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| Home > Wireless network reporting tool: Graph performance behavior with Pilot | |
| In Laura's Lab: |
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Laura Chappell shows you how to improve your wireless networking behavior and performance monitoring reports with Pilot, a graphing tool that will significantly reduce your traffic analysis time and allow you to get right to troubleshooting problems. The users are complaining about the wireless network -- again! They continually lose their connections through the day, and file download speeds are painfully slow.
In March of this year, CACE Technologies released Pilot. If you aren't familiar with CACE Technologies, these are the folks who released the AirPcap adapters for capturing wireless traffic on Windows systems using Wireshark (formerly Ethereal). The creators of Wireshark and WinPcap, Gerald Combs and Loris Degioanni, both work at CACE Technologies -- an amazing team! Pilot is a graphing and reporting tool that integrates with Wireshark. Add a few AirPcap adapters, as shown in Figure 1, and you're ready to examine your wireless traffic and create reports on performance issues in a matter of minutes. I've spent hundreds of hours writing network reports using screenshots and external graphing programs to build the visually clear picture of what went wrong on hundreds of networks. With Pilot, my analysis and reporting times are reduced to a fraction of their previous values. Figure 1 depicts Pilot's view of Access Points (APs) and Stations seen at the location of my Pilot/AirPcap adapter system. ![]() Click on the image for a full size view Figure 1: Pilot discovers and plots the APs and Stations in table, pie-chart, and bar-chart format. This is an ideal place to start when troubleshooting wireless network issues. Here's a quick list of how I typically apply views in Pilot when someone complains of wireless network performance problems:
I am a big believer in documenting your findings after analyzing a network. A picture is worth a thousand words, and Pilot offers a new method to create stunning images that help pinpoint and explain what's really going on at packet-level. From the editor: In the example above, Laura used Pilot/AirPcap Ex. Pricing starts at $1,295.
About the author:
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