Network locations are organized into the following location hierarchy:
Site Group
Site groups are optional folders
into which you can organize sites. Two levels of site groups are permitted. Site
group names must be unique within the organization.
Site
Sites are a mandatory component
of the location hierarchy. A site is the parent container for buildings and can
include multiple buildings. There is no default site; at account creation, only
the global (org) level exists. Sites can have, but do not require
addresses.
Sites replace locations as the parent container for buildings
and serve the following purposes:
Column picker
Configuration
applicability
Monitoring unit
Troubleshooting and
health score unit
Site names must be unique within the organization. A site cannot belong
to more than one site group.
Building
Buildings are physical premises
with addresses. A building is the parent container for floors and it must be
associated with a site.
The physical address format is adjusted for the
selected country, that is USA or international format.
Building names
must be unique within the parent site.
Floor
Floors are physical subdivisions
of buildings. A floor is the parent container for zones.
Floor names must be
unique within the parent building.
Zone
Zones are defined areas of building floors.
For more information about changes to the location hierarchy after upgrading
to this release, see Location Tree Changes.
Use the Manage > Planning page to view and modify your network locations. Define site groups,
sites,
maps, buildings, floors, and
network
zones. Place simulated devices to help determine where you might need to add
or redistribute devices for the best wireless network capability. View heat map data and
modify floor plans to include obstructions that can affect your wireless signal
strength.
Note
Because complex factors affect radio
signals in the real world, Extreme Networks cannot guarantee that actual
radio coverage will match the estimated coverage results.
This page contains the following features:
Search Maps helps you
find a specific location in a large network. Enter the first few characters of a
building or site name here to see a list of locations. The more characters you
enter, the more precise the search results will be.
Google Maps also provides location search
functionality.
Global View provides
an overall view of your network in the map. The Global View location
tree lists the names of all site groups (), sites (), buildings (), and floors (). You can add multiple buildings to a site, and multiple floors to a
building by importing floor plans or by drawing your own floor plan. ExtremeCloud IQ supports the PNG file format.
Location Maps: On the
top-level map (the network location map) a building icon indicates your network
location. The location map contains Import Map and
Add
Building buttons, an option to choose between map or satellite view,
and a zoom option.
Building Maps: Select
a building in the hierarchy to open the corresponding building map. A building map
contains a floor plan of the building. Building maps include Import Map and
Add Floor
buttons, an expand screen option, and a Details panel, which
shows the number of devices, alarms, and active clients at this location. To drill
down for more specific network information, select any blue text in the expanded
Details panel. If a building has multiple floors, you can
toggle between them to see floor plans and device deployment.
Floor Maps: Select a
floor name in the hierarchy to open the corresponding floor map. A floor map should
contain at least one floor perimeter and information about the types of walls and
obstructions that appear on the floor. Floor map tabs let you plan and view your
network deployments:
Edit Floor
Plan: Upload a floor plan, and draw, change, or remove
building parameters and walls. A details panel displays the number of
devices installed on the floor.
Plan Devices:
Manually or automatically add simulated and real devices, and change plan
parameters for the floor.
View Heat
Map: See coverage details for simulated and real devices on this
floor. For more information, see View Heatmaps and Real Time Maps.
Zones: Create
and name zones. Zones help you track roaming clients and enable you to
identify groups of APs on floors where their locations must be clearly
defined and differentiated from each other.
Each item in the network hierarchy
panel contains Delete, Move, Export, Clone, Edit, and Add tools.
Use Network Summary to
view the current status of each network hierarchy item.