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This article aims to provide an explanation to how the SonicWall administrator can influence the IP address assignment by the UTM firewall .
For a guide on "SonicPoint provisioning: how to influence the IP address assignment by the UTM firewall controller", please refer to KB 9345
The SonicWall administrator cannot choose the ip address to be assigned to each and every SonicPoint connected to a WLAN interface, as the provisioning is completed by the firewall controller, which assigns IP addresses to SonicPoints according to the following criteria:
1. the IP address pool is taken from the WLAN network configured on the interface where the SonicPoints are connected;
2. if the WLAN is segmented into VLANs, then the SonicPoint ip addresses are taken from the management network (or native VLAN);
3. the number of ip addresses reserved for the SonicPoints is determined and configurable by means of the "SonicPoint limit" parameter, which is configurable in the WLAN physical interface "General" configuration tab
4. the ip address assigned to the SonicPoints is taken from the slot: [(254 - SonicPoint_limit) to 254] belonging to the given subnet (see points 1 and 2)
Aforementioned criteria are explained with examples and screenshots from the SonicWall SonicOS Enhanced gui in KB 9345.
In KB 9345 an example of provisioning and ip address assignment is shown: after
the SonicPoint N is assigned the first ip address (i.e. 10.20.0.251) in the slot available (10.20.0.251 - 10.20.0.254), this in case he choose to have a WLAN without VLANs (Virtual Access Points).
It is recommendable not to use a SonicPoint Limit number too much greater than the actual number of SonicPoints to connect, in order not to have too many unnecessary ip addresses reserved on the impacted network.
Nevertheless the SonicWall administrator may have already allocated one or more of the ip addresses to resources in the network (server, printers, etc..).
How can then the SonicWall administrator workaround this issue without reconfiguring at IP level the subnet, for a WLAN without VLANs (Virtual Access Points)?
The SonicWall administrator can identify a spot in his subnet free of ip address assignments, large enough to allocate the ip addresses of all SonicPoints on the given subnet.
In this case, we present an example of subnetting and alternative SonicPoint ip address allocation.
Data from case study:
Summary and considerations on the Data from case study:
Case study resolution

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