Displaying and Changing Network Session Timers
565
Last packet signal strength: -60 dBm
Last packet data S/N ratio: 35
Protocol: 802.11
Session CAC: disabled
(For information about the fields in the output, see the
Wireless LAN
Switch and Controller Command Reference
.)
The
verbose
option is not available with the
display sessions network
session-id
command.
To clear network sessions by session ID, type the following command with
the appropriate local session ID number.
clear sessions network session-id
session-id
For example, the following command deletes network session 9:
WX1200#
clear sessions network session-id 9
SM Apr 11 19:53:38 DEBUG SM-STATE: localid 9, mac
00:06:25:09:39:5d,
flags 0000012fh, to change state to KILLING
Localid 9, globalid SESSION-9-893249336 moved from ACTIVE to
KILLING
(client=00:06:25:09:39:5d)
Displaying and
Changing Network
Session Timers
MSS periodically sends keepalive probes to wireless clients to verify that
the clients are still present. The keepalive probes are null data frames sent
as unicasts to each client. MSS expects each client to respond with an
Ack. MSS sends the keepalives every 10 seconds. You can disable the
keepalives but the keepalive interval is not configurable.
MSS also maintains an idle timer for each user (wireless client). Each time
the client sends data or responds to a keepalive probe, MSS resets the idle
timer to 0 for the client. However, if the client remains idle for the period
of the idle timer, MSS changes the client’s session to the Disassociated
state. The default idle timeout value is 180 seconds (3 minutes). You can
change the timeout to a value from 20 to 86400 seconds. To disable the
timeout, specify 0.
Keepalive probes and the user idle timeout are configurable on a
service-profile basis.
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 ...