06-06-2008 05:45 AM - edited 07-03-2021 03:59 PM
Can some please clarify how Mobility groups work and when to use them. I have 2 data centers, each with a WLC, for centralized control. I just want to provide simple redundancy.
When should I use an Anchor group.
Thanks for your help.
06-06-2008 03:01 PM
To make it simple, any wlc's that will be a primary, secondary or tertiary WLC for lap's will need to be placed in the same mobility group. Now if you have a guest anchor controller for guest, then that will need to be added in the same mobility group. Bottom line, when users roam from AP to AP from WLC to another even getting tunneled (anchor) the WLC's need to be aware of the roaming and that is what mobility group does.
Anchor is if you want to tunnel users to a specific controller like in a guest wireless situation when the WLC is located in the DMZ. There are other reasons, but this is most likely why.
06-07-2008 03:50 AM
Berbee,
That helps a lot. What about subnet planning if the controllers are in different datacenters. I thought the virtual IP address on the WLC's had to be the same. How does that work?
Thx again...Patrick
06-07-2008 04:26 AM
Patrick,
Yes the Virtual Ip has to be the same on all controllers that are part of a mobility group. Since this is a communication between the wlc's, it is a tunnel that is formed and is forwarded and received through the management interface of the wlc's. So if you are allowing all traffic between the wlc's you should be fine. it is ports 16666 & 16667.
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide