Release Notes

963 | show ap debug client-table Dell Networking W-Series ArubaOS 6.4.x| Reference Guide
Parameter Description
Tx_Pkts
Number of packets transmitted from the AP to the client.
Rx_Pkts
Number of packets the AP received from the client.
PS_Qlen
Number of packets in the power save queue length.
Tx_Retries
Number of packets that the AP had to resend to the client due to an initial transmission
failure.
Tx_rate
Rate at which last packet was sent to client (in Mbps)
Rx_rate
Rate at which last packet was received from client (in Mbps)
Last_ACK_SNR
Signal-to-Noise ratio of the last acknowledge packet sent by client.
Last_Rx_SNR
Signal-to-Noise ratio of the last data packet received from the client.
TX_Chains
The first digit in this value indicates the number of transmission chains on the radio currently
in use, and the number in brackets shows which of the chains are active.
The current status of each chain is indicated by a single-digit binary number; 1 if the chain is
active, and 0 if it is inactive. In the example output above (2 [0x5]), two chain are active;
chain one and chain three.
l chain one: 1 (active)
l chain two: 0 (inactive)
l chain three: 1 (active
In the example above, the chain would generate the value 101, which translates to the
hexadecimal number 5. If all three chain were active, it would generate the value 111,
(the hexadecimal number 7), and would appear in the CLI output as 3 [0x7].
Tx_timestamp
Date and time the last packet was sent to the client.
Rx_timestamp
Date and time the last packet was received from the client.
MFP status
Client is 802.11W capable/802.11W is enabled on Radio
Idle Time
Number of seconds elapsed since a packet was received from the client.
Client
Health
This column shows the client health of the client and the AP radio, in the format <client_
health>/<AP-health>. These values report the quality of link between the client and radio,
An AP’s client health is the efficiency at which that AP transmits downstream traffic to a par-
ticular client. This value is determined by comparing the amount of time the AP spends trans-
mitting data to a client to the amount of time that would be required under ideal conditions,
that is, at the maximum Rx rate supported by client, with no data retries.
A client health metric of 100% means the actual airtime the AP spends transmitting data is
equal to the ideal amount of time required to send data to the client. A client health metric of
50% means the AP is taking twice as long as is ideal, or is sending one extra transmission
to that client for every packet. A metric of 25% means the AP is taking four times longer than
the ideal transmission time, or sending 3 extra transmissions to that client for every packet.