Managing sessions 689
Nortel WLAN—Security Switch 2300 Series Configuration Guide

Displaying and clearing client Telnet sessions

To view administrative sessions of Telnet clients, type the following command:
WSS# show sessions telnet client
Session Server Address Server Port Client Port
------- ------------------- ------------ -----------
0 192.168.1.81 23 48000
1 10.10.1.22 23 48001
To clear the administrative sessions of Telnet clients, use the following command:
clear sessions telnet [client [session-id]]
You can clear all Telnet client sessions or a particular session. For example, the following command clears Telnet client
session 1:
WSS# clear sessions telnet client 1

Displaying and clearing network sessions

Use the following command to display information about network sessions:
show sessions network [user user-wildcard | mac-addr mac-addr-wildcard | ssid ssid-name | vlan
vlan-wildcard | session-id session-id | wired] [verbose]
In most cases, you can display both summary and detailed (verbose) information for a session. For example, the
following command displays summary information about all current network sessions:
WSS# show sessions network
User Name Sess IP or MAC ID Address VLAN Name Port/Radio
----------------------- ------------------------------------- ----------------- ---------------
EXAMPLE 5* 192.168.12.100 vlan-eng 3/1
jose@example.com 5125* 192.168.12.141 vlan-eng 1/1
00:30:65:16:8d:69 4385* 192.168.19.199 vlan-wep 3/1
761 00:0b:be:15:46:56 (none) 1/2
763 00:02:2d:02:10:f5 (none) 1/1
5 sessions total
An asterisk (*) in the Sess ID field indicates a session that is fully active. (For more information about the fields in the
output, see the Nortel WLAN Security Switch 2300 Series Command Line Reference.)
(For information about getting detailed output, see “Displaying verbose network session information” on page 691.)
You can display and clear network sessions in the following ways:
By the name of the user. (See “Displaying and clearing network sessions by username” on page 692.)
By the MAC address of the user. (See “Displaying and clearing network sessions by MAC address” on page 693.)
By the name of the VLAN to which the user belongs. (See “Displaying and clearing network sessions by VLAN
name” on page 694.)
By the local session ID. (See “Displaying and clearing network sessions by session ID” on page 695.)