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EZN Plus series Network Camera User Manual Copyright © EverFocus Electronics Corp, Release: February 2012 EZN-Series IP Cameras Product Name: EZN Plus series Megapixel HD Outdoor IR & WDR Bullet Network Camera FCC Notice "Declaration of Conformity Information" This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures: - Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. - Increase the distance between the equipment and the receiver. - Connect the equipment to an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. - Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. Warning: Changes or modifications made to this equipment, not expressly approved by EverFocus or parties authorized by EverFocus could void the user's authority to operate the equipment. This device complies with part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) This device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. EverFocus Electronics Corp. 12F, No. 79, Sec. 1, Shin-Tai Wu Rd., Hsi-Chi, Taipei Hsien, Taiwan, R.O.C. EZN Plus series cameras comply with CE and FCC regulations. About this document 2 EZN-Series IP Cameras All the safety and operating instructions should be read and followed before the unit is operated. This manual should be retained for future reference. The information in this manual was current when published. The manufacturer reserves the right to revise and improve its products. All specifications are therefore subject to change without notice. Safety Notice These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection. This equipment generates, uses and can radiated radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures: - Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. - Increase the distance between the equipment and the receiver. - Connect the equipment to an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. - Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user's authority to operate the equipment. To reduce risk of fire or electric shock, do not expose this appliance to rain or moisture. Do not attempt to disassemble the appliance. To prevent electric shock, do not remove screws or covers. There are no user-serviceable parts inside. Contact qualified service personnel for maintenance. Handle the appliance with care. Do not strike or shake, as this may damage the appliance. Do not use strong or abrasive detergents when cleaning the appliance body. Use a dry cloth to clean the appliance when it is dirty. When the dirt is hard to remove, use a mild detergent and wipe gently. 3 EZN-Series IP Cameras Do not operate the appliance beyond its specified temperature, humidity or power source ratings. Do not use the appliance in an extreme environment where high temperature or high humidity exists. Use the appliance at a temperature between -40°C and 55°C / -40°F and 131°F (DC 12V only) and -20°C ~ 55°C / -4°F ~ 131°F (for PoE ) . Humidity level between 20% and 80% non-condensing. The input power source for this appliance is DC 12V & PoE. Use only the recommended power supplies. Power supplies must comply with the requirement of the latest version of IEC60950-1. Substitutions may damage the unit or cause a fire or shock hazard. Electrostatic-sensitive device. Use proper CMOS/MOSFET handing precautions to avoid electrostatic discharge. Installation should be performed by qualified service personnel only in accordance with the National Electrical Code or applicable local codes. Terms and Trademark Ethernet, Internet Explorer, Linux, Microsoft, Windows, WWW are registered trademarks of the respective holders. Other product names appearing in this User's Guide may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders. Java™ and all Java-related logos and trademarks are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries. Support If the unit ever needs to be repaired or serviced, the customer should contact the nearest EverFocus Electronics Corp. Service Center for return authorization and shipping instructions. 4 EZN-Series IP Cameras TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................... 8 2. FEATURES ................................................................................................................ 8 3. NAVIGATING THE USER INTERFACE .............................................................................. 9 3.1 ACCESS VIA THE INTERNET ................................................................................................ 9 3.2 THE DEFAULT HOME PAGE (“LIVE”) OF THE CAMERA MENU ................................................. 9 4. PLAYBACK .............................................................................................................. 13 4.1 SETTING UP THE PLAYBACK FUNCTION ............................................................................. 13 4.1.1 PREPARING THE MICRO SD CARD ............................................................................ 13 4.1.2 TESTING THE PLAYBACK FUNCTION ......................................................................... 14 4.2 5 THE PLAYBACK PAGE ....................................................................................................... 15 SETTINGS ............................................................................................................... 17 5.1 SYSTEM INFO ................................................................................................................. 17 5.1.1 SYSTEM INFO – INFORMATION ................................................................................ 17 5.1.2 SYSTEM INFO – LOG ............................................................................................... 17 5.2 USER CONFIG ................................................................................................................. 18 5.2.1 LIVE VIEW CONFIG ................................................................................................. 18 5.2.2 RECORDING/SNAPSHOT EXPORT SETTINGS .............................................................. 19 5.2.3 LANGUAGE ............................................................................................................ 19 5.3 NETWORK ...................................................................................................................... 19 5.3.1 NETWORK – NETWORK ........................................................................................... 20 5 EZN-Series IP Cameras 5.3.2 NETWORK – DDNS .................................................................................................. 22 5.3.3 SMTP / FTP ............................................................................................................ 23 5.3.4 HTTPS ................................................................................................................... 24 5.3.5 SNMP .................................................................................................................... 27 5.3.6 NETWORK ALARM .................................................................................................. 27 5.4 VIDEO ............................................................................................................................ 27 5.4.1 MULTI STREAMING................................................................................................. 27 5.4.2 CAMERA ................................................................................................................ 29 5.4.3 ADVANCED ............................................................................................................ 30 5.4.4 ROI (REGION OF INTEREST) ..................................................................................... 34 5.4.5 PRIVACY MASK ....................................................................................................... 35 5.5 AUDIO ........................................................................................................................... 36 5.6 USER.............................................................................................................................. 37 5.6.1 USER INFORMATION .............................................................................................. 37 5.6.2 IP ADDRESS FILTER ................................................................................................. 38 5.7 EVENT ............................................................................................................................ 39 5.7.1 EVENT SETTINGS .................................................................................................... 39 5.7.2 MOTION DETECTION .............................................................................................. 42 5.7.3 TAMPER DETECTION ............................................................................................... 43 5.7.4 ALARM I/O ............................................................................................................ 43 5.7.5 SCHEDULE ............................................................................................................. 43 6 EZN-Series IP Cameras 5.8 SYSTEM .......................................................................................................................... 