
Viewing
Wireless
Neighborhood
Information
D-Link
Unified
Access
Point
Administrator’s
Guide
November
2011
Page
158
Unified
Access
Point
Administrator’s
Guide
Viewing
Wireless
Neighborhood
Information
The
Wireless
Neighborhood
shows
up
to
20
access
points
per
radio
within
range
of
every
member
of
the
cluster,
shows
which
access
points
are
within
range
of
which
cluster
members,
and
distinguishes
between
cluster
members
and
non
‐
members.
For
each
neighbor
access
point,
the
Wireless
Neighborhood
view
shows
identifying
information
(
SSID
or
Network
Name,
IP
Address
,
MAC
address)
along
with
radio
statistics
(signal
strength,
channel,
beacon
interval).
You
can
click
on
an
AP
to
get
additional
statistics
about
the
APs
in
radio
range
of
the
currently
selected
AP.
The
Wireless
Neighborhood
view
can
help
you:
• Detect
and
locate
unexpected
(or
rogue
)
access
points
in
a
wireless
domain
so
that
you
can
take
action
to
limit
associated
risks
• Verify
coverage
expectations.
By
assessing
which
APs
are
visible
at
what
signal
strength
from
other
APs,
you
can
verify
that
the
deployment
meets
your
planning
goals.
• Detect
faults.
Unexpected
changes
in
the
coverage
pattern
are
evident
at
a
glance
in
the
color
coded
table.
Figure
49:
Wireless
Neighborhood
Note:
The
Wireless
Neighborhood
page
shows
up
to
20
access
points
per
radio.
To
see
all
the
access
points
detected
on
a
given
cluster
access
point,
navigate
to
that
cluster
member's
web
interface
and
go
to
the
Status
>
Neighboring
Access
Points
page.