Rf domain overrides – Brocade Mobility Access Point System Reference Guide (Supporting software release 5.5.0.0 and later) User Manual

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Brocade Mobility Access Point System Reference Guide

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Select the following Additional Credentials required for the generation of the CSR:

Select the Generate CSR button at the bottom of the Create CSR screen to generate the CSR.

RF Domain Overrides

Overriding a Device Configuration

Use RF Domain Overrides to define settings overriding a target device’s original RF Domain
configuration.

An RF Domain allows an administrator to assign configuration data to multiple access points (of the
same model) deployed in a common coverage area (floor, building or site). In such instances,
there’s many configuration attributes these devices share as their general client support roles are
quite similar. However, device configurations may need periodic refinement from their original RF
Domain administered design. Unlike a RFS series controller, an access point supports a single RF
domain. An access point RF Domain cannot be used on a different model access point.

To define a device’s RF Domain override configuration:

Select the Configuration tab from the Web UI.

Select Devices from the Configuration tab.

Select Device Overrides.

Select a target device from the device browser in the lower, left-hand, side of the UI.

Select RF Domain Overrides.

City (L)

Enter a City to represent the city name used in the CSR. This is a required field.

Organization (O)

Define an Organization for the organization used in the CSR. This is a required field.

Organizational Unit (OU)

Enter an Organizational Unit for the name of the organization unit used in the CSR. This is a
required field.

Common Name (CN)

If there’s a Common Name (IP address) for the organizational unit issuing the certificate, enter it
here.

Email Address

Provide an E-mail address used as the contact address for issues relating to this CSR.

Domain Name)

Enter a FQDN as an unambiguous domain name that specifies the node's position in the DNS tree
hierarchy. To distinguish an FQDN from a regular domain name, a trailing period is added. For
example, somehost.example.com. An FQDN differs from a regular domain name by its
absoluteness, since a suffix is not added.

IP Address

Specify the IP address used as the destination for certificate requests.

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