44 5.8.1 DATE/TIME ............................................................................................................ 44 5.8.2 DAYLIGHT SAVING .................................................................................................. 45 5.8.3 SD CARD ................................................................................................................ 45 5.8.4 MAINTENANCE....................................................................................................... 46 6. EXIT ...................................................................................................................... 47 7. SPECIFICATIONS ...................................................................................................... 48 7 EZN-Series IP Cameras 1. INTRODUCTION This innovative EZN Plus series camera from EverFocus is a high-performance, multi-stream, H.264, outdoor network camera featuring HD-quality optics, infrared lighting and WDR*. This camera’s infrared lighting enables high-quality images in the darkest of environments, while its built-in WDR* capability helps to smooth out high-contrast light conditions and can therefore record important image details even in high-backlight conditions. The camera also features H.264/MJPEG multi-stream output for simultaneous live monitoring and high-resolution recording. The EZN Plus series is designed for simple installation and supports all types of outdoor/indoor mounting applications. Its tough IP66 casing and impact resistance combines with its tampering-detection capabilities to deliver a rugged, vandal-proof solution that can keep recording in very adverse environments. *Note: The WDR function is only for models that are specified to have this feature. 2. FEATURES Built-in H.264/MJPEG digital signal output at HD and megapixel resolution at up to 30fps H.264/MJPEG multi-stream output for simultaneous live monitoring and high-resolution recording Supports 3 independent video streams that can provide different compression formats and resolutions Built-in network interface (10Base-T/100Base-TX) for remote monitoring by PC Easy configuration system for various event and schedule recording conditions One-click easy installation True Day/Night function with IR Cut filter Low luminance and built-in IR LEDs for better image quality at night Wide Dynamic Range (WDR*) Built-in Dynamic Noise Reduction (DNR) Motion Detection and Privacy Zone Masking IP66-rated housings for all outdoor models One priority alarm input and one alarm output Smart alarm reaction & resume after alarm Digital Mirror and Flip functions Auto IRIS control Power over Ethernet (PoE) Built-in Micro SDHC slot 8 EZN-Series IP Cameras 3. NAVIGATING THE USER INTERFACE The Installation Guide included in the product packaging explains how to connect your EZN Plus series camera to your computer or IP network via its Ethernet cable. The guide also explains how to find the camera and its IP address on the network. This section explains how to access the camera’s configuration menu via the Internet. 3.1 ACCESS VIA THE INTERNET 1. Start your Internet Explorer browser. (Download IE if you don’t have it on your computer. IE 7 is the most suitable version. Please upgrade to IE 7 if you have an older version of IE.) 2. Enter the IP address or host name of the camera in the Location/Address field of your Internet Explorer browser. (Please refer to your Installation Guide to see how you can find the IP address. You can also use the IP Utility program that is on the included CD ROM – see the Installation Guide – to find the device on your LAN, especially if you left the IP address dynamic, instead of changing it to a static address. If you can at first not find the camera on your IP Utility program, restart the program and try again.) 3. If the login screen appears, input the “Username” and “Password”. The default username is “user1” and the default password is “11111111”. Click the “Login” button. 4. You might be required to download ActiveX, which is required to view the camera feed. If asked, click "Yes". 5. You should be able to see the Live page now (see the screenshot on the right). 3.2 THE DEFAULT HOME PAGE (“LIVE”) OF THE CAMERA MENU 1. Press the button to display the "Live View" page (see the image on the right). Double-click on the image to show a full-screen display, double-click again or press ESC to return to the normal display. If you experience video feed lag time (if connected via Internet), you can reduce the resolution or limit the number of streams (see the Settings > Video > Multi Streaming section below). 9 EZN-Series IP Cameras 2. Press the button to play recorded data directly from the on-camera Micro SD card (for this function to become active, you have to insert a Micro SD card in the camera’s Micro SD card slot. The Micro SD card slot can be accessed by unscrewing the front part of the camera housing dome. See the Playback section below for more details.) 3. Press the button to enter the Settings page. On the Settings page, there are 10 submenu sections: [System Info], [User Config], [Network], [Video], [Audio], [User], [Event], and [System]. Click on the section buttons to open their configuration fields. See the Settings section below for more information. 4. Press the button to exit the system and close this browser page. 5. Video Stream Select the Video Stream (Stream 1, Stream 2 or Stream 3) that will be displayed in the video-feed screen on the right. Stream 2 and Stream 3 will only be selectable if you have enabled these streams in your Settings > Video > Multi Streaming setup page. The default setting is Stream 1 only. See the Settings > Video > Multi Streaming section below for more info. 6. View Size Use this to select the appropriate view size and shape of the video box on the right. A smaller size might increase transmission speed and video quality. 7. Digital Zoom Press the “+” or “-“ buttons or roll the mouse wheel to magnify / reduce the displayed image (maximum magnification is x10). Clicking on a magnified image will re-center the image around that point. 8. Record The record button is used to record the current video stream. The location on your computer where the image file will be saved to can be specified in the submenu “Settings > User Config > Recording/Snapshot”. See the User Config section below for further information. Note: The recordable segment for this function is limited to 1 minute. If you need to do long-period recording, please set a recording schedule. See the Event section below for more info. 10 EZN-Series IP Cameras 9. Snapshot Click the Snapshot button to save a snapshot of the video image currently being displayed. The location on your computer where the snapshot data will be saved can be specified in “Settings > User Config > Recording/Snapshot”. Please refer to the User Config. section in this manual for further information. 10. Play Audio / Transmit Audio Click the “Play Audio” (speaker) and “Transmit Audio” (microphone) buttons to switch the sound on/off for the speaker and microphone, respectively (if such external devices have been connected to the camera directly or via the network). 11. One Push This button can be enabled (turned from faded to clear) by following the navigation path “Setting > Video > Advanced” and then going to the “White Balance Setting” field’s “Mode” line and selecting “One Push” in the drop-down menu. Once this is done, pressing this button will instruct the camera to adjust the White Balance settings of the camera, and these settings will be active until the button is pushed again. This is like a “semi-automatic” way to adjust White Balance to suit the user, if the Auto or Manual mode does not give the result that the user wants. 12. Manual Control – Trigger Event Press the “Trigger Event” button to trigger an event directly from the Live page. If you have configured an event (in the Event submenu) that will trigger a reaction (like a recording) when a Manual Trigger event occurs, clicking this button will trigger that reaction. You can select what that reaction will be. You can, for instance, set the camera to record the audio/video feed to the Micro SD card on board the camera. You can then click on the Playback button to open the Playback page and search for and play all such recordings that had been stored on the card. Such event actions will be effective once they have been configured in the “Event” menu. (Please refer to the Event section for more details.) 13. Manual Control – Reset Alarm Press the “Reset Alarm” button to reset the alarm output remotely. 11 EZN-Series IP Cameras 14. Lens Control These buttons control the lens actions. Click the “++” flower icon at top left to focus closer quickly. Click the “+” flower icon to focus closer slowly. Click the corresponding mountain icons to focus farther quickly or slowly. Click the “++” and “+” magnifying glass icons to zoom in quickly or slowly. Click the corresponding “- -“ and “-“ magnifying glass icons to zoom out quickly or slowly. 15. Status Display (info lines that can be placed above video box or at bottom of page) This shows the name of the camera that is currently active or being configured, current date/time and current frame rate. You can activate these info displays in the Settings > User Config page (under Text Settings). 