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Brocade Mobility Access Point System Reference Guide (Supporting software release 5.5.0.0 and later) User Manual

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Brocade Mobility Access Point System Reference Guide

839

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The Association field displays the following:

The 802.11 Protocol field displays the following:

40 MHz Capable

Displays whether the wireless client has 802.11n channels operating at 40 MHz.

Max Physical Rate

Displays the maximum data rate at the physical layer.

Max User Rate

Displays the maximum permitted user data rate.

MC2UC Streams

Lists the number or multicast to unicast data streams detected.

AP

Displays the MAC address of the client’s connected access point.

BSS

Displays the Basic Service Set (BSS) the access point belongs to. A BSS is a set of stations
that can communicate with one another.

Radio Number

Displays the access point radio the wireless client is connected to.

Radio Type

Displays the radio type. The radio can be 802.11b, 802.11bg, 802.11bgn, 802.11a or
802.11an.

Rate

Displays the permitted data rate for access point and client interoperation.

High-Throughput

Displays whether high throughput is supported. High throughput is a measure of the successful
packet delivery over a communication channel.

RIFS

Displays whether this feature is supported. RIFS is a required 802.11n feature that improves
performance by reducing the amount of dead time between OFDM transmissions.

Unscheduled APSD

Displays whether APSD is supported. APSD defines an unscheduled service period, which is a
contiguous period of time during which the access point is expected to be awake.

Negotiated Fast BSS
Transition

Lists whether Fast BSS transition is negotiated. This indicates support for a seamless fast and
secure client handoff between two access points.

AID

Displays the Association ID (AID) established by an AP. 802.11 association enables the access
point to allocate resources and synchronize with a client. A client begins the association
process by sending an association request to an access point. This association request is sent
as a frame. This frame carries information about the client and the SSID of the network it
wishes to associate. After receiving the request, the access point considers associating with
the client, and reserves memory space for establishing an AID for the client.

Max AMSDU Size

Displays the maximum size of AMSDU. AMSDU is a set of Ethernet frames to the same
destination that are wrapped in a 802.11n frame. This values is the maximum AMSDU frame
size in bytes.

Max AMPDU Size

Displays the maximum size of AMPDU. AMPDU is a set of Ethernet frames to the same
destination that are wrapped in an 802.11n MAC header. AMPDUs are used in a very noisy
environment to provide reliable packet transmission. This value is the maximum AMPDU size in
bytes.

Interframe Spacing

Displays the interval between two consecutive Ethernet frames.

Short Guard Interval

Displays the guard interval in micro seconds. Guard intervals prevent interference between
data transmissions. The guard interval is the space between characters being transmitted. The
guard interval eliminates inter-symbol interference (ISI). ISI occurs when echoes or reflections
from one character interfere with another character. Adding time between transmissions allows
echo's and reflections to settle before the next character is transmitted. A shorter guard
interval results in shorter character times which reduces overhead and increases data rates by
up to 10%.

Refresh

Select the Refresh button to update the screen’s statistics counters to their latest values.