This page contains information about the status
of FastEthernet and Radio-802.11b, Radio-802.11a, or Radio-802.11g
interfaces, depending on which radio is installed on the access
point.
IP Address (DHCP) / IP Address (Static)
The IP address for the access point. The IP address
can be assigned dynamically with DHCP or assigned statically.
IP Subnet Mask
The IP subnet mask identifies the subnetwork so
the IP address can be recognized on the LAN.
Default Gateway
The IP address of your default internet gateway
is displayed here.
MAC Address
The Media Access Control address is a unique identifier
assigned to the network interface by the manufacturer.
Software Status
Indicates whether the FastEthernet, Radio-802.11b,
Radio-802.11a, or Radio-802.11g interfaces have been enabled or
disabled by the operator.
Hardware Status
Indicates whether the line protocol for the FastEthernet,
Radio-802.11a, Radio-802.11b, or Radio-802.11g interface is up or
down.
Interface Resets
The number of times an interface has been completely
reset.
Input Rate Timespan
The timespan being used for the input rates.
Input Rate (bits/sec)
The average number of bits per second transmitted
in the designated input rate timespan.
Input Rate (packets/sec)
The average number of packets per second transmitted
in the designated input rate timespan.
Time Since Last
Input
The number of hours, minutes, and seconds since
the last packet was successfully received by an interface. Knowing
this time helps you determine the load on the interface and helps
locate network problems.
Total Packets
Input
The total number of error-free packets received
by the system.
Total Bytes Input
The total number of error-free bytes received by
the system.
Broadcast Packets
The total number of broadcast packets received
by the interface.
Total Input Errors
The total number of input-related errors that occurred
including runts, giants, no buffer, CRC, frame, overrun, and ignored
counts.
Overrun Errors
The number of times the receiver hardware was unable
to send received data to a hardware buffer because the input rate
exceeded the receiver's ability to process the data.
Ignored Packets
The number of received packets ignored by the interface
because the interface hardware ran low on internal buffers. Broadcast
storms and bursts of noise can cause the ignored count to be increased.
Throttles
The number of times the receiver on the port was
disabled, possibly because of a buffer or processor overload.
Output Rate Timespan
The timespan being used for the output rates.
Output Rate (bits/sec)
The average number of bits transmitted per second
in the designated output rate timespan.
Output Rate (packets/sec)
The average number of packets transmitted per second
in the designated output rate timespan.
Time Since Last
Output
The number of hours, minutes, and seconds since
the last packet was successfully transmitted by the interface. Knowing
this time helps you determine traffic load on the interface and
helps locate network problems.
Total Packets Output
The total number of messages transmitted by the
system.
Total Bytes Output
The total number of bytes, including data and MAC
encapsulation, transmitted by the system.
Total Output Errors
The sum of all errors that prevented the final
transmission of datagrams out of the interface being examined.
Last Output Hang
The number of hours, minutes, and seconds (or never)
since the interface was last reset because of a transmission that
took too long. When the number of hours in the Time Since Last Input,
Time Since Last Output, or Last Output Hang fields exceeds 24 hours,
the number of days and hours is printed.
Lost Parent Counts
(Repeater Mode Only)
No beacons
- The number of times the repeater
stopped receiving beacons from the parent. The parent access point
is probably out of of range.
Average retry level - Not applicable.
Deauthenticated - The number of times the repeater received
a deauthenticate packet from the parent.
Disassociated - The number of times the repeater received
a disassociate packet from the parent access point.
Time lost base - The number of times the time base broadcast
of the repeater changed to an amount that was too large. The parent
access point probably restarted.
Host request - The number of times the link between the
repeater and the parent access point was restarted. The operator
changed the assigned parent.
Better parent found - The number of times the repeater
switched to a new parent access point because the signal from
the current parent was getting weak.
Association Statistics
(Repeater Mode Only)
If the repeater is not associating to a parent,
you should note the following statistics.
SSID mismatched - The number of times
the repeater received a beacon or probe response that did not
match the requested SSID.
Not specified AP - The number of times the repeater received
a response from a parent that has not been configured in the list
of parents.
Rates mismatched - The number of times the repeater received
a response from a parent that does not support the rates that
were requested.
Privacy mismatched - The number of times the repeater received
a response from a parent that does not support the privacy settings
that were requested.
Authentication rejects - The number of times the repeater
received an authentication response from a parent containing a
unsuccessful status.
Association timeout - The number of times the repeater
did not receive an associate request response from a parent access
point.
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