
156
C
HAPTER
5: W
ORKING
WITH
THE
M
AP
The map and the tree work in conjunction with each other. When you
select a device, subnet or device group within the tree it is also selected in
the map and vice versa. Once you have made your selection: you can use
the pull-right menu, in either the tree or the map, to perform an action
on that item.
Components
The following section describes the principal features of the map and the
tree and the operations you can carry out from them.
Map Structure
The map provides two basic views of your network topology, depending
upon whether or not you choose to view the devices in your network
grouped by subnet or as individual devices. Within each view you can
navigate around the map, and focus on particular areas of the topology
that are of interest to you.
To change from one view to another, toggle
View
>
Group Map by
Subnet
.
The Grouped
Network View
The default view shows the devices in your network logically grouped by
IP subnet. This view is hierarchical, consisting of:
■
The top-level map
— This map presents a logical layer-3 view of your
network, showing the routers and layer-3 switches, the links between
them, and which IP subnets they are logically connected to.
■
Submaps
— These present logical groupings of the devices on your
network. There are two types of submap:
■
Subnets
— are automatically created by 3Com Network Director
during
Network Discovery
, and allow you to view the network
broken down into separate IP subnets. Each subnet contains all
devices with related IP addresses.
Summary of Contents for 3C15500 - Network Director - PC
Page 4: ......
Page 34: ......
Page 38: ...34 ABOUT THIS GUIDE ...
Page 50: ...46 CHAPTER 1 GETTING STARTED ...
Page 64: ...60 CHAPTER 2 PRODUCT ACTIVATION ...
Page 213: ...Components 209 Figure 75 Export to Visio Dialog Box ...
Page 220: ...216 CHAPTER 5 WORKING WITH THE MAP Figure 84 Double Clicking on a Router in the Tree ...
Page 264: ...260 CHAPTER 6 VIEWING DEVICE DETAILS Figure 117 Security Tab for a Device ...
Page 276: ...272 CHAPTER 6 VIEWING DEVICE DETAILS ...
Page 322: ...318 CHAPTER 7 MONITORING THE NETWORK ...
Page 385: ...Examples 381 Figure 189 Attach Alerts Dialog Box ...
Page 406: ...402 CHAPTER 9 PERFORMANCE REPORTING ...
Page 431: ...Components 427 History View dialog box Figure 210 History View Dialog Box ...
Page 440: ...436 CHAPTER 10 RMON Host View dialog box Figure 219 Host View Dialog Box ...
Page 476: ...472 CHAPTER 11 CREATING REPORTS ...
Page 502: ...498 CHAPTER 12 CONFIGURING SINGLE DEVICES ...
Page 526: ...522 CHAPTER 13 VLAN MANAGEMENT Figure 272 Options Dialog Box VLANs Tab ...
Page 567: ...Components 563 Figure 305 Selecting the Link to the End Station on the Map ...
Page 626: ...622 CHAPTER 14 BULK CONFIGURATION ...
Page 684: ...680 CHAPTER 16 UPGRADING DEVICE SOFTWARE ...
Page 814: ...810 CHAPTER 19 BACKING UP DEVICE CONFIGURATIONS ...
Page 838: ...834 CHAPTER 20 LIVE UPDATE ...
Page 894: ...890 APPENDIX G ADDING MAC ADDRESS VENDOR TRANSLATIONS ...