User's Manual

17-6
Cisco 3200 Series Wireless MIC Software Configuration Guide
OL-7734-02
Chapter 17 Wireless Device Troubleshooting
Reloading the Image
Step 8 When IOS software is loaded, you can use the del privileged EXEC command to delete the config.old
file from Flash.
ap# del flash:config.old
Delete filename [config.old]
Delete flash:config.old [confirm]
ap#
Reloading the Image
If the wireless device has a firmware failure, you must reload the image file using the Web browser
interface. You can use the browser interface if the wireless device firmware is still fully operational and
you want to upgrade the firmware image.
If the wireless device experiences a firmware failure or a corrupt firmware image, indicated by three red
LED indicators, you must reload the image from a connected TFTP server.
Note This process resets all configuration settings to factory defaults, including passwords, WEP keys, the
wireless device IP address, and SSIDs.
Using the Web Browser Interface
You can also use the Web browser interface to reload the wireless device image file. The Web broswer
interface supports loading the image file using HTTP or TFTP interfaces.
Note Your wireless device configuration does not change when you use the browser to reload the
image file.
Browser HTTP Interface
The HTTP interface enables you to browse to the wireless device image file on your PC and download
the image to the wireless device. Follow the instructions below to use the HTTP interface:
Step 1 Open your Internet browser. You must use Microsoft Internet Explorer (version 5.x or later) or Netscape
Navigator (version 4.x).
Step 2 Enter the wireless device IP address in the browser address line and press Enter. An Enter Network
Password screen appears.
Step 3 Enter your username in the User Name field.
Step 4 Enter the wireless device password in the Password field and press Enter. The Summary Status page
appears.
Step 5 Click the System Software tab and then click Software Upgrade. The HTTP Upgrade screen appears.
Step 6 Click Browse to find the image file on your PC.