Users Guide

Table Of Contents
Element Description
User Indicates a wireless or wired user associated to the controller.
Traffic that is not generated by a user is aggregated as non-user traffic.
Devices Specifies the client device type.
for example: Windows 7, Mac OS X, iPhone, or Android.
Destinations Destination hostname, or IP address if the hostname is unavailable.
Common advertising and file sharing services on the Internet are cat-
egorized under special destinations called ad networks and file share
networks respectively.
Applications Application name, protocols, and ports. For example:
l Web applications: YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, Gotomeeting,
Webex, Amazon, Saleforce, and more.
l Stateful applications: FTP, Lync, SIP, and more.
l Custom applications: using the netservice command, you can
define custom applications if the application uses well-known port
numbers (0 - 1023).
l Peer-to-Peer: all peer-to-peer traffic is classified under peer to
peer.
l Lync applications: Lync-desktop-sharing, Lync-file-transfer,
Lync-voice, and Lync-video.
If a session does not map to any of the above, the destination port is
classified as application.
WLANs The service set identifier (SSID) that uniquely identifies the WLAN.
Wired connection is shown as wired.
Roles Determines the user's network privileges based on the assigned user role.
Table 172: Element View
The Element View section has two views: Chart and Table. Click Chart or Table at the top-right corner of an
element to toggle between the two views. Each chart container shows the top five sessions with respect to
traffic bandwidth and the rest are shown as Others. Click Others within the chart to view the rest of the
sessions in the chart. Click any entry on the chart legend to view more usage details. The figure below shows
the Chart view:
Figure 175 Chart View
Dell Networking W-Series ArubaOS 6.4.x | User Guide Dashboard Monitoring | 855