Seamless roaming
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Looks more like 516 mbps to me ;) Which is actually realistic.. At 60% of PHY.. not 70..
5] 0.00-10.03 sec 618 MBytes 516 Mbits/sec
Just tested off my phone to speedtest getting 437mbps down on 5.24 firmware on AC-Pro with iphone Xr.. Showing a 780 PHY.. Or 56% which is good..
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@johnpoz True.. 516Mbits/s :)
I'll stay on this 4.20 firmware for a while, it's working pretty well.
In my scenario, with just one AP, the roaming events are working, no need to update to 5.24 at this time. -
Yeah I didn't really see anything in the firmware related to my devices - but I just like to be on whatever is the latest.. Helps me know if actually seeing what others say they see on the threads over on unifi when they post the latest updates..
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Yeah, the release notes for this 5.24 release got a lot for the new wifi 6 devices..
I usually get the latest too.
What I will try to do next time, in case that I can hold myself to not update Is to wait a little longer, to read the forum feedback. But I doubt that I'll be able to hold myself -
There is no cpu/board temperature measurement on the Unifi AP's?
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Maybe ask Ubiquiti?
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@Derelict Your absolutely right, as this is a Netgate forum, so I posted it
https://community.ui.com/questions/No-temperature-monitoring-on-UAP/a48836fd-9410-4203-becb-fc3734658f22
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Kind of hard to show temp without temp sensors. I do not believe there are any sensors in the AP, this question has come up before over on their forums. Which is actually kind of funny, since they actually sell a temp sensor ;)
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As there datasheet says mentions it operates between -10 t 70 degrees Celsius or 14 to 158 degrees Fahrenheit, then even operating in death valley would be no problem ;)
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Not sure what that has to do with measurement of the actual cpu/board temperature?
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The UAP has only passive cooling and it's mounted in many cases against the ceiling, so probably the warmest/hottest part of the room. So it can only loose heat when there is a temperature difference between board/cpu and the room it's in, so that's why I guess is mentioned.
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Huh?? Was some stuff removed from this thread??
29 days later out of the blue asking about cpu/board temps on APs? Then from there jumping to they can operate in death valley?? WTF???
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Not as far as I can see, here all messages are from 1 to 224.
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Then why all this nonsense about temps?? Just such a non-sequitur
https://youtu.be/C_R5fK73Eaw
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non-sequitur and off topic you are right, but I was sincerely interested why these so complete AP's don't measure the temp, but I think it is best to leave it at that and no further pollute this nice thread </off-topic>
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@johnpoz I just installed the 6.0.20 version op the controller and came upon Protected management frames (PMF ) and would like your opinion on these, and the settings that go along with it; "Optional
and Required".Thanks.
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Guess depends on how tight your tinfoil hat is..
I would leave them disabled, its going to be a performance hit.
Do you have clients that support it? Can tell pretty much for a fact that no iot devices would support such a feature.
If your so worried about someone sniffing/messing with your management frames.. Then yeah you would want it.. And you would want to make sure all your clients support it before you do so you could "require" it.. Optional would mean some clients could use it and some clients might not - so what would be the point if your not going to do it for all clients..
I personally would just leave it disabled.. Really of little use in a home network. To meet some security audit for a corp setup - sure..
In a corp setup I would see it being required on say the trusted wireless network.. And say the guest network being disabled or optional. But in a home network where hey how come my wireless network speed is not 600Mbps -- I would just leave disabled... While sure it is a much improved security aspect for wireless.. Do you feel the nerd kid next door is trying to hack your wireless? Is your psk secure? etc..
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@johnpoz said in Seamless roaming:
Is your psk secure? etc..
Having no PSK is the best part of the setup
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While I would love to get rid of PSK as well - and just use better eap auth (my trusted wifi network is eap-tls), or wpa3-personal, the problem is no iot devices support enterprise and don't see me replacing all my current iot devices with new iot at some future point when they support wpa3.. Which prob going to be a really long time anyway
So yeah your going to have to have atleast 1 ssid with wpa2-psk, and prob even more for your iot devices, and then 1 for guests..
the "psk" is going to be around for quite some time..
So all your clients support wpa3? Or all your devices support using wpa2-enterprise?
How is it your not using any psk?
edit: btw @Qinn 6.0.22 just came out ;)
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@johnpoz I have it installed too.
Already backing it up..[marcelo@linux Raspberry_Pi]$ rm buster.img
[marcelo@linux Raspberry_Pi]$ sudo dd bs=4M if=/dev/sdc | gzip > buster.img.gz