On Jul 21, 2007, at 8:52 PM, Bill Woodcock wrote:
Cisco, Duke has now come to see the elimination of the problem, see: "*Duke Resolves iPhone, Wi-Fi Outage Problems"* at http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,2161065,00.asp
it's an ARP storm, or something similar, when the iPhone roams onto a new 802.11 hotspot. Apple hasn't issued a fix yet, so Cisco had to do an emergency patch for some of their larger customers.
As I understand, Duke is using cisco wireless controllers to run their wireless network. Apparently there is some sort of interop issue where one system was aggravating the other to cause arp floods in rfc1918 space. We've seen 116 distinct iphones so far on our campus and have had sniffers watching arps all week to look for any similar nonsense. However, we are running the AP's in autonomous (regular ios) mode without any magic central controller box. Dale -- Dale W. Carder - Network Engineer University of Wisconsin at Madison / WiscNet http://net.doit.wisc.edu/~dwcarder