Specifications
Altitude 3500 Series Access Point Product Reference Guide
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2 Refer to the Information field to view the following Altitude 35xx device address information:
3 Refer to the Received field to view data received over the Altitude 35xx LAN port.
Status Displays whether this particular LAN has been enabled as
viable subnet from within the LAN Configuration screen.
IP Address The Internet Protocol (IP) addresses for the Altitude 35xx
LAN port.
Network Mask The first two sets of numbers specify the network domain,
the next set specifies the subset of hosts within a larger
network. These values help divide a network into
subnetworks and simplify routing and data transmission.
Ethernet Address The Media Access Control (MAC) address of the Altitude
35xx. The MAC address is hard coded at the factory and
cannot be changed. For more information on how access
point MAC addresses are assigned,
Link The Link parameter displays Up if the LAN connection is
active between the Altitude 35xx and network, and Down if
the LAN connection is interrupted or lost. Use this
information to assess the current connection status of LAN
1 or LAN2.
Speed The LAN 1 or LAN 2 connection speed is displayed in
Megabits per second (Mbps), for example, 54Mbps. If the
throughput speed is not achieved, examine the number of
transmit and receive errors, or consider increasing the
supported data rate.
Duplex Displays whether the current LAN connection is full or half
duplex.
WLANs Mapped The WLANs Mapped table lists the WLANs mapped to this
LAN (either LAN1 or LAN2) as their LAN interface.
RX Packets RX packets are data packets received over the Altitude
35xx LAN port. The number is a cumulative total since the
LAN connection was last enabled or the Altitude 35xx was
last restarted.
RX Bytes RX bytes are bytes of information received over the LAN
port. The value is a cumulative total since the LAN
connection was last enabled or the Altitude 35xx was last
restarted.
RX Errors RX errors include dropped data packets, buffer overruns,
and frame errors on inbound traffic. The number of RX
errors is a total of RX Dropped, RX Overruns and RX
Carrier errors. Use this information to determine
performance quality of the current LAN connection.
RX Dropped The RX Dropped field displays the number of data packets
failing to reach the LAN port. If this number appears
excessive, consider a new connection to the device.
RX Overruns RX overruns are buffer overruns on the Altitude 35xx LAN
port. RX overruns occur when packets are received faster
than the LAN connection can handle them. If RX overruns
are excessive, consider reducing the data rate,
RX Frame The RX Frame field displays the number of TCP/IP data
frame errors received.