Professional Access Point
Administrator Guide
Class Structure, Commands, and Examples - 246
rx-frame 0
rx-compressed 0
rx-multicast 0
tx-bytes 0
tx-packets 0
tx-errors 0
tx-drop 0
tx-fifo 0
tx-colls 0
tx-carrier 0
tx-compressed 0
ssid
bss
security
wpa-personal-key
wep-key-ascii no
wep-key-length 104
wep-default-key
wep-key-1
wep-key-2
wep-key-3
wep-key-4
vlan-interface
vlan-id
radio wlan0
remote-mac 00:E0:B8:76:1B:14
wep-key
Time Protocol
The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is an Internet standard protocol that synchronizes computer clock times
on your network. NTP servers transmit Coordinated Universal Time (UTC, also known as Greenwich Mean
Time) to their client systems. NTP sends periodic time requests to servers, using the returned time stamp
to adjust its clock. The timestamp will be used to indicate the date and time of each event in log messages.
See http://www.ntp.org for more general information on NTP.
To enable the Network Time Protocol (NTP) server on the access point do the following:
1. Enable the NTP Server
set ntp status up
2. Provide the Host Name or Address of an NTP Server
set ntp server
NTP_Server
Where
NTP_Server
is the host name or IP address of the NTP server you want to use. (USRobotics recom-
mends using the host name rather than the IP address, since IP addresses these change more frequently.)
For example, this command sets the NTP server by host name to "
ntp.instant802.com
"
set ntp server ntp.instant802.com
3. Get Current Time Protocol Settings
USR5453-AP#
get ntp detail