16. Event signal icons (above video area) When an alarm or motion event is triggered, a signal icon will appear at the top right of the Live page to alert the user. A red “phone” icon is for an alarm event and the remaining “running man” color icons are for motion detection events in differently colored motion detection zones. The colors of these motion event icons correspond to the colors of the motion trigger areas you have configured in the Motion Detection submenu. Please refer to the Settngs > Event > Motion Detection section for detailed information about Motion Detection setup. The red circle icon above the video screen (see the image below) will appear when the camera is recording footage to a computer-based folder (not to the on-board SD card) as part of a preconfigured Event (see the Settings > Event > Event Settings and Schedule sections for more info). Right: The red circle icon above the video screen will appear when the camera is recording footage to a computer-based folder as part of a preconfigured Event (see the Settings > Event > Event Settings section for more info). 12 EZN-Series IP Cameras 4. PLAYBACK Playback is designed as a quick way to check recent recordings that were triggered by Events that were configured to “Record to SD Card” in the Settings > Event > Event Settings page. Right: The Playback page is only accessible once the on-camera Micro SD card is inserted and active (see instructions below). 4.1 SETTING ETTING UP THE PLAYBACK PLAYBA FUNCTION The Playback function operates from a Micro SD card on board the camera. This function will not be active until the user has inserted such a card in the camera’s camera’ Micro SD card slot. The card may also have to be formatted in the Settings submenu. This card slot can be accessed by simply unscrewing the front of the camera housing (see the picture on the right). Remember to slide the card in with the lettering and ridge facing upward. upward 4.1.1 PREPARING THE MICRO SD CARD Once you insert a functional Micro SD card into the slot, the Playback button on the Live page should become active within seconds (see section 4.1.2 below – the grey letters should hould turn white). white) IF NOT, do the following: 13 EZN-Series IP Cameras 1) From the Live page, click Settings > System > SD Card. If no card has been inserted yet, the Remove button should be faded, indicating that no card is being detected. (If a card is inserted, and the Remove button is still faded, pull the card out and re-insert it.) 2) Slide the card into the slot until it clicks into position. 3) The Remove button should become active within a few seconds, indicating the card is active. 4) If the Remove button stays faded, click the Format button to format the card. NOTE: All data on the disk will be deleted if the Format button is clicked. 4.1.2 TESTING THE PLAYBACK FUNCTION 1 Once the SD card is detected by the system, the button (inactive) will turn to (active). 2 To test the Playback function (this is not required), set up a “Manual Trigger” Recording Event by clicking Settings > Event > Event Settings. 3 Click the “Add” button on the middle right side of the page to open an “Add Event” box. 4 Give the event a name, like “Test 1”. 5 In the “Event Triggered by” field, click on Manual Trigger. 6 Below this, check “Enable This Event”, “Enable Post-trigger Buffer”, and “Record to SD Card”. 7 To save your settings, click OK, or close the box by clicking on the red x icon at top right of the box (in which case you will be asked if you want to save the data, to which you should reply OK). The box will close and the new event will be listed in the list area of the Event Settings page. 8 Look at the “Post-trigger Buffer” at the bottom to make sure the buffer time is set to 10 seconds. 9 Click “Apply” to make sure all settings are saved. 10 Click the Live button to go back to the Live page. 11 Get ready to click the Trigger Event button at the bottom of the page. Before you do, see if you can find something in the view screen that will give you a visual time marker. For instance, if you can get your hand in front of the camera’s lens, get ready to count down on your fingers. 12 Click the Trigger Event button and slowly count down on your fingers in front of the lens (if you are able to do so – if not, try to find visual cues on the view screen that will help you to mark the moment you pushed the trigger). The recording period will be as long as the buffer time you selected – the default period is 10 seconds. 13 Click the Playback button to open the Playback page. 14 EZN-Series IP Cameras 14 There are different ways to search for recording files on the camera’s Micro SD card (i.e. the Playback memory). For a recent recording like your test event, simply click the “Search” button under the “Search by File” header. 15 If the SD card is active and formatted correctly, the recording folder’s name (the recording day’s date) will appear in the Filename box at the bottom. Click on this folder to open it. If there are sub-folders, click on the bottom one (the most recent would be at the bottom) until you can click on a file that cannot open to another sub-level and shows data in the File Information box to the right. This would be the file of the most recent recording event. 16 To play this file, click the Play button below the video box. The test footage you have recorded should start playing. Play time should be 10 seconds if you left the Post-trigger Buffer as 10 seconds. 4.2 THE PLAYBACK PAGE On the Live page, click the Playback button to open the Playback page (see the image on the next page). Search by File: Click the Search button to search for all recording files on the on-camera Micro SD card. Search results will be displayed in the Filename area. Search by Time: Click the calendar icon and select the date and time from which you want to search until the present moment. Click search to get your search results, which will be displayed in the Filename area. Search by event: Click the type of Event recordings you want to search for (Alarm, Motion, Manual Trigger) and then click the calendar icons to select the Start Time date/time and the End Time date/time of your search. Click Search to get your search results, which will be displayed in the Filename area. Multiple Files: Check this box if you want the video player to play all the files in the selected folder. The files will be displayed in the Filename area. Loop Again: Check this box if you want the video player to play the selected file over and over again. Filename: This area will display a list of search results (recording files and folders). Folders will be displayed first. Click on the folder and click on each subfolder until the recording files in that folder is listed. Files 15 EZN-Series IP Cameras can be recognized by clicking on them – clicking on a file will display the file’s information in the File Information area. Play: Once you have opened the file’s folder and have clicked on the file to highlight it, its details will be displayed in the File Information area. You can now click Play to play that specific file. Stop: Click this button to stop the playback. Copy: Click this button to copy the selected file to the computer-based folder of your choice. A browsing box will open so that you can search for the folder of your choice. Lock: Click this button to lock the selected file. This will protect that file from being overwritten during any overwrite procedure. The file will thus be saved on the SD card indefinitely. However, the file will still be deleted if the SD card is ever formatted. Remove: Click this button to delete the selected file. 16 EZN-Series IP Cameras 5 SETTINGS Click the Settings button on the Live page to enter the settings menu. Right: Clicking the Settings button will open the Settings submenu column on the left, and display on the right whichever of these submenu pages have been selected by clicking on the related submenu’s button on the left. The default selected submenu is the top one, System Info. 5.1 SYSTEM INFO The System Information and System Log can be checked on this page. Click the top tab of the one you want to see. 5.1.1 SYSTEM INFO – INFORMATION These values cannot be changed on this page, and are for reference only. 5.1.2 SYSTEM INFO – LOG System Log: Number/Date/Time: Displays the sequence number, date and time of the log event. Log message: Contains all information and event messages, including Login, the User’s IP, Reboot, Firmware Upgrade, Load Factory Default, Configuration Reset and Events Detected. The log will display the last 256 log events. 17 EZN-Series IP Cameras Click the Export button to export the system log event list into a “.txt” file and select the location where the exported log file will be saved to. 5.2 USER CONFIG Each user can set a different configuration for his/her Live page here. These settings will be applied to the logged-in user’s Live page every time he/she logs in. 5.2.1 LIVE VIEW CONFIG Video/Audio Connection Protocol Setting: If needed, select the protocol that applies to your connection setup. Click Apply to apply the changes or Reset to reset without saving the changes. Text Settings: Check the box of each option (Machine name, Date/Time, Frame Rate) to display this info on the Live page screen. Foreground Color: Slide the Red, Green and Blue bars to create your preferred text color for the info text line. Position: Select the position where the text will be displayed. Choose from Upper Left / Lower Right / Lower Left. Click Apply to apply the changes or Reset to reset without saving the changes. Date/Time Format Used in Text: Click the dropdown menu to select date/time format from the listed options. Click on the desired hour format. Click Apply to apply the setting changes or Reset to reset without saving the change. Live View Layout Settings: Check the “Show Lens Control Buttons” and “Show One Push Buttons” boxes if you want to show these buttons on the Live page. Uncheck these boxes to hide these buttons. 18 EZN-Series IP Cameras 5.2.2 RECORDING/SNAPSHOT EXPORT SETTINGS This configures where your Record Button and Snapshot Button ( ) files will be saved if you click one of these buttons. Selectable folders will be on the computer only, not on the on-camera Micro SD card. Enable Event Recording to PC: Checking this box will let the system save Record/Snapshot Button recordings to the folder configured below on the user’s PC. Export Folder: Select the Export folder for the action above by clicking on the browse (…) button, then select the desired folder on your computer for saving to. File size: The user can limit the size of each recorded file here (in minutes). When a single recording file exceeds the time you set, the system will create a new file to save that data to. Overwrite: Select “ON” for overwriting recording/snapshot file when the disk storage capacity is full. The user can set the storage capacity limitation in the in-sentence field in the gray box below the Overwrite setting: “If the remaining hard disk capacity is less than ____ MB (50~2000), system will stop recording or start overwriting. “ Click Apply to apply the setting changes or Reset to reset without saving the changes. 5.2.3 LANGUAGE Select the language to be displayed on the web pages of this GUI. The default language is English. To add a new language not listed in the current Language list, click the Browse button to locate the new language file (.evb) on your computer and then click the Upload button. Updated language files might be available on the manufacturer’s website. Contact your vendor if required. Click Apply to apply any changes or Reset to reset without saving the changes. Note: Uploading a new language file will cause the system to reboot automatically. Please create a new network connection to the IP camera when the reboot is complete. 5.3 NETWORK This page covers network-related settings, including Network, DDNS, SMTP/FTP, HTTPS, SNMP, and Network Alarm. 19 EZN-Series IP Cameras 5.3.1 NETWORK – NETWORK The following information is required to configure the network settings. Contact your network administrator or your internet service provider to get the info. IP Settings: IP Type Refer to the network administrator for these settings of the server. Default: DHCP DHCP: This setting lets the system use an automatically assigned (dynamic) IP address. This address can change under certain circumstances. For instance, when the camera’s network switch/hub has to be rebooted. Do not assign to the DHCP server the same IP addresses used for the other network cameras and PCs with unique IP addresses. Static IP: The user can manually set the Static IP address. This type of address is stable and cannot change, but the user has to make sure there are no address conflicts with other network-connected devices. PPPoE: This is a DSL-connection application. The ISP will ask the user to input a username and password. Contact your ISP for these details. Note: If PPPoE is selected as the IP type, the supplied IP Utility program will not be able to detect the device. IP address When DHCP is not used, the user needs to manually enter the IP address of the camera. Do not enter an IP address that is already used for your computer or other network cameras. 20 EZN-Series IP Cameras Subnet Mask This field is used to set the netmask for your network, so that the IP camera will be recognized within the network. Example: 255.255.255.0. When DHCP is selected, the DHCP server will assign this value automatically. Gateway This field is used to set the gateway for your network so that the IP camera will be recognized within the network. When DHCP is selected, the DHCP server will assign this value automatically. Primary DNS Enter the IP address of the DNS server if this is provided by an ISP. Secondary DNS If your ISP provided you with a secondary DNS address, please enter it here. Username Enter the account’s username (used only for PPPoE). Password Used only for PPPoE. IPv6 Enter the IPv6 details in this area, if this applies to your system. Click Apply to apply the setting changes or Reset to reset without saving the change. Port Settings: Enter the HTTP and RTSP port numbers and click Apply to save. Multicast Settings: Enable if required, fill in the setting options and click Apply to save. 21 EZN-Series IP Cameras 5.3.2 NETWORK – DDNS DDNS settings DDNS is necessary when accessing the camera via the Internet from a network environment of which the global IP address is obtained by using DHCP. To use the DDNS function, it is necessary to connect to a dedicated DDNS server. We support these four DDNS server providers: www.everfocusddns.com, www.sitelutions.com, www.dyndns.com, and www.no-ip.com Enable: Check this box to enable the DDNS function. Service ISP: If you choose the EverFocus DDNS server, you can obtain a free account name from EverFocus “www.everfocusddns.com”. Just enter your desired camera name in the textbox in the following sentence, and then click the Register/ Update button to register it. If you wish to get a domain name from one of the other three DDNS providers that are listed in the lower area, please register your name with that provider, then check that provider’s button and fill in that domain name’s Record ID, FQDN, Username and Password on this GUI page. Refer to the specific DDNS company’s website for further information about the DDNS. Click Apply to apply the setting changes or Reset to reset without saving the changes. 22 EZN-Series IP Cameras 5.3.3 SMTP / FTP Set SMTP Server (email) This area is for configuring the mail server that is used to send e-mail notifications from the camera to predefined addresses via SMTP. SMTP Server: Enter the IP address or the host name of the SMTP server used to send e-mails. SMTP Port: Enter the port number for SMTP. The default is 25. Authentication: Check this box if the SMTP server requires authentication (user/password). User name: Input the user’s login ID if the SMTP server requires authentication. Password: Input the user’s login password if the SMTP server requires authentication. Receiver Address: Input the e-mail addresses for receiving an e-mail message when an EVENT is enabled and triggered. Please use “;” to separate multiple addresses. Sender Address: Input the sender’s e-mail address, so that the receiver can recognize the sender when an Event message is received. Send Test Email: Click the button to send a testing email to the assigned address. Click Apply to apply the setting changes or Reset to reset without saving the changes. 23 EZN-Series IP Cameras Set FTP Server The settings relating to the FTP server used to transmit the alarm images can be configured here. FTP Server: Enter the IP address or the host name of the FTP server. FTP Port: Enter the port number for the FTP server. Default is 21. Recording Path: Assign the recording path. User Name: Set FTP User’s name. Password: Set FTP password. PASV mode: Check to enable Passive mode. Passive mode is normally enabled. If a connection cannot be established, uncheck "PASV Mode”. Test FTP Server: Click the button to send a testing file to the assigned FTP server. Click Apply to apply the setting changes or Reset to reset without saving the changes. 5.3.4 HTTPS Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure (HTTPS) is a combination of the Hypertext Transfer Protocol and the SSL/TLS protocol and provides encrypted communication and secure identification of a network web server. To use HTTPS, a Certificate must be created first. There are two ways to create and install a certificate: 24 EZN-Series IP Cameras Create Self-signed Certificate: A self-signed certificate can be used until a Certificate Authority-issued certificate has been obtained. Click the button to install a self-signed certificate. Although self-signed certificates are free and offer some protection, true security is only implemented after the installation of a signed certificate issued by a certificate authority. Enter the required Certificate information as shown below. This info will be displayed on the certificate if anyone wants to inspect it. Enter all required information and click Apply to save it. Create Certificate Request: An official certificate can be requested from an issuing Certificate Authority by clicking the button. Enter all the required info and click Apply to save and send the request. Created Request: This field will show the Subject field of the created request (see below) The properties of any current certificate request can be viewed by clicking the Property button in this field. 25 EZN-Series IP Cameras The image on the right shows an example of the “Property” box of a certificate request. To create and install another certificate or request, remove the existing one by clicking the Remove button to erase the certificate or request. Install Signed Certificate: When the signed certificate is sent back to you from the Issuing Authority, download it on your computer. Then click the Browse button in this field to search for the file. Click on the file and press the Upload button to import the certificate. Installed Certificate Information: Once a certificate has been uploaded, this field will show the subject line of the certificate (see the example below). Press the Property button to view the details of the certificate. A pop-up window will appear with the information (below is an example of the Property pop-up window of a self-signed certificate). To create and install other certificates, remove the existing one by clicking the Remove button to erase the certificate. 26 EZN-Series IP Cameras 5.3.5 SNMP The default values for SNMP v1/v2/v2c and SNMP v3 are already filled in. Click either of the Enable buttons to enable either of the two. Make your changes as desired. Click on the Trap Address field to enter the digits, if required. 5.3.6 NETWORK ALARM Set Network Alarm This function works with PowerCon software, for the setting details, please refer to the PowerCon network alarm protocol. 5.4 VIDEO The settings relating to video such as streaming, camera OSD can be configured on this page. The "Video" page has two tabs: Multi-streaming, Camera, Advanced, ROI and Privacy Mask. 5.4.1 MULTI STREAMING 27 EZN-Series IP Cameras Stream Settings This IP camera can output three video streams simultaneously. For each of these streams, the user can set the compression format, resolution, bit rate, and frame rate individually. Stream 1 is always enabled for live view. To enable Stream 2 and/or Stream 3, check the “Enable” box the header of each stream. NOTE: If you connect to the camera via the Internet and experience a delay (lag time) in the video feed, try to reduce the number of streams and the quality and resolution of the streams – but keep the frame rate at its maximum (30fps). Format: Select the encoding format – H.264 or MJPEG. Resolution: Select the most suitable resolution for your needs. Frame Rate: Select from 1 to 30 fps. If required, select whether you want the stream to stream a Constant Bit Rate or a Variable Bit Rate, and set the values of whichever option you choose. Click Apply to apply the setting changes or Reset to reset without saving the changes. Video Recording Settings Select the stream you want to configure and then select whether you want the recording files of that stream to be saved in AVI or ARV format. Time Stamp Settings 28 EZN-Series IP Cameras You can select the Date/Time format, position, and add the setting to the streaming. Click Apply to apply the changes, or Reset to reset without saving the changes. 5.4.2 CAMERA Lens Control: Set the Zoom, Focus, and Digital Zoom actions of your camera. Image Settings: Set the Brightness and Sharpness of the image. Camera Settings: Mirror: Switch Mirror ON to rotate the image horizontally around a vertical axis. Flip: Switch Flip ON to rotate the image vertically around a horizontal axis. AE: ALC = Selecting Automatic Light Control allows the camera circuitry to either take bright spots more into consideration (peak), bringing out detail in bright areas, or less into consideration (average) bringing out detail in shadows. AES = Selecting Auto Electronic Shutter disables the Shutter setting below this setting. In this mode, the camera measures the light level and decides whether it needs more or less light and then automatically adjusts the shutter speed accordingly. BLC: Back Light Compensation (BLC) is used to make the subject appear clearer when it is set against a bright background.HLC (Highlight-Suppression BLC) is used to reduce the brightness of light sources in a specific area. It is activated only in a low illumination environment to minimize the effects of glare from bright lights such as spotlights, street lights or headlights in the field of view. Whereas BLC can increase the exposure of a dark area surrounded by a brighter area, HLC can decrease the exposure of bright areas surrounded by darker areas. This enables the camera to better display information that would otherwise have been “whited out”, like a license plate between two bright headlights on a dark road. 29 EZN-Series IP Cameras Select OFF to switch Back Light Compensation functions off. Select ON(BLC) to activate the BLC function. Select ON(HLC) to activate Highlight-Suppression BLC. WDR: D-WDR corrects the exposure when the contrast between light and dark in an image is extreme. Test the different levels to find the one that works best for your light conditions. Switch this function off, or select the level at which it will operate. D/N Mode: Select “Auto” to let the camera automatically switch to Night mode (Black&White) when the light levels fall to a specified level, and back to Day mode (Color) when the light levels rise to a specified level. Select “Day” to keep the camera in Day mode (Color), even in nighttime. Select “Night” to keep the camera in Night mode (B&W), even in daytime. 5.4.3 ADVANCED Note: The Advanced settings for the 1 megapixel EZN3160 will be listed first, after which the additional settings of the 2 megapixel EZN3260 and then the 3 megapixel EZN3340 will be listed. Camera Settings (EZN3160): Exposure Settings (AE): This setting is used to adapt to the amount or type of light used by the camera. Mode: ALC: Selecting Automatic Light Control allows the camera circuitry to either take bright spots more into consideration (peak), bringing out detail in bright areas, or less into consideration (average) bringing out detail in shadows. AES: Selecting Auto Electronic Shutter disables the Shutter setting below this setting. In this mode, the camera measures the light level and decides whether it needs more or less light and then automatically adjusts the shutter speed accordingly. 30 EZN-Series IP Cameras Iris: Specify the size of the Iris opening here. Shutter: If enabled, this setting lets you set the shutter speed yourself (measured in fractions of a second). Shutter Limit: Use this setting to set the maximum shutter speed for the camera. AGC Limit: Set the Auto Gain Control limit here. Brightness: Set the image brightness here. BLC Settings: Back Light Compensation (BLC) is used to make the subject appear clearer when it is set against a bright background.HLC (Highlight-Suppression BLC) is used to reduce the brightness of light sources in a specific area. It is activated only in a low illumination environment to minimize the effects of glare from bright lights such as spotlights, street lights or headlights in the field of view. Whereas BLC can increase the exposure of a dark area surrounded by a brighter area, HLC can decrease the exposure of bright areas surrounded by darker areas. This enables the camera to better display information that would otherwise have been “whited out”, like a license plate between two bright headlights on a dark road. Mode: Select OFF to switch Back Light Compensation functions off. Select ON(BLC) to activate the BLC function. Select ON(HLC) to activate Highlight-Suppression BLC. Level: Select the level of whatever option you selected in the field above. 3D-DNR Settings: This limits the amount of digital “video noise” that is usually found in any video stream, and helps to reduce file size. The higher the level, the more the reduction. Mode: Select OFF to switch the 3D-DNR function off. Select ON to activate the function. Select AUTO to activate automatic 3D-DNR. Level: Select the level of whatever option you selected in the field above. D-WDR Setting: D-WDR corrects the exposure when the contrast between light and dark in an image is extreme. Test the different levels to find the one that works best for your light conditions. Switch this function off, or select the level at which it will operate. 31 EZN-Series IP Cameras Note: When D-WDR is ON, some parts of the image may appear solarized. This is normal for WDR, and is not a camera malfunction. White Balance Settings: Select the mode that delivers the best quality image for the camera’s light environment. In the Auto mode the camera computes the white balance value output using color information from the entire screen. It outputs the proper value using the color temperature radiating from a black subject based on a range of value from 3000 to 7500K. In Indoor mode the camera uses 3200K as the base value. In Outdoor mode it uses 5800K as the base value. Mode: Select “Auto” to let the camera automatically adjust the White Balance. Select “Manual” to adjust the Red and Blue values yourself in the fields below this field. Select “Indoor” to use the default settings for indoor environments. Select “Outdoor” to use the default settings for outdoor environments. Select “One Push” to enable this function’s button on the Live page – this will allow you to force the camera to readjust the white balance every time you push the “one Push” button on the Live page. The lens will hold the same focal position until the next trigger command is received. This function helps to prevent incorrect focusing in dark environments. Day/Night Settings: Mode: Select “Auto” to let the camera automatically switch to Night mode (Black&White) when the light levels fall to a specified level, and back to Day mode (Color) when the light levels rise to a specified level. Select “Day” to keep the camera in Day mode (Color), even in nighttime. Select “Night” to keep the camera in Night mode (B&W), even in daytime. Sharpness: Select the sharpness level of the image. A low sharpness level will deliver a softer, less detailed image. A high level will deliver a sharp, highly detailed image. Mirror: Switch Mirror ON to rotate the image horizontally around a vertical axis. Flip: Switch Flip ON to rotate the image vertically around a horizontal axis. 32 EZN-Series IP Cameras Monitor Type: If you are experiencing image quality problems on your monitor, it could be because the camera is not synchronized with the type of monitor you are using. Select either Set 2 or Set 3 and click Apply to see if the image quality improves. Click Apply to save all changes. Click Reset to cancel all changes. Additional Camera Settings (EZN3260): Lens (IRIS Control): Choose between DC and Manual lens types, depending on the lens that has been attached to the camera. Slow Shutter: This option can be switched on if the Shutter (speed) setting is 1/30. Setting options range from x2 to x60. Visibility Enhancement: (OFF/Low/Middle/High) Images in foggy or rain environments or in environments with a very strong luminous intensity have a dynamic range that is significantly lower than ordinary images. The user can use this Visibility Enhancement setting to “DEFOG” the image if such “FOGGING” is an issue. Negative: Switch this setting ON to view a color negative version of the video image. This is useful at night or when viewing temperature-sensitive images. Color Suppression: Edge Color Suppression: False color can be created on the edges of the video image. In such conditions, you can switch Edge Color Suppression ON to reduce the false color. Highlight Color Suppression: False Color can happen quite often when it is too bright or too dark. Switching this setting ON will suppress all colors that are brighter or darker than a predetermined value. Monitor Settings: The user can use this field to optimize video quality for his or her specific type of monitor – LCD or CRT. Color Space Standard: The options are YUV601 and YUV709. These define the color space standard required to convert an RGB picture to a YUV picture. Generally, YUV601 is used for Standard Definition (720P) devices and the YUV709 is used for High Definition (1080P) devices. 33 EZN-Series IP Cameras Additional Camera Settings (EZN3340): Flickerless: If the Mode field in the Exposure Settings (AE) area has been set to AES, then this option becomes available. Choose between OFF, 50HZ, and 60HZ. Suppress Function: Aperture Compensation Suppression: (OFF/Low/Middle/High) This setting can be activated to suppress luminance noise when the AGC level increases. Chroma Suppression: (OFF/Low/Middle/High) This setting can be activated to suppress chrominance noise when the AGC level increases. 5.4.4 ROI (REGION OF INTEREST) A Region of Interest is an on-screen area that is streamed at higher definition/quality than the areas around it. It allows you to choose which parts of the camera view are the most important. Use this page to configure up to 8 ROIs and select the quality level at which each of these would be streamed. ROI Settings 1. Click the ROI No. field’s down area and select a number/ID for the ROI you want to add. 2. If you click the Add button, your mouse cursor will turn into a pen when you hold it over the setup screen on the left. 3. Move your mouse pen to the position where you want your ROI rectangle to start. Click on that position and move your mouse pen to the position (diagonally opposing corner) where you want your ROI rectangle to end. 34 EZN-Series IP Cameras 4. Click again and the setup screen will display the rectangular area you selected with the ROI number/ID inside it. 5. Click on the Quality bar and slide it to the High or Low direction, depending on the quality that ROI should be streamed at. 6. Click Apply to apply the changes, or click Reset to reset without saving the changes. 5.4.5 PRIVACY MASK Use this page to configure up to 4 Privacy Masks. Privacy Mask Setting Mode: Click Color to make the masks appear as colored rectangles on the screen. Click B/W to make the masks appear as gray rectangles on the screen. Click Mosaic to make the masks appear as translucent mosaic blocks on the screen. Level: Select the color of the masks if you selected Color in the field above. Select the level of grayness (0~15) of the masks if you selected B/W in the field above. Select the size of the mosaic blocks if you selected Mosaic in the field above (the larger the blocks, the more the masking effect). Click Apply to apply the changes, or click Reset to reset without saving the changes. The Color Palette: Click on the turquoise palette block to select this color for your block selection pen. When you hover your mouse cursor over the image now, the mouse cursor will turn into a pen of this color. Move your mouse pen to the position where you want your mask rectangle to start. Click on that position and move your mouse pen to the position (diagonally opposing corner) where you want your mask rectangle to end. Click again and the setup screen will display the rectangular area you selected in the color you selected (see the image above). If you want to create another mask, use one of the other three palette colors. Select All: Click this button to select the whole screen for masking. Clear All: Click this button to clear the screen of all masks. 35 EZN-Series IP Cameras Eraser: Click this button to turn the mouse cursor into an eraser when placed on the video image. When you click on a configured mask with this eraser, the mask will be deleted. Area: These are the color codes and number codes of each mask, which only become applicable if a mask of that color has been configured above. Enable: Click the box under each color code to activate the mask of that color – if a mask of that color has been configured above. Click Apply to apply the changes, or click Reset to reset without saving the changes. 5.5 AUDIO This camera can transmit audio to your computer if you have connected an external microphone to its audio Input cable. It can also receive audio input from you and transmit it via an external speaker, if you have connected such a speaker to its audio Output cable. Check the Enable Audio box to enable the camera’s audio function. The camera will now act as a digital bridge (via the IP network) between any connected audio input device and any connected audio device. Adjust the Audio Input Volume if you have external audio input devices (microphones) connected to the camera and if there are problems with the sound input being too low or high. Click Apply to save all settings, or click Reset to cancel. 36 EZN-Series IP Cameras 5.6 USER 5.6.1 USER INFORMATION The system administrator can create up to 10 user accounts on this page. There are three different authority levels: • Supervisor/Administrator: The only difference between a supervisor and administrator is that a supervisor can edit an administrator’s account and password, but an administrator cannot edit the supervisor’s account and password. Multiple administrators can be configured, but there can be only one supervisor. The supervisor and administrators all have unrestricted access to the Settings submenus and can determine the registration of all other users. • User: A user can view the Live View page and view the system, network, video, and audio information. A user can only adjust the User Config page settings. The user does not have access to the User, Event and System pages. • Guest: The lowest level of access, which only allows the user access to the Live View page. Add: Click this button to open the Add User window (see the image on the right). Enter the Account (e.g. user1), Description (e.g. Mike), Password (for the new account) and Confirm (password again). Select the user’s authority level (ADMIN, USER, or GUEST – only one user can be the Supervisor). At Status, select whether to activate or disable the user account. Switch SD Card Playback ON if you want the user to have access to the Playback function that plays recordings from the on-camera SD card. Click OK to save all settings, or click Cancel to cancel. Modify: Click this button to edit the selected user’s account details. Remove: Click this button to remove the selected user’s account. Click Apply to save all settings, or click Reset to cancel. 37 EZN-Series IP Cameras 5.6.2 IP ADDRESS FILTER Use this page to specify IP addresses that are allowed to access this camera, and IP addresses that are not allowed to access it. NOTE: By default, any IP address can access the camera, the Allowed List addresses only become relevant when the Denied List contains a network or range, and the supervisor wants to allow one or more IP addresses within that excluded range or network. In such a scenario, the user would enter the excluded range or network in the Denied List, and enter the exceptions in the Allowed List. Click the Allowed List button and then click the Add button to open the User IP Address Filter page (see the image on the right). Enter the Allowed address’s details – IP Type, the Rule (Single, Network, or Range), and the IP Address. Click the Denied List button and then do the same to add a Denied address. Click OK to save all settings, or click Cancel to cancel. Modify: Click this button to edit an existing entry (select the entry from the Allowed or Denied list). Remove: Remove the selected entry. Anonymous Viewer Login: Check this box to allow anonymous viewers to log into the camera. WARNING: TO PROTECT YOUR CAMERA FROM BEING TAKEN OVER BY UNAUTHORIZED PERSONS, MAKE SURE THE ‘ANONYMOUS VIEWER LOGIN’ BUTTON IS NOT CHECKED/SELECTED. Click Apply to save all settings, or click Reset to cancel. 38 EZN-Series IP Cameras 5.7 EVENT Use this submenu’s categories to set up different types of events (different types of triggers that will trigger different types of reactions). Configurable events are Motion Detection, Tamper Detection, Scheduled Recording, Manual Trigger, and alarms created by external sensors connected via the camera’s Alarm Input. 5.7.1 EVENT SETTINGS Event List: This lists the already configured events. Check the box next to each list to activate or deactivate the event. Click on an event to highlight it and select it. Add: Click this button to open the Event configuration window (see the image below) and add a new Event that will tell the camera to trigger a selectable reaction/s if this type of Event occurs. In the window, give the Event a name, and click the down arrow in the “Event Triggered by” field to select the type of event that will trigger the to-be-specified response/s: The “Event Triggered by” options are: 39 EZN-Series IP Cameras Alarm Input: Select this if you want a reaction trigger coming from any external, connected sensor to activate a to-be-specified-below reaction/s via the camera system. Make sure that a suitable device is actually connected to the alarm input relay. See the Alarm I/O section for info on how to set up the alarm input and output channels. Manual Trigger: Select this option if you want the to-be-specified reaction/s to be triggered manually (by clicking the Trigger Event on the Live page). Motion Detection: Select this option if you want motion in a specified part of the camera’s viewing rectangle (the screen image) to trigger the to-be-specified-below reaction/s. See the Motion Detection section below for info on how to set up Motion Detection areas. Tampering Detection: Select this option if you want the camera’s tampering detection sensor to trigger the to-be-specified-below reaction/s. See the Tamper Detection section below for info on how to set up Tampering Detection. Schedule Recording: Select this option if you want the Schedule Recording periods configured in the recording schedule (the Settings > Event > Schedule page) to activate this event. See the Schedule section below for info on how to set up recording schedules. In this scenario, a preconfigured event reaction like a log entry (“Log”) will list the start and end times of each period. Actual recording will only be triggered if the event is preconfigured to do so. Click Enable This Event to activate the event. Click Enable Re-trigger to set a minimum time after the event is triggered before the event can be triggered again. Click Enable Pre-trigger Buffer if you want the Event reaction (as selected in the “Notification Over” field below) to be the activation of the video recording function, and if you want the recording to include the video feed from the time period (configurable on the previous “Event Settings” page) just before the Event trigger occurred. 40 EZN-Series IP Cameras Click Enable Post-trigger Buffer if you want the Event reaction (as selected in the Notification Over field) to be the activation of the video recording function, and if you want the recording to include the video feed from a time period (configurable on the Event Settings page) just after the Event trigger occurred. The “Notification Over” (Event Reaction) options are: Log: Check this box if you want the camera to list the event’s details in its log if the event is triggered. Trigger Alarm Output: If you want the camera to relay the event reaction to a device attached to the alarm relay output wire, then check this box and the box of the relevant alarm output channel. Also set how long the alarm output signal will be sustained. Send Mail Notification: Check this box if you want the camera to send an Event notification email to the email address entered in the Set SMTP Server(email) field of the Network > SMTP/FTP page, if the Event occurs. Upload to FTP: Check this box if you want the camera to upload recorded footage to the FTP server entered in the Set SMTP Server(email) field of the Network > SMTP/FTP page, if the Event occurs. Record to SD Card: Check this box if you want the camera to start recording its video feed (when the event occurs) on an on-camera Micro SD Card (if such a card has been inserted). NOTE: The recording will only be as long as the combined Pre- and Post-trigger Buffers, so make sure you enable at least one of these buffers, especially the Post-trigger Buffer. Record to PC: Check this box if you want the camera to start recording its video feed (when the event occurs) on the same folder on the same PC as configured on the User Config > User Config page (if such a folder has been enabled and configured). NOTE: The recording will only be as long as the combined Pre- and Post-trigger Buffers (and for as long as the event trigger is happening – e.g. a motion is detected), so make sure you enable at least one of these buffers, especially the Post-trigger Buffer. Network Alarm: Check this box if you want the camera to send a network alarm signal (when the event occurs) to the servers configured on the Network > Network Alarm page (if such a configuration has been completed). Click OK to save all settings, or click Cancel to cancel. Modify: Click this button on the Event Settings page to edit an existing Event’s settings. Highlight the desired event on the list before clicking this button. See the section above for info on the setting options. 41 EZN-Series IP Cameras Remove: Click this button to delete an existing, selected Event. Click Apply to save all settings, or click Reset to cancel. Pre/Post Trigger Settings: Select the duration of each buffer. This will determine the amount of footage (length of time) before or after the event trigger moment that will be included in an event-triggered video recording, if that buffer and video recording has been enabled in the event’s configuration window. Click Apply to save all settings, or click Reset to cancel. 5.7.2 MOTION DETECTION Use this page to configure up to four areas in which motion will be detected. This function can be linked with correctly configured Events to trigger Event reactions like the activation of video recording periods, snapshots, alarms, etc. Color tabs: Click on a color tab to turn your mouse cursor into a pen of that color. You can now create a block of that color on the video screen. Move your mouse pen to the position where you want your detection rectangle to start. Click on that position and move your mouse pen to the position (diagonally opposing corner) where you want your mask rectangle to end. Click again and the setup screen will display the rectangular area you selected in the color you selected (see the image above). This block will be an area inside which the camera will detect motion. If you want to create another detection area, use one of the other three palette colors. Each color denotes a different detection area. Only one block per color is allowed. As the number of colors suggests, you can configure up to four blocks. Select All: Click this button to select the whole screen and thus turn the whole screen into a motion detection area. Clear All: Click this button to delete all configured motion detection blocks. 42 EZN-Series IP Cameras Eraser: Click this button to turn your mouse cursor into an eraser to delete any block you click on. Area: Shows the color and number/ID of the block. Enable: Check this box to enable the related motion detection block. Sensitivity: Set the sensitivity of the motion detection sensor function. Click Apply to save all settings, or click Reset to cancel. 5.7.3 TAMPER DETECTION Use this page to set the number of seconds that an alarm signal will be active if the device is tampered with. 5.7.4 ALARM I/O Use this page to set the type of trigger input and the type of output contact for each of the camera’s two configurable alarm channels. 5.7.5 SCHEDULE Use this page to configure a schedule for periods during which the camera should deactivate all user-activated Events (gray Deselect periods), or when the camera should deactivate all user-activated Events, except Schedule Recording (SR) events (blue Schedule Recording-only periods), or when the camera should deactivate only SR events (red Event Recording-only periods), or when it should enable all 43 EZN-Series IP Cameras activated Events (yellow periods). Event Recording: Click this button to make every hour block you click on red. A red block represents an Event Recording-only block, which represents an hour when the camera will deactivate all preconfigured, activated Schedule Recording events and keep all the other activated events active. Schedule Recording: Click this button to make every hour block you click on blue. A blue block represents a Schedule Recording-only block, which represents an hour when the camera will deactivate all other preconfigured, activated events and keep only the preconfigured, activated Schedule Recording events active. Event + Schedule: Click this button to make every hour block you click on yellow. A yellow block represents an hour in which all activated events, including Schedule Recording events, will be active. Deselect: Click this button to make every hour block become grey. A grey block represents an hour in which all activated events, including Schedule Recording events, will be inactive. Click Apply to save all settings, or click Reset to cancel. 5.8 SYSTEM Use this submenu’s submenus to set the system’s time and Micro SD card settings, and to do maintenance and reset actions like reboots and upgrades. 5.8.1 DATE/TIME Machine Name Settings: If required, enter a new name for the machine. This name will be visible in the Machine Name field of the IP Utility software that comes with the product (see below). Set Time Zone: Set the time zone of the camera’s location. 44 EZN-Series IP Cameras Set Date/Time Manually: Set the date/time here if you won’t be using an NTP server to update the date/time (see below). Set Date/Time Sync.: Enter the Network Time Protocol server, if applicable. The camera’s time will be automatically adjusted by synchronizing with the NTP server. Click Apply to save all settings, or click Reset to cancel. 5.8.2 DAYLIGHT SAVING Click the button to enable this schedule, and select the dates when the region’s daylight saving period begins and ends. 5.8.3 SD CARD Use this page to prepare the system for safely removing the Micro SD Card from its slot (see the image below). Set up the SD Card Notification: Select the percentage of storage space that should be left on the card before the camera notifies you of the impending storage shortage or overwrite. Event Recording: Select if you want Event Recording only, FTP Backup only, or both. 45 EZN-Series IP Cameras Overwrite: Click ON if you want the card to start writing over recorded footage when its memory is full. Click OFF if you want the card to stop recording new footage when its memory is full. SD Card Utility Capacity: This shows you how much card memory has been used and how much memory capacity remains on the card. Remove: Click this button before removing the card from the system. Format: Click this button to Format the card. All data saved on the SD card will be removed if the card is formatted. 5.8.4 MAINTENANCE Maintenance Server Reboot: Click this button to reboot the unit without changing any of the settings. Use this function if the unit is not behaving as expected. Restore: Click this button to restart and reset most of the current 46 EZN-Series IP Cameras settings to their factory default values. The only settings that will not be changed to default are: • IP settings • DDNS settings Default: The Default button should be used with caution. Pressing this button will return all of the camera's settings, including the IP address, to the factory default values. The camera will then have to be reconfigured. Save/Load Configuration Server Save: To make a backup file of the machine’s current configurations, press Save to save all the configurations to a config. file. This will enable the user to reload these configuration settings if the settings are changed and there is unexpected behavior. Load: To load a previously saved configuration, press the Browse button to locate the saved config. file (see above) and then click the Load button. The system’s settings will be restored to the saved configuration. Upgrade Firmware Click the Browse button to find a previously prepared firmware upgrade file. Click Upgrade to install the new firmware. Note: Do not disconnect power to the unit during the upgrade sequence. The unit will reboot automatically after the upgrade has completed. (1-5 minutes.) Note: During the upgrade process, all event recording actions will be stopped. Event recording actions will resume after the camera is rebooted. 6. EXIT Click this button to exit from the system and close the web page. 47 EZN-Series IP Cameras 7. SPECIFICATIONS GENERAL Pickup Device EZN3160 EZN3260 EZN3340 Image sensor 1/3" Panasonic 1.3Mega HD progressive scan CMOS sensor 1/3" Panasonic 2Mega HD progressive scan CMOS sensor 1/ 2.8" Sony 3Mega HD progressive scan CMOS sensor Vari-focal lens, Auto Iris, 2.8-10mm, F1.3, 19 Lens Horizontal : Wide 100° / Tele 27° Angle of view Vertical : Wide 73° / Tele 20° Min. Illuminations 0 Lux/F=1.3 (IR LEDs on) Day/Night Built-in Auto IR cut filter Shutter Time 1/125 ~1/60,000 sec. Video Compression Max. Resolution IRIS Control Video Streaming H.264/M-JPEG 1280 x 1024 1944 x 1092 2048 x 1536 Electrical IRIS/Lens IRIS (DC Lens) Multi-stream H.264, and Motion JPEG: 1 stream in max. resolution at 30 fps; more streams if identical or limited in frame rate/resolution Image Settings Compression, Brightness, Sharpness, Contrast, Saturation, Hue, White balance, Exposure control, Backlight compensation, Rotation, Mirroring of images, Text and image overlay WDR Yes(only EZN3160/3260) AUDIO Audio Compression G.711 Operation Mode Two-way audio 48 EZN-Series IP Cameras NETWORK Interface 10Base-T/100Base-TX auto-negotiation, RJ-45 socket Support MDI/MDI-X auto crossover function Supported Protocols TCP/IP,IPV6,UDP,ICMP,DHCP,NTP,DNS,DDNS,SMTP,SNMP,FTP,HTTP,HTTPs, PPPoE,UPnP,Bonjour,RTP,RTSP,RTCP,UDP,IGMP,ICMP,ARP,ONVIF,PSIA TERMINAL I/O Alarm Input/Output 1/1 Audio Input/Output 1/1 Test Video Output BNC socket, composite 1 V p-p / 75Ω IR LEDs IR Distance 40 meters / 131feet IR Wavelength 850nm IR LED Lifespan Up to 20,000 hours EVENT MNGMNT Event Trigger Notification Alarm Input, Manual Trigger, Motion Detection Trigger alarm output, Send mail notification, Upload video to FTP, Record video to PC and Network alarm LOCAL STORAGE Micro SD Card Secure Disk physical layer specification version 2.0 Supports SDHC Host Specification POWER 49 EZN-Series IP Cameras Power Supply DC 12V & PoE Power over Ethernet Max. Power Consumption Yes (PoE 802.3af) 9W (IR LEDs on ) 9W (IR LEDs on ) PHYSICAL Operation Temperature -40°C ~ 55°C / -40°F ~ 131°F (DC 12V) -20°C ~ 55°C / -4°F ~ 131°F ( PoE ) Humidity 20% ~ 80% non-condensing Weight Dimensions (L x W x H) 1.62kg 359.9mm x 95.5mm x 95.5mm Environm. Rating IP66 for outdoor Certificates CE, FCC 50 8W (IR LEDs on ) EZN-Series IP Cameras EverFocus Electronics Corp. EverFocus Taiwan: EverFocus Europe - Germany: 12F, No.79, Sec. 1, Shin-Tai Wu Road, Albert-Einstein-Strasse 1, D-46446 Hsi-Chih, Taipei, Taiwan Emmerich, Germany TEL: +886 2 2698 2334 TEL: +49 2822 93940 FAX: +886 2 2698 2380 FAX: +49 2822 939495 www.everfocus.com.tw www.everfocus.de [email protected] [email protected] EverFocus China - Beijing: EverFocus China - Shenzhen: Room 609, Technology Trade Building, 4F, No. 2, D4 Building, Wan Yelong Shangdi Information Industry Base, Industrial Park, Tangtou Road, Shiyan, Haidian District, Beijing 100085, China Baoan, Shenzhen, Guangdong 518101, China TEL: +86 10 6297 3336~39 TEL: +86 755 2765 1313 FAX: +86 10 6297 1423 FAX: +86 755 2765 0337 www.everfocus.com.cn www.everfocus.com.cn [email protected] [email protected] EverFocus USA - California: EverFocus USA - New York: 1801 Highland Avenue, Unit A, Duarte, CA 91010, USA 415 Oser Avenue, Unit S, Hauppauge, NY 11788, USA TEL: +1 626 844 8888 TEL: +1 631 436 5070 FAX: +1 626 844 8838 FAX: +1 631 436 5027 www.everfocus.com www.everfocus.com [email protected] [email protected] EverFocus Japan: EverFocus Europe - UK: 5F, Kinshicho City Building, 2-13-4 Koto-Bashi,Sumida-Ku, Unit 12, Spitfire Business Park, Tokyo, 130-0022, Japan Hawker Road, Croydon Surrey, CR0 4WD, UK TEL: +81 3 5625 8188 TEL: +44 20 8649 9757 / +44 845 430 9999 FAX: +81 3 5625 8189 FAX: +44 20 8649 9907 www.everfocus.co.jp www.everfocusuk.co.uk [email protected] [email protected] EverFocus India: Your EverFocus product is designed and manufactured with high quality materials and components which can be recycled and reused. This symbol means that electrical and electronic equipment, at their end-of-life, should be disposed of separately from your household waste. Please, dispose of this equipment at your local community waste collection/recycling centre. In the European Union there are separate collection systems for used electrical and electronic product. Please, help us to conserve the environment we live in! Suite 803, Housefin Bhavan, C-21, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra (East), Mumbai 400051, India TEL: +91 22 6128 8700 FAX: +91 22 6128 8705 www.everfocus.in Ihr EverFocus Produkt wurde entwickelt und hergestellt mit qualitativ hochwertigen Materialien und Komponenten, die recycelt und wieder verwendet werden können. Dieses Symbol bedeutet, dass elektrische und elektronische Geräte am Ende ihrer Nutzungsdauer vom Hausmüll getrennt entsorgt werden sollen. Bitte entsorgen Sie dieses Gerät bei Ihrer örtlichen kommunalen Sammelstelle oder im Recycling Centre. Helfen Sie uns bitte, die Umwelt zu erhalten, in der wir leben! [email protected] P/N: 4605PZ3160B010A 51
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