Tspec Client Associations - Cisco WAP121 Administration Manual

Wireless-n access point with poe wireless-n selectable-band access point with poe
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TSPEC Client Associations

TSPEC Client Associations
Cisco Small Business WAP121 and WAP321 Wireless-N Access Point with PoE
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Bytes—Number of bytes received (transmitted) from the wireless client.
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Drop Packets—Number of packets dropped after being received
(transmitted).
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Drop Bytes—Number of bytes that dropped after being received
(transmitted).
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TS Violate Packets (From Station)—Number of packets sent from a
client STA to the WAP device in excess of its active Traffic Stream (TS)
uplink bandwidth, or for an access category requiring admission control
to which the client STA has not been admitted.
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TS Violate Packets (To Station)—Number of packets sent from the
WAP device to a client STA in excess of its active TS downlink
bandwidth, or for an access category requiring admission control to
which the client STA has not been admitted.
Up Time—The amount of time the client has been associated with the WAP
device.
You can click Refresh to refresh the screen and display the most current
information.
The TSPEC Client Associations page provides information about the TSPEC
client data transmitted and received by this access point. The tables on this page
show voice and video packets transmitted and received by the association, along
with status information.
This page shows a real-time display of the transmit and receive statistics for the
TSPEC clients. All transmit and receive statistics shown are totals since the client
association started.
A TSPEC is a traffic specification that is sent from a QoS-capable wireless client to
a WAP device requesting a certain amount of network access for the Traffic
Stream (TS) it represents. A traffic stream is a collection of data packets identified
by the wireless client as belonging to a particular user priority. An example of a
voice traffic stream is a Wi-Fi CERTIFIED telephone handset that marks its codec-
generated data packets as voice priority traffic. An example of a video traffic
stream is a video player application on a wireless laptop that prioritizes a video
conference feed from a corporate server.
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