Switch > Clients > Clients
In the switch dashboard, the Clients tab displays details about the wired clients that are connected to the switch. This tab also displays a visual representation of the switch faceplate with port details.
The Clients tab displays the following details:
Viewing the Clients > Clients Tab
To navigate to the
tab in the Switch dashboard, complete the following steps:- In the
The dashboard context for the selected filter is displayed.
app, set the filter to one of the options under , , or . For all devices, set the filter to .
Ensure that the filter selected contains at least one active switch. - Under
A list of switches is displayed in the
view.
, click > . - Click a switch listed under
The dashboard context for the specific switch is displayed.
. - Under
The
tab is displayed.
, click > . - To exit the Switch dashboard, click the back arrow on the filter.
You can change the time range for the
tab by clicking the time range filter and selecting one of the available options: , , , , and .
Overview of Connected Devices
This section displays the following details:
- —Total number of clients connected to the switch.
- —Number of clients, that are not tunneled connected, to the switch.
- —Number of UBT clients connected to the switch.
- —Number of PBT clients connected to the switch.
To view the details about dynamic segmentation, a controller must be licensed in Aruba Central and connected to the switch.
Faceplate
If the switch is a standalone switch, the faceplate of the switch is displayed. For a switch stack, faceplate of all the switches part of the stack is displayed. From the faceplate, click on a port to view port-level information. On the switch faceplate, hover over a port to view the following details:
- Port Number
- Port Name
- Speed
- Type
- Tunneled
Client Devices
The
tab displays the following details:The AOS-CX switches.
, , and columns are not displayed for- —Displays the name of the client device.
- —Displays the status of the client as Connected, Disconnected, Failed, Connecting, or Denylisted.
- —Displays the port number of the switch the client device is connected to. If the port is part of a LAG, the LAG name is displayed.
- —Displays the MAC address of the client device.
- AOS-CX switches. —Displays the IP address of the client device. The IP address is displayed only if the client is directly connected to the switch or if the IP tracker is enabled on the switch. IP tracker is not available for
- VLAN ID—Displays the VLAN ID of the client device.
- VLAN Name—Displays the VLAN name of the client device.
- Normal—The subnetwork which can group devices on separate physical LANs.
- Primary—The standard VLAN that is partitioned to create a private VLAN.
- Isolated—Secondary VLAN that carries unidirectional traffic upstream from the hosts toward the promiscuous ports.
- Community— Secondary VLAN that forwards traffic between ports which belong to the same community and to the promiscuous ports.
—Displays the following VLAN types of the client device:- —Displays the primary VLAN ID of the client device.
- —Displays the primary VLAN name of the client device.
- Authentication—Displays the authentication type of the client device.
- Usage—Displays the total data usage by the client device for the selected time period.
- —Indicates whether the client is a tunneled client or not. or .
- —Displays the type of dynamic segmentation configured for the client. Supported values are , , , , or .
- —Name of the role that the switch assigns to the client.
- —Name of the role that the gateway assigns to the client.
- —Name of the gateway.
The wired client will show up in the Aruba 2540 Switch Series, Aruba 2920 Switch Series, Aruba 2930F Switch Series, Aruba 2930M Switch Series, Aruba 3810 Switch Series, Aruba 5400R Switch Series, or any of the AOS-CX Switch Series.
table only if the client is connected to anActions
The
tab displays the various options available for remote administration of the switch. The following options are available:- Rebooting Switches. —Reboots the switch. See
- Troubleshooting Aruba Switches. —Allows the administrators to generate a tech support dump for troubleshooting the device. See
- Opening Remote Console for Switch. —Opens the remote console for a CLI session through SSH. Ensure that you allow SSH over port 443. The default user ID is admin, but you can edit and customize the user ID. This custom user ID must be mapped to the device. See
For AOS-CX 8320 and 8325 switch series, you must enable SSH server on the default VRF. Add the ssh server vrf default code to the template.
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