Teleste MPH241 User Manual

Mph series video encoders
Table of Contents

Advertisement

User manual – MPH241/242
MPH series video encoders
H.264 / MPEG-4 / MJPEG / MPEG-2 video encoders
for PTZ and fixed camera networking applications
MPH241 – 1-ch stand-alone video encoder
MPH242 – 2-ch stand-alone video encoder
SD, HD-SDI (1080p)
MPH200 series video encoders
user manual, 59300463, rev002

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Summary of Contents for Teleste MPH241

  • Page 1 User manual – MPH241/242 MPH series video encoders H.264 / MPEG-4 / MJPEG / MPEG-2 video encoders for PTZ and fixed camera networking applications MPH241 – 1-ch stand-alone video encoder MPH242 – 2-ch stand-alone video encoder SD, HD-SDI (1080p) MPH200 series video encoders...
  • Page 2: Table Of Contents

    Contents MPH series video encoders introduction ....................... 1 MPH series video encoders front and rear panel ....................2-3 Getting started ................................4 Quick instructions ............................... 4 Device’s IP address ............................4 MPH200 series models ............................. 5 Ethernet interface ..............................6-7 Local ports, electrical interfaces ........................6 Power over Ethernet (PoE+) option ........................
  • Page 3: Mph Series Video Encoders Introduction

    ISO/IEC13818 (MPEG-2 MP@ML) standard. General-purpose asynchronous data channels are transferred sepa- Note! This product is under rately from the encoded video signals. development and Teleste reserves the rights to alter specifications, features, Firmware version manufacturing release dates and...
  • Page 4: Mph Series Video Encoders Front And Rear Panel

    MPH series video encoders front and rear panel MPH200 stand-alone encoder (example view from MPH241 device) Reset button T - Led. Terminal AUDIO server indicator led M - Led. Power and status indicator led Ground 12...24 VDC Front panel Back panel...
  • Page 5 6. Audio interface (10-pin screw terminal block). 7. Power supply connector (2-pin screw terminal block, +12...28 VDC). Reset button: Device software reboot and hard/soft factory defaults restoration (see section Factory reset). MPH241 signals. Ground: Device ground