The Controller Discovery Process
To support the CW9162I AP, the controller must be running Cisco IOS XE Cupertino 17.9.1 or a later release. For more information, see the Cisco Catalyst 9162 Series Access Points Data Sheet .
Guidelines and Limitations
-
It is not possible to edit or query an access point using the controller CLI if the name of the access point contains a space.
-
Make sure that the controller is set to the current time. If the controller is set to a time that has already occurred, the access point might not join the controller because its certificate may not be valid for that time.
The AP must discover the controller before it can become an active part of the network. The AP supports the following controller discovery processes:
-
Locally stored controller IP address discovery: If the access point was previously joined to a controller, the IP addresses of the primary, secondary, and tertiary controllers are stored in the access point's nonvolatile memory. This process of storing controller IP addresses on an access point for later deployment is called priming the access point. For more information about priming, see Performing a Preinstallation Configuration (Optional).
-
DHCP server discovery: This feature uses DHCP Option 43 to provide controller IP addresses to the access points. Cisco switches support a DHCP server option that is typically used for this capability. For more information about DHCP Option 43, see Configuring DHCP Option 43.
-
DNS discovery: The access point can discover controllers through your domain name server (DNS). For the access point to do so, you must configure your DNS to return controller IP addresses in response to CISCO-CAPWAP-CONTROLLER.localdomain, where localdomain is the access point domain name. Configuring the CISCO-CAPWAP-CONTROLLER provides backwards compatibility in an existing customer deployment. When an access point receives an IP address and DNS information from a DHCP server, it contacts the DNS to resolve CISCO-CAPWAP-CONTROLLER.localdomain. When the DNS sends a list of controller IP addresses, the access point sends discovery requests to these controllers.