User Guide

Table Of Contents
Bridge GUI Guide: Introduction
7
Create a bridging BSS on (one of) the radio(s) with:
NOTE: A BSSs
bridging setting
also determines its FP
Mesh function. With
Wireless Bridge Enabled,
BSSs function as Core
interfaces; with
Wireless
Bridge
Disabled they
function as Access inter-
faces (Section 3.3.4.3).
an SSID in common with the bridging BSSs on the rest
of the MPs
a Wireless Bridge setting of Enabled
on Configure -> Radio Settings -> ADD BSS
If the current MP will connect NMPs to the network, create
an Access BSS on (one of) the radio(s) with:
an SSID for NMP devices to connect to
a Wireless Bridge setting of Disabled
on Configure -> Radio Settings -> ADD BSS
The Bridge will force you to change the password of the
preconfigured administrator account when you log in for the
first time. The Bridge is not fully secure until you have also
changed passwords for the two remaining preconfigured
administrative accounts and the network Access ID from their
defaults.
Including the RFC-4193 IPv6 address FP Mesh automatically
generates, each MP can have up to sixteen IPv6 addresses. It
always has a link-local address and can always have a
manually configured IPv6 global address. If
IPv6 Auto
Addressing is Enabled (the default) and an IPv6 router is
present on the network to provide routing prefixes, additional
IPv6 addresses will be present. Each MP can also have a
manually configured IPv4 address. Refer to Section 3.4.2 for
more on IP addressing on the Bridge.
To provide virtually configuration-free DHCP and DNS services
for Non-Mesh Points on the FP Mesh network, enable one (or a
few) of the DHCP servers internal to the network MPs and
leave all of their internal DNS servers enabled (the default).
The Bridge’s DNS service is used in common by IPv4 and IPv6
networks, while the Bridge provides separate, dedicated IPv4
and IPv6 DHCP servers. Refer to Section 3.6 for more on the
Bridge’s internal DHCP and DNS servers.
1.4.1.2 Network-Attached FastPath Mesh Networks
One or more of the Mesh Points in a FastPath Mesh network
can connect the mesh to a conventional hierarchical LAN or
WAN (wide are network). An MP that serves as a bridge
between the FP Mesh network and a hierarchical network is a
Mesh Border Gateway (MBG).
The MBG interface that connects to the LAN or WAN must be
configured as an
Access interface, the MBG’s default gateway
must be a router on the hierarchical network, and route(s) to
the FastPath Mesh's subnet must be configured on the network
router(s). If IPv6 network routers are configured to provide an
IPv6 global prefix, the MBG will forward it to every node in the
network (MPs and NMPs).