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Cisco Meraki Documentation

Conducting Site Surveys with MR Access Points

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To best understand the RF environment both pre and post-deployment of wireless infrastructure, it is strongly encouraged to perform site surveys and make changes based on the result. This article outlines some tools and best practices for performing site surveys with an MR wireless deployment.

Site Survey Mode

Cisco Meraki Access Points can be configured to broadcast a dedicated SSID for Site Surveys, without the access point requiring an active Internet connection to the Meraki Dashboard. Clients can then connect to this SSID in order to conduct passive or active site surveys. A MR in site survey mode will be denoted by a blinking green status LED on the unit.

Important: To utilize the 5 or 6 GHz radios on a Cisco Meraki AP for site surveys, the flex radio on your 6GHz capable APs must be set to 6GHz, and your AP(s) must be connected to the Meraki dashboard before enabling survey mode for up to 2 hours. 

This will allow the configuration of your APs to be marked as "safe" and let your APs be used in a site survey mode without a persistent connection to the Meraki dashboard.

Configuring a Survey SSID

The following instructions outline how to enable site survey mode on an MR access point:

  1. Ensure that the AP has come online and checked into the Cisco Meraki Dashboard at least once. It should currently be green in Dashboard.
  2. Access the local status page of the AP by associating with any SSID broadcast by the device, and opening ap.meraki.com in a web browser.

Note: If the AP does not have a wired connection to the network, it will broadcast an SSID similar to "meraki-scanning" for access to the local status page:

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  1. On the local status page, navigate to the Configure tab.
  2. Set Survey mode to enable to turn on site survey mode.

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  1. Optional: After the site survey SSID has been enabled, the channel and power usage of the survey SSID can be manually set on a per-radio basis.

Note: The site survey SSID is only broadcasted when the AP is claimed into a network. If the AP has not been claimed, it will only broadcast the SSID on 2.4GHz. 

Configuring 6 GHz Site Survey

Note: By default, flex radios on 6E APs will default to broadcast in the 5 Ghz band. To utilize the 6 GHz band for site surveys on a Cisco Meraki AP (MR). The flex radio must be provisioned to operate in the 6 GHz band via RF profiles in the Meraki dashboard. 

1. Within the Meraki dashboard, navigate to Wireless > Configure > Radio settings > RF profiles 

2. Click Edit on the desired RF profile 

3. Within Flex radio selection of 6E AP, toggle the band preference to utilize 6 GHz

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4. Save the configuration

Using a Survey SSID

After setting the access point for Site Survey mode, the AP starts broadcasting an open SSID, "site_survey-<Mac address of the AP>" as shown below:

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While in Site Survey Mode, the access point will no longer be able to serve connectivity for any wireless clients and can be used only for site survey purposes. The access point is now ready to be used at the location where the site survey needs to be performed. The AP can be powered using a PoE injector or a PoE switch and does not need to have wired connectivity to the internet.

The survey SSID being broadcast from the access point can now be used to perform active/passive site surveys using any professional site survey tool. Examples include:

These tools have the coverage patterns for Cisco Meraki access points built-in, enabling predictive survey functionality as well.

Using Channel Widths other than 20Mhz

MR access points in survey mode default to 20Mhz channel widths; this is typically the channel width most used for high density deployments. It is possible to change this channel width for your survey; however, this requires connecting the AP to the internet and making a configuration change on the Meraki dashboard before setting the AP in survey mode. Use the RF profile feature to create a new profile e.g 'surveyor' and apply it to the AP. 

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Go to Wireless > Radio Settings > RF profiles and create a new profile and under the 5 Ghz set the Channel width to manual. Select between the 40MHz and 80 MHz channels.

 

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Once the profile is created, assign it to the AP.

 

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Make sure to clear any channel width overrides

 

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Check on the dashboard that the access point configuration has been updated (this takes around 30 seconds)

 

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 Now when the AP is set to survey mode (from the local status page), it will show the desired change made in the 5Ghz channel width.


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Site Survey Best Practices

  • Site surveys should be performed using the same Cisco Meraki access point model as that would be used in the customer infrastructure.

  • Ensure that the AP is not mounted close to any metal or concrete walls that can contribute to heavy attenuation of RF signals.

  • Have a blueprint of the location being surveyed handy, to document the signal readings, data rates and record any interference sources during the survey.

  • With the proliferation of clients with varying wireless capabilities, it is important to survey for the ‘worst’ clients in order to ensure a consistent experience across all your clients once your wireless network is in production.

Additional Survey Options and Considerations

With so many variables that can affect the RF propagation of an AP and in turn affect the client performance and roaming behaviors, it is always recommended to have an onsite site survey performed to ensure optimal coverage and performance. Those who do not have access to a site survey tool can still leverage the statistics provided on the local status page on the access point. Admins can see signal-to-noise ratio for the client that is connected to the survey SSID. A classic approach is to design for a voice-grade network which uses cell edges around -67dBm and a consistent SNR (Signal to Noise Ratio) of 25dB or more. This is generally sufficient for normal data clients, while allowing for VoIP infrastructure to be introduced later.

The local status page also provides info about channel utilization on current channels. It also describes the amount of time that both WiFi and non-WiFi (interference) are present on each of those channels, and provides a list of all the other access points (Meraki and non-Meraki) that it can hear on the same channel (under the Neighbors tab). These statistics can help provide a good estimate of the coverage provided by the access point, along with any interference that may be present across those channels.

The following article outlines how to perform a full site survey, in-depth, and is strongly recommended for additional guidelines:

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