User Guide

About Network Map

The Network Map is a per-switch topology diagram derived from SNMP discovery data. It gives Network Engineers a visual layout of how devices connect to a specific switch and what state those connections are in.

How the Network Map works

A Network Map is generated automatically from the SNMP audit data of a single switch. AlloyScan collects port and neighbour information during the SNMP audit, then builds the diagram on demand:

  • The diagram is scoped to one switch at a time, not to the entire network.
  • It is reached from the switch record in Inventory > SNMP devices > Switches, by opening the switch and choosing Network interfaces > Show as map.
  • Visual coding on the diagram reflects connection types and link state derived from the underlying SNMP audit data.
  • You can optionally upload a floor plan image to use as the background of the map, which lets you place the topology over a physical layout of your building.

Note: Details may vary by deployment.

The map is a read-only view of the most recent SNMP audit snapshot. Re-running the SNMP audit on the switch refreshes the data the map is built from.

Why this design

Per-switch scoping keeps the diagram readable. Network maps that try to span an entire site quickly become unusable; building from a switch as the focal point lets you drill into one collision domain at a time and follow links from there.

Auto-building the topology from SNMP audit data — rather than from manually drawn diagrams — keeps the map in sync with reality. The same audit cycle that updates the SNMP-device inventory updates the map.

Key distinctions

  • Network Map vs Inventory grid. The Inventory grid lists SNMP devices as rows; the Network Map shows their interconnections relative to one switch.
  • Network Map vs Dashboard. Dashboard widgets summarise counts and trends; the Network Map visualises topology.
  • Floor plan vs map. The map is the live, audit-driven topology; the floor plan is a static background image that you upload to give the map physical context.

Limitations

  • Network Maps require at least one SNMP-audited switch in the site. With zero switches, no map is reachable.
  • The diagram is per-switch only — there is no site-wide composite map.
  • Export formats are limited to PDF and PNG.