In Juniper Networks Mist AI Wireless, Juniper prescribes a top-down, structured troubleshooting methodology when using Service-Level Expectations (SLEs). This approach ensures that engineers identify systemic issues before drilling into individual client problems, preventing misdiagnosis and wasted effort.
The correct troubleshooting order is:
Organization → Site → SLE → Client
Organization of interestTroubleshooting always begins at the organization level. This provides a global view of overall health, license status, widespread outages, and configuration changes that may impact multiple sites. Organization-level visibility helps determine whether the issue is localized or systemic.
Site of interestAfter confirming the organization is healthy, the next step is narrowing the scope to the affected site. Site-level views expose infrastructure issues such as WAN problems, DHCP outages, AP connectivity issues, or RF-wide anomalies that affect many users simultaneously.
SLE of interestOnce scoped to the site, administrators identify the specific degraded SLE (for example, Time to Connect, Coverage, Capacity, or Throughput). Each SLE includes classifiers that pinpoint the likely root cause, such as DHCP, DNS, authentication, or RF interference.
Client of interestOnly after isolating the failing SLE should troubleshooting move to the individual client level. Client views provide detailed timelines, event history, and packet-level insights to confirm whether the issue is isolated or a symptom of a broader problem.
The other answer choices are incorrect because they start with either the SLE or client, which risks overlooking organization-wide or site-wide conditions. Juniper’s recommended workflow ensures efficient, accurate fault isolation and aligns with how Mist AI correlates telemetry and events.
Therefore, the correct answer is A. Organization of interest, site of interest, SLE of interest, client of interest.