While each video driver has some of its own particular capabilities and requirements, each uses a common set of components and characteristics that are the same among all video drivers. This chapter describes some of the concepts, components, and functions that are common to most video drivers that are developed for integrations using NiagaraAX-3.2 or later. Refer to the manufacturer’s documentation for system-specific video device capabilities and requirements.
Some of the basic common video features include the following:
Camera control capabilities include: controlling pan, tilt, zoom, focus and iris settings. You can create camera presets to be used in association with alarm events or for activation during live video display.
Some video devices (such as intelligent IP Cameras, DVRs, and NVRs) have the ability to provide motion-detection alarms. These types of alarms can be routed to a NiagaraAX application where they are presented in the alarm console with a link to the recorded video.
NiagaraAX alarms can be routed to the video device to initiate actions based on those alarms. For example, a NiagaraAX alarm may initiate an action to direct a camera to move and start recording one of several pre-configured targets. DVRs can identify and store alarm-related footage for review.
Beginning with NiagaraAX-3.6, the driver can direct the Surveillance Viewer to the display connected to a DVR. You can choose which camera feeds to view on the display.
The remote video feature includes the following remote support capacities:
A Web Supervisor alarm console can display video associated with an alarm that was generated at a remote station.
A Web Supervisor station can support video graphics (using Px widgets) and have them served by cameras that are assigned to remote stations associated with the Web Supervisor.
The Playback Viewer component
displays live or recorded video from any recording device that is configured on a remote station communicating over a NiagaraAX
network.
The Video Surveillance Viewer component
displays live or recorded video from any recording device that is configured on a remote station communicating over the network.
This includes displaying the Surveillance Viewer on the monitor connected to a remote DVR.
Video recording devices on local stations may start recording as a result of an alarm event that occurs at a remote station communicating over the NiagaraNetwork. These alarms can be archived to a supervisor station and associated video viewed from the supervisor.
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