Management
Ensuring that you have a robust management system in place is
as important as its design and implementation. After you have installed the
infrastructure, distributed the clients, and enabled the solution, you will have
ongoing management to consider. This is especially important in large
deployment, where it is not uncommon to encounter several thousand access points
and tens of thousands of clients. It is therefore prudent to also consider this
during the design and implementation phase. Chapter 8, "Management Strategies for Wireless LANs"
covers this topic in much greater detail. However, a brief overview is provided
here.
There are two facets to managing an enterprise-class wireless
network:
Managing the Infrastructure
Infrastructure issues will include configuration management,
image (or firmware) maintenance, maintenance and security settings updates, and
so on. Many enterprises will already have an existing network management
solution in place. Ensure that your wireless infrastructure can be seamlessly
integrated with this system.
Wireless networks also pose unique challenges, such as radio
management, rogue AP detection, and radio optimization. Several wireless
equipment manufacturers produce management toolsets specifically geared toward
their WLAN products. If you choose to deploy these, you should consider how to
integrate them with any existing network management platform you have and where
to locate the management servers/appliances. (If you have a geographically
dispersed environment, carefully decide where to place it in your infrastructure
as it will have a direct impact on performance.) You should also ensure that
your IT and support staff have appropriate training with the toolsets
provided.
Retrofitting a management platform after your infrastructure
deployment is complete will be both costly and resource intensive. It makes much
more sense to consider this as part of the standard deployment process.
Managing the Clients
Client management is very important for all large-scale wireless
deployments. As
your WLAN grows and evolves, you will probably need to revisit client devices at
some stage. Security settings may need to be changed, user and security profiles
distributed or modified, or firmware and client software updated. If you have
several thousand clients, this can be extremely resource intensive and therefore
costly.
Although it is true that most of your client settings can be
configured during the initial client distribution, you should also plan for some
manner of updating and managing your clients in the future. Many corporations
already have client management software available to handle their desktop
systems, such as LANdesk, Altiris, Microsoft SMS, or Symantec LiveState. If
appropriate, ensure that the existing client management platform can handle
updating your wireless software. Alternatively, some wireless solution
manufacturers provide administrative and management toolsets with their software
that is dedicated to updating and managing wireless client software and devices.
If you choose to use these, ensure that your support and desktop engineering
staff are familiar with them.