Verint Nextiva S1100w User Manual - Red/blue Display
3: Configuring and Installing the Device
28
Verint Video Solutions
Red/Blue Display
If an S1100w transmitter currently streaming video to a management software loses its
connection to a camera, the corresponding display tile in the software will present a half
red, half blue/black pattern.
Quality of Service
Quality of Service (QoS) is a set of low-level networking protocols giving higher priority to
more important data flows while ensuring that the less important ones do not fail. QoS is an
essential technology for organizations rolling out a new generation of network applications
such as real-time voice communications and high-quality video delivery.
In the Nextiva edge devices, the two available QoS flavors are Type of Service (ToS) and
Differentiated Service Code Points (DSCP).
For QoS to be taken into account, the network infrastructure equipment (switches and
routers) must support one of these protocols. If any of these devices does not support QoS,
the QoS data will simply be processed as traditional non-QoS data. Furthermore, all Nextiva
edge devices on a network must support the same QoS protocol (or no protocols at all).
You can set a priority flag to three data types coming out of an edge device: video, audio,
and control. A QoS-enabled switch (or router) uses this flag to determine how the current
data compares to what is currently going through it.
To set the QoS values, you need to go in the command line interface (CLI) of the device,
access the Advanced > Quality of Service menu. For the procedure to access the CLI, see
page 31.
Status LED
The system status LED is a bicolor (green-red) LED providing detailed information on the
current state of the device.
* At least one of them must be transferred to obtain the LED condition.
Condition
Indication
Steady red for 5 sec.
The device is powering up.
Flashing red (1 sec. intervals)
The IP address of the device is already assigned to another device
in the network.
Flashing green (3 sec. intervals)
The firmware has started, but RF communication is not
established.
Flashing green (1 sec. intervals)
The firmware has started, RF communication is established, but no
video/serial* data is transmitted.
Flashing green (0.2 sec. intervals) The firmware has started, RF communication is established, and
video/serial* data is transmitted.
Three consecutive red blinks
every 2 sec.
No video source is detected and no video is transmitted.
Flashing green-red (1 sec.
intervals)
The device is undergoing a firmware update.
Flashing red (0.1 sec. intervals)
The device is being identified.