Allied Telesis AT-TQ2403 Network Card User Manual


 
272 AT-TQ2403 - Management Software - User's Guide
AT-TQ2403# remove
ap-list AP list for rogue AP detection
basic-rate Basic rates of radios
bridge-port Bridge ports of bridge interfaces
bss Basic Service Set of radios
interface Network interface
mac-acl MAC address access list item
radius-user RADIUS user
supported-rate Supported rates of radios
traphost Destination host for SNMP trap
CLI Classes and Properties Reference
Configuration information for the AT-TQ2403 is represented as a set of classes and objects. The
following is a general introduction to the CLI classes and properties. For a reference guide to all CLI
classes and properties, see the CLI Class and Properties Reference documentation.
Different kinds of information uses different classes. For example, information about a network interface
is represented by the "interface" class, while information about an NTP client is represented by the "ntp"
class.
Depending on the type of class, there can be multiple instances of a class. For example, there is one
instance of the "interface" class for each network interface the AP has (Ethernet, radio, and so on), while
there is just a singleton instance of the "ntp" class, since an AP needs only a single NTP client. Some
classes require their instances to have names to differentiate between them; these are called named
classes. For example, one interface might have a name of eth0 to indicate that it is an Ethernet interface,
while another interface could have a name of wlan0 to indicate it is a wireless LAN (WLAN) interface.
Instances of singleton classes do not have names, since they only have a single instance. Classes that can
have multiple instances but do not have a name are called anonymous classes. Together, singleton and
anonymous classes are called unnamed classes. Some classes require their instances to have names, but
the multiple instances can have the same name to indicate that they are part of the same group. These
are called group classes.
has name? \ # of instances? one multiple
No singleton anonymous
yes – unique n/a unique named
yes - non-unique n/a group named
Each class defines a set of properties, that describe the actual information associated with a class. Each
instance of a class will have a value for each property that contains the information. For example, the
interface class has properties such as "ip" and "mask". For one instance, the ip property might have a
value of 192.168.1.1 while the mask property has a value of 255.255.0.0; another instance might have an
ip property with a value of 10.0.0.1 and mask property with a value of 255.0.0.0.