- Table of Contents
-
- 03-Monitor
- 01-Application analysis center
- 02-Blacklist logs
- 03-Single-packet attack logs
- 04-Scanning attack logs
- 05-Flood attack logs
- 06-WAF logs
- 07-Threat logs
- 08-Reputation logs
- 09-URL filtering logs
- 10-File filtering logs
- 11-Security policy logs
- 12-IPCAR logs
- 13-Sandbox logs
- 14-Terminal status
- 15-Application audit logs
- 16-System logs
- 17-Configuration logs
- 18-Traffic logs
- 19-TopN traffic
- 20-Security policy hit analysis
- 21-TopN threats
- 22-TopN URL filtering statistics
- 23-TopN file filtering statistics
- 24-Attack defense statistics
- 25-Connection rate ranking
- 26-TopN traffic trends
- 27-Security policy hit trend analysis
- 28-TopN threat trends
- 29-TopN URL filtering trends
- 30-TopN file filtering trends
- 31-Botnet analysis
- 32-Asset security
- 33-Threat case management
- 34-Report settings
- 35-Session list
- 36-User information center
- 37-IPv4 online users
- 38-IPv6 online users
- 39-MAC authentication online users
- 40-Terminal status
- Related Documents
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Title | Size | Download |
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40-Terminal status | 27.05 KB |
Terminal status
This help contains the following topics:
Introduction
Terminal heat map
The terminal heat map offers a visual representation of the state of each terminal in each network segment. The terminal state can be normal, abnormal, or unreachable. You can search terminals by terminal state or block state. You can click the IP address of a terminal to block the terminal. The blocked terminal cannot access the network until the block duration expires or you unblock it.
The terminal heat map uses different colors to represent different states.
· Unused (Gray)—The device does not detect the traffic from the terminal that uses the IP address.
· Normal (Green)—The device has detected the traffic from the terminal, and the traffic is between the bandwidth lower limit and the bandwidth upper limit.
· Abnormal (Orange)—The terminal is in abnormal state, which includes the following situations:
¡ Poorly connected—The traffic from the terminal is below the bandwidth lower limit.
¡ Illegally used—The IP address of the terminal is used by another illegal terminal. The device detects this situation when terminal information changes.
· Unreachable (Red)—The device detected the traffic from the terminal and then cannot detect the traffic. This state transitions to the Unused state after being kept for seven days.
· Blocked (Purple)—The IP address of the terminal is administratively blocked.
Terminal information
This section displays information about and states of all terminals for monitoring purposes. By monitoring the MAC address, manufacturer, and model information of a terminal, you can prevent its IP address from being illegally used or prevent it from being illegally replaced. You can also click Unblocked or Blocked to block or unblock a terminal.
Restrictions and guidelines
The block function can be used only after you click Enable globally on the Policies > Attack Defense > Blacklist page.