Release Notes

aaa bandwidth-contract
aaa bandwidth-contract <name> {kbits <kbits>|mbits <mbits>}
Description
This command configures a bandwidth contract.
Syntax
Parameter Description Range
<name>
Name that identifies this bandwidth contract.
kbits <bits>
Limit the traffic rate for this bandwidth contract to a
specified number of kilobits per second.
256-2000000
mbits <bits>
Limit the traffic rate for this bandwidth contract to a
specified number of megabits per second.
1-2000
Usage Guidelines
You can apply a configured bandwidth contract to a user role or to a VLAN. When you apply a bandwidth
contract to a user role (see user-role on page 1948), you specify whether the contract applies to upstream
traffic (from the client to the controller) or downstream traffic (from the controller to the client). You can also
specify whether the contract applies to all users in a specified user role or per-user in a user role.
When you apply a bandwidth contract to a VLAN (see interface vlan on page 424), the contract limits multicast
traffic and does not affect other data. This is useful because an AP can only send multicast traffic at the rate of
the slowest associated client. Thus excessive multicast traffic will fill the buffers of the AP, causing frame loss
and poor voice quality. Generally, every system should have a bandwidth contract of 1 Mbps or even 700 Kbps
and it should be applied to all VLANs with which users are associated, especially those VLANs that pass through
the upstream router. The exception are VLANs that are used for high speed multicasts, where the SSID is
configured without low data rates.
Example
The following command creates a bandwidth contract that limits the traffic rate to 1 Mbps:
aaa bandwidth-contract mbits 1
Command History
This command was available in ArubaOS 3.0.
Command Information
Platforms Licensing Command Mode
All platforms Base operating system Config mode on master controllers
Dell Networking W-Series ArubaOS 6.4.x | Reference Guide aaa bandwidth-contract | 76