06-09-2010 10:20 AM - edited 07-03-2021 06:52 PM
We upgraded our Cisco wireless controller recently, and a few of our Access Points became corrupted. They are now
restarting themselves in a continuous loop. I have tried pushing the "mode" button while powering up. A blue and green light
come on and then the system does a restart again. There were two recommendations that I found online - reset to default settings
or force the system to reboot to ip 10.0.0.1 and have a TFTP server available on 10.0.0.2. Neither option is working and the units
continue to reboot. I can't break into the reboot using the ESC key. The reboot message indicates there are some files on flash memory
and it's attempting to load the flash, but the actual "flash" message is cut off (ex. loading flash:AP12) and then the reboot occurs. Sounds like
corruption occurred but I can't seem to clear the files and start over, Any ideas?
06-09-2010 03:53 PM
force the system to reboot to ip 10.0.0.1 and have a TFTP server available on 10.0.0.2
When doing this proceedure:
1. Did you power off the AP, hold the "Mode" button and power up the AP?
2. Did you rename the IOS file correctly?
06-09-2010 04:03 PM
Yes - I did press and hold the "mode" button while powering on. I can't
rename the IOS file because I cannot break the reboot cycle (even using the console port). I tried breaking the restart process by pressing the ESC key from the console port - but I cannot get a prompt to issue any commands.
06-09-2010 04:06 PM
Yes - the name of the IOS file is: c1200-k9w7-tar.default The TFTP server does not even indicate that a file transfer is starting.
06-09-2010 09:10 PM
What TFTP client are you using?
Is the TFTP software pointing to the same location at to your renamed file?
06-09-2010 09:34 PM
I am using the TFTP software that Cisco used to provide. The TFTP server is pointed to c:\tftp - which is where the file resides. The TFTP server gives no indication that there's even an attempt to download a file.
06-09-2010 09:49 PM
Try using TFTP32.
06-10-2010 10:57 AM
I downloaded and tried the TFTP software you recommended, but got the same result. The AP does not appear to be even attempting to communicate with the TFTP server. I do see a partial messages indicating that an IP/Recovery of some sort is occurring, but the message is truncated.
06-10-2010 11:11 AM
OK - I deserve the BOZO of the month award. For testing purposes, I had taken the AP off the wall and moved it into our server room. I connected it directly to a switch with inline power. The AP powers up, but does not function well without the use of the special power supplies that come with it. Thanks for all of your suggestions.
06-10-2010 03:19 PM
Don't kick yourself. You found the issue by yourself and you solved it. Now that means alot!
If you want to know who deserve the award for being an idi0t, then it should be MicroS0ft. Read the following post:
https://supportforums.cisco.com/thread/2017992
Have a nice weekend.
06-10-2010 04:27 PM
Right! - who needs an apr cache? I guess we can do all of our networking with mac addresses!
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