TftpServer



With Spiceworks’ built-in TFTP server, you’ll be able to back up your network configuration when your network is running smoothly, and receive an alert and restore it. TFTP server Tftpd64 is a free, lightweight, opensource IPv6 ready application which includes DHCP, TFTP, DNS, SNTP and Syslog servers as well as a TFTP client. The TFTP client and server are fully compatible with TFTP option support (tsize, blocksize and timeout), which allow the maximum performance when transferring the data. TFTP Server Free TFTP server for reliable and secure network file transfers Easily push OS images, firmware, and configuration updates, backup configuration files. TFTP server Versions (Top/Haut de page) 28th Feb 2019: v4.64: Tftpd32 is now 20 years old! Direct link for tftpd64 installer direct link for tftpd64 portable edition direct link for tftpd64 service edition: 5th May 2018: v4.62: Thank you for downloading Tftpd32. The download location has been moved to bitbucket.

  1. Tftp Server Software
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Recently I spent some time setting up a Cisco wireless network using their Cisco Mobility Express technology and in this article I'd like to highlight some 'gotchas' I ran into regarding access point software images while putting the network together.

This article does not cover the process of converting a regular Cisco Access Point to Mobility Express Controller mode, there are already plenty of guides out there about that.

For those that don't know, Cisco Mobility Express is a wireless deployment method where instead of using a seperate wireless controller (also called WLC, which includes the 3504, 5520, 8540 and the newer 9800 models) to control and configure all of your access points (APs), a single access point is converted to a so-called Mobility Express Controller and after that acts as the single-point of management for all the other access points in the network. Using the Mobility Express technology, you can configure most of the common settings found in a typical office wireless network, but since a simple access points is the one in charge, there are of course some features that are not available to their full extent. One of those things are access point software image management.

In a normal WLC deployment, the WLC itself is in charge of storing and distributing appropriate software images to all access points in the deployment. In Mobility Express, however, the storing part has to be moved to a seperate TFTP-server because an access point acting as a Mobility Express Controller does not have enough resources to store and manage all of the different kinds of images needed in networks that are running lots of different types of access points. This is why the storing part is instead handled by a seperate TFTP-server that needs to be installed on your network.

Without a TFTP-server up and running on your network, other access points (even if they are the same model as the access point acting as the Mobility Express Controller) will not be able to join your deployment.

There is also a mode where you connect your Mobility Express Controller to Cisco.com to automatically download access point images on the go as needed, but that requires having an active SmartNet contract tied to the serial number of your access points, which is a whole other story and not covered in this article.

To illustrate the process of making other access points join your Mobility Express deployment with access point images being stored on a seperate TFTP-server, take a look at the topology image below.

In my case I needed both an AP-2802 and an AP-2702 to join an AP-2802 acting as Mobility Express Controller, but you can of course have a deployment consisting of only a single access point model.

SET UP THE TFTP-SERVER

Start by installing a TFTP-server on your network. I used the free TFTP-server from Solarwinds, which you can easily find using your search engine of choice. In my case I installed the TFTP-server on a Windows server. The default installation settings created the directory C:TFTP-Root on my server and any file placed in this folder will be available for download using TFTP.

  • If you have a network firewall between your Mobility Express Controller and your TFTP-server, make sure that UDP port 69 is allowed from the Mobility Express Controller’s IP-address to the server’s IP-address.

  • Make sure the local firewall on your server is permitting TFTP-traffic from the Mobility Express controller's IP-address.

  • If you server is very somewhat locked-down, also take a look at the Permissions settings for the TFTP-Root folder and make sure it can be accessed by outside sources (giving the “Everyone” entity read-permissions is usually enough).

DOWNLOAD THE AP BUNDLE OF IMAGES

Head over to Cisco.com and in the Software Download section, search for your model of access point that is acting as the Mobility Controller. Navigate to the version currently being run on your Mobility Express controller and download the 'Access Point image bundle' for that version. In my case I had version 8.5.161.0 running on my Mobility Express Controller.

Tftp server for windows

As you can see, the download size of the access point image bundle is way bigger than just downloading the image that runs on the Mobility Express Controller, which makes sense.

PUT THE AP BUNDLE OF IMAGES ON YOUR TFTP-SERVER

Unzip the file you downloaded from Cisco and open the folder it contained. Move all the files from the folder to your TFTP-Root. For simplicity I am not using any particular structure inside my TFTP-Root folder, so I will just put all the images straight into C:TFTP-Root

If you did everything right, you should have something like this:

CONFIGURE THE WLC TO ACCESS THE TFTP-SERVER

Login to the management web-GUI of the Mobility Express Controller (for me it’s IP-address 192.168.1.210) and head over to Management > Software Update.
Set the Transfer Mode to TFTP and put in the IP-address of your TFTP-server (which is 192.168.1.55 in my case). For File Path I am simple putting in a '/' which tells the Mobility Express Controller that the access point software images are in the root-folder of the TFTP-server, and not inside any other folders in the TFTP-Root-folder itself.

Click Save when you are done.

JOIN A NEW ACCESS POINT TO THE NETWORK

Time to put your configuration to the test. Connect an access point to your network that has a different software image version running on it than the one currently running on your Mobility Express Controller.

I plugged in my AP-2802 first to power it up, have it get an IP-address from my DHCP-server and then find the Mobility Express Controller via local broadcast on the subnet.

If you are watching the console output on the access point itself it will look similar to a non-Mobility Express deployment: once the access point finds the Mobility Express Controller, it will be told it needs to download a new image version to join the network. It will seem as the access point is downloading the new image from the Mobility Express Controller, and if you are also watching the log of your TFTP-server you will see that the Mobility Express Controller actually goes to fetch the image from the TFTP-server first and then send it to the access point.

In the TFTP-server’s log I could see the Mobility Express Controller access the file “ap3g3” from the TFTP-server, which you can see in the image below.

After downloading the image, the access point restarted itself and joined the Mobility Express Controller.

With the AP-2802 done I then plugged in the AP-2702 into my switch to get it to join as well, and the process was very similiar except that it was given the image named “ap3g2” instead.

Tftp Server Software

At a glance, the AP image filenames don't really tell you much, but if you dig into Cisco's website you can find the filename structure and which image is used for which access point model.

Final words

Tftp Server Pc

I rarely run into Mobility Express deployment so I thought it’d best to write down this process of access point image management as it is a bit different from what I am used to. I also thought it would make a good practical guide as the official Cisco documentation isn’t crystal clear about the traffic flow of getting the access point images from the TFTP-server to the ME-WLC and THEN send it to the access point itself. The documentation I ran into made it sound like the access point had to access the TFTP-server, which is not the case.
Remember that this TFTP-server always has to be available with the correct access points images on it if you want to be able to continuously add access points to your deployment. The Mobility Express Controller will not locally store any of the images that has been grabbed using the TFTP-server in the past.