SonicOS 7.0 Access Points
- SonicOS7.0
- About Access Points
- Settings
- Synchronize Access Points
- Provisioning Overview
- Creating/Modifying Provisioning Profiles
- Adding/Editing a Provisioning Profile - Getting Started
- General Settings for Provisioning Profiles
- 5GHz/2.4GHz Radio Basic Settings for Provisioning Profiles
- 5GHz/2.4GHz Radio Advanced Settings for Provisioning Profiles
- Sensor Settings for WIDP in Provisioning Profiles
- Mesh Network Settings for Provisioning Profiles
- 3G/4G/LTE WWAN Settings for Provisioning Profiles
- Bluetooth LE Settings for Provisioning Profiles
- Deleting Access Point Profiles
- Product Specific Configuration Notes
- Managing Access Point Objects
- Firmware Management
- Floor Plan View
- Station Status
- Intrusion Detection Services
- Advanced IDP
- Packet Capture
- Virtual Access Points
- RF Monitoring
- RF Analysis
- RF Spectrum
- FairNet
- Wi-Fi Multimedia
- 3G/4G/LTE WWAN
- Bluetooth LE Devices
- Radio Management
- SonicWall Support
802.11 Management Frame Setting
The 802.11 Management Frame Setting panel is used to configure your management frame settings and displays the number of threats for each setting.
To enable any of the settings, toggle the radio button for that option. By default, all are enabled. Click Accept to save the settings. The following table describes the settings.
Name | Description |
---|---|
Total Management Threats | Displays the total number of management threats. |
Management Frame Flood | This variation on the DoS attack attempts to flood wireless access points with management frames (such as association or authentication requests) filling the management table with bogus requests. |
Null Probe Response |
When a wireless client sends out a probe request, the attacker sends back a response with a Null SSID. This response causes many popular wireless cards and devices to stop responding. |
Broadcasting Deauthentication | This DoS variation sends a flood of spoofed de-authentication frames to wireless clients, forcing them to constantly de-authenticate and subsequently re-authenticate with an access point. |
Valid Station With Invalid SSID | In this attack, a rouge access point attempts to broadcast a trusted station ID (ESSID). Although the BSSID is often invalid, the station can still appear to clients as though it is a trusted access point. The goal of this attack is often to gain authentication information from a trusted client. |
Wellenreiter Detection | Wellenreiter is a popular software application used by attackers to retrieve information from surrounding wireless networks. |
Ad-Hoc Station Detection | Ad-Hoc stations are nodes that provide access to wireless clients by acting as a bridge between the actual access point and the user. Wireless users are often tricked into connecting to an Ad-Hoc station instead of the actual access point, as they might have the same SSID. This allows the Ad-Hoc station to intercept any wireless traffic that connected clients send to or receive from the access point. |
Was This Article Helpful?
Help us to improve our support portal