Computer Product Reference Guide

Tap

Next

. If

Ad-Hoc

mode was selected the

Ad-Hoc

dialog box displays. If

Infrastructure

mode was selected the

Authentication

dialog box displays. See Authentication on page 4-6 for instruction on setting up authentication.

Ad-Hoc

Use the

Ad-Hoc

dialog box to select the required information to control

Ad-Hoc

mode. This dialog box does not

appear if you selected

Infrastructure

mode. To select Ad-Hoc mode:

1.

Select a channel number from the

Channel

drop-down list. The default is

Channel 1 (2412 MHz)

.

Figure 4-5

Ad-Hoc Settings Dialog Box

2.

Tap

Next

. The

Encryption

dialog box displays. See Encryption on page 4-15 for encryption options.

Authentication

Use the

Authentication

dialog box to configure authentication. If you selected

Ad-Hoc

mode, you can only

select

None

because Ad-Hoc authentication is not supported.

Select an authentication type from the drop-down list and tap

Next

. Selecting

PEAP

or

TTLS

displays the

Tunneled

dialog box. Selecting

None

,

EAP TLS

, or

LEAP

displays the

Encryption

dialog box. See Encryption on

page 4-15

for encryption options.

Table 4-6

lists the available authentication options.

Country

(Continued)

For a single profile that can be used in multiple countries, but with infrastructure that does

not support 802.11d, set the profile country to

Allow Any Country

, and de-select (uncheck)

Enable 802.11d

. In this case, the

Options

>

Regulatory

>

Country

setting must always be

set to the country the device is currently in. This configuration option is the most efficient

and may be chosen for use with any infrastructure. However, the

Options

>

Regulatory

>

Country

setting must be manually changed when a new country is entered.

Note that using a single profile in multiple countries implies that there is a common ESSID

to connect to in each country. This is less likely than having unique ESSIDs in each

country, this requires unique profiles for each country.

For additional efficiency when using multiple profiles that can be used in multiple

countries, the country setting for each profile can be set to a specific country. If the current

country (found via 802.11d or set by

Options

>

Regulatory

>

Country

when 802.11d is

disabled) does not match the country set in a given profile, then that profile is disabled.

This can make profile roaming occur faster. For example, if two profiles are created and

configured for Japan, and two more profiles are created and configured for USA, then

when in Japan only the first two profiles are active, and when in USA only the last two are

active. If they had all been configured for

Allow Any Country

, then all four would always

be active, making profile roaming less efficient.

Table 4-5

Operating Mode Fields (Continued)

Field

Description

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