User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Chapter 1 Introduction
 - Chapter 2 Mesh Point CLI and Administrative Access
 - Chapter 3 Networking and Radio Configuration
- 3.1 Network Interfaces
 - 3.2 Network Bridging
- 3.2.1 Bridging Configuration
 - 3.2.2 FastPath Mesh Bridging
 - 3.2.3 Fine-tuning FastPath Mesh Network Performance
- 3.2.3.1 Selecting the FastPath Mesh Multicast Transmit Mode
 - 3.2.3.2 Setting the FastPath Mesh Packet Interval
 - 3.2.3.3 Setting the FastPath Mesh Transmit Control Level
 - 3.2.3.4 Setting Multicast Video Clamping Thresholds
 - 3.2.3.5 Setting Mesh Routing Reactivity
 - 3.2.3.6 Setting Mesh Packet Time To Live
 - 3.2.3.7 Viewing Current Mesh Performance Parameters
 - 3.2.3.8 Frame Processor Parameters
 
 - 3.2.4 STP Bridging
 
 - 3.3 Global Radio Settings
 - 3.4 Individual Radio Settings
- 3.4.1 Radio Band, Short Preamble, Guard Interval
 - 3.4.2 Channel Selection
 - 3.4.3 Distance, Beacon Interval, Noise Immunity
 - 3.4.4 Network Type, Antenna Gain, Tx Power
 - 3.4.5 MIMO
 - 3.4.6 STBC
 - 3.4.7 Channel Lock and Other Channel Selection Features
 - 3.4.8 DFS, TDWR, and Channel Exclusion
 - 3.4.9 Radio BSS Settings
- 3.4.9.1 BSS Radio, BSS Name and SSID
 - 3.4.9.2 WDS Bridging or AP Infrastructure Configuration
 - 3.4.9.3 BSS State, SSID Advertising and Drop Probe Requests
 - 3.4.9.4 BSS STA Idle Timeout and 802.11g-Only Settings
 - 3.4.9.5 BSS Unicast Transmission Rate Settings
 - 3.4.9.6 BSS WMM QoS Setting
 - 3.4.9.7 BSS Fragmentation and RTS Thresholds
 - 3.4.9.8 BSS DTIM Beacon Countdown
 - 3.4.9.9 BSS VLANs Settings
 - 3.4.9.10 BSS Fortress Security Zone
 - 3.4.9.11 FastPath Mesh BSS Cost Offset
 - 3.4.9.12 BSS Multicast Settings
 - 3.4.9.13 Bridging MTU and Beacon Encryption
 - 3.4.9.14 BSS Description
 - 3.4.9.15 BSS Wi-Fi Security Configuration
 
 - 3.4.10 Antenna Tracking / Rate Monitoring
 - 3.4.11 ES210 Mesh Point STA Settings and Operation
- 3.4.11.1 STA Radio, Name, SSID and SSID Roaming
 - 3.4.11.2 STA State
 - 3.4.11.3 STA Unicast Transmission Rate Settings
 - 3.4.11.4 STA Background Scanning
 - 3.4.11.5 STA WMM QoS Setting
 - 3.4.11.6 STA Fragmentation and RTS Thresholds
 - 3.4.11.7 STA Multicast Rate
 - 3.4.11.8 STA Description
 - 3.4.11.9 STA Wi-Fi Security Configuration
 - 3.4.11.10 Editing or Deleting a STA Interface Connection
 - 3.4.11.11 Establishing a STA Interface Connection
 - 3.4.11.12 ES210 Station Access Control Lists
 
 
 - 3.5 Local Area Network Configuration
 - 3.6 Time and Location Configuration
 - 3.7 GPS and Location Configuration
 - 3.8 DHCP and DNS Services
 - 3.9 Ethernet Interfaces
 - 3.10 Quality of Service
 - 3.11 VLANs Implementation
 - 3.12 ES210 Mesh Point Serial Port Settings
 - 3.13 Mesh Viewer Protocol Settings
 
 - Chapter 4 Network Security, Authentication and Auditing
- 4.1 Fortress Security Settings
- 4.1.1 Operating Mode
 - 4.1.2 FIPS Settings
 - 4.1.3 MSP Encryption Algorithm
 - 4.1.4 Encrypted Data Compression
 - 4.1.5 MSP Key Establishment
 - 4.1.6 MSP Re-Key Interval
 - 4.1.7 Key Beacon Interval
 - 4.1.8 Fortress Legacy Devices
 - 4.1.9 Encrypted Zone Cleartext Traffic
 - 4.1.10 Encrypted Zone Management Settings
 - 4.1.11 Authorized Wireless Client Management Settings
 - 4.1.12 Turning Mesh Point GUI Access Off and On
 - 4.1.13 SSH Access to the Mesh Point CLI
 - 4.1.14 Blackout Mode
 - 4.1.15 Allow Cached Credentials
 - 4.1.16 Fortress Access ID
 
 - 4.2 Digital Certificates
 - 4.3 Access Control Entries
 - 4.4 Internet Protocol Security
 - 4.5 Authentication and Timeouts
- 4.5.1 Authentication Servers
 - 4.5.2 Internal Authentication Server
- 4.5.2.1 Basic Internal Authentication Server Settings
 - 4.5.2.2 Certificate Authority Settings
 - 4.5.2.3 Global User and Device Authentication Settings
 - 4.5.2.4 Local 802.1X Authentication Settings
 - 4.5.2.5 OCSP Authentication Server Settings
 - 4.5.2.6 OCSP Cache Settings and Management
 - 4.5.2.7 Internal Authentication Server Access Control Lists
 
 - 4.5.3 User Authentication
 - 4.5.4 Client Device Authentication
 - 4.5.5 Session Idle Timeouts
 
 - 4.6 ACLs and Cleartext Devices
 - 4.7 Remote Audit Logging
 - 4.8 Wireless Schedules
 
 - 4.1 Fortress Security Settings
 - Chapter 5 System Options, Maintenance and Licensing
 - Chapter 6 System and Network Monitoring
 - Index
 - Glossary
 
Fortress ES-Series CLI Guide: Networking and Radio Configuration
34
 Multicast transmit mode
 Packet interval
 Transmit control
 Clamping of multicast video
 Mesh routing reactivity
 Packet time to live value
 Frame processor mode
3.2.3.1 Selecting the FastPath Mesh Multicast Transmit Mode
NOTE: Do not
change the Multi-
cast Transmit Mode
unless you are working
with Fortress technical
support to troubleshoot
a problem.
The multicast transmit mode determines how multicast packets 
are transmitted over radio interfaces. Specify the multicast 
transmit mode with the 
set command: 
# set mesh -multicastmode auto|reliable|efficient 
When set to 
auto
, the multicast mode is determined 
automatically. When there is more than one neighbor with an 
interested listener behind it, packets are transmitted in 
efficient
 mode. Otherwise, 
reliable
 mode is used. 
Auto
 is 
the default multicast mode.
When the multicast mode is 
reliable
, multicast packets are 
transmitted reliably (that is, multicast packets are transmitted 
with the reliability associated with the transmission of 802.11 
unicast frames). Each multicast packet is duplicated over every 
MRP (Mesh Radio Port) connection. The bandwidth consumed 
by multicast packets in this mode is at least ‘n’ times the 
bandwidth consumed in the ‘efficient’ mode, where n is the 
number of MRP connections.
When multicast mode is 
efficient
, multicast packets are 
transmitted on a best-effort basis (that is, multicast packets are 
transmitted with the reliability associated with the transmission 
of 802.11 multicast frames). A single copy of each multicast 
packet is placed on the air. 
3.2.3.2 Setting the FastPath Mesh Packet Interval
NOTE: Do not
change the Packet
Interval unless you are
working with Fortress
technical support to
troubleshoot a problem.
The FP Mesh packet interval is the time interval in milliseconds 
between sending mesh routing protocol control packets. The 
default is 
auto
. Specify a packet interval in milliseconds with 
the 
set mesh command:
# set mesh -packetinterval auto|<
100..4000>
In an FP Mesh network with 10 or fewer neighbors, the mesh 
responds more quickly to changes with a smaller packet 
interval. In an FP Mesh network with more than 20 neighbors, 
small packet intervals are impractical due to performance 
restrictions. An interval of 
600 ms is practical for a mesh 
network where a node may have as many as 39 neighbors.










