Monitoring the VLANs and Tunnels in a Mobility Domain
159
Monitoring the
VLANs and Tunnels
in a Mobility
Domain
Tunnels connect WX switches. Tunnels are formed automatically in a
Mobility Domain to extend a VLAN to the WX switch that a roaming
station is associated with. A single tunnel can carry traffic for many users
and many VLANs. The tunnel port can carry traffic for multiple VLANs by
means of multiple
virtual
ports
.
MSS automatically adds virtual ports to VLANs as needed to preserve the
associations of users to the correct subnet or broadcast domain as they
roam across the Mobility Domain. Although tunnels are formed by IP
between WX switches, the tunnels can carry user traffic of any protocol
type.
MSS provides the following commands to display the roaming and
tunneling of users within their Mobility Domain groups:
display roaming station
(See “Displaying Roaming Stations” on
page 159.)
display roaming vlan
(See “Displaying Roaming VLANs and Their
Affinities” on page 160.)
display tunnel
(See “Displaying Tunnel Information” on page 160.)
Displaying Roaming
Stations
The command
display roaming station
displays a list of the stations
roaming to the WX switch through a VLAN tunnel. To display roaming
stations (clients), type the following command:
WX1200#
display roaming station
User Name Station Address VLAN State
---------------------- ----------------- --------------- -----
example\geetha
192.168.15.104
vlan-am
Up
192.168.15.1990 vlan-am
Up
example\tamara
192.168.11.200 vlan-ds
Up
example\jose
192.168.14.200 vlan-et
Up
192.168.15.194 vlan-am
Up
(For more information about this command and the fields in the output,
see the
Wireless LAN Switch and Controller Command Reference
.)
Summary of Contents for 3CRWX120695A
Page 138: ...138 CHAPTER 6 CONFIGURING AND MANAGING IP INTERFACES AND SERVICES ...
Page 272: ...272 CHAPTER 11 CONFIGURING RF LOAD BALANCING FOR MAPS ...
Page 310: ...310 CHAPTER 13 CONFIGURING USER ENCRYPTION ...
Page 322: ...322 CHAPTER 14 CONFIGURING RF AUTO TUNING ...
Page 350: ...350 CHAPTER 16 CONFIGURING QUALITY OF SERVICE ...
Page 368: ...368 CHAPTER 17 CONFIGURING AND MANAGING SPANNING TREE PROTOCOL ...
Page 412: ...412 CHAPTER 19 CONFIGURING AND MANAGING SECURITY ACLS ...
Page 518: ...518 CHAPTER 21 CONFIGURING AAA FOR NETWORK USERS ...
Page 530: ...530 CHAPTER 22 CONFIGURING COMMUNICATION WITH RADIUS ...
Page 542: ...542 CHAPTER 23 MANAGING 802 1X ON THE WX SWITCH ...
Page 598: ...598 CHAPTER 26 ROGUE DETECTION AND COUNTERMEASURES ...
Page 706: ...706 GLOSSARY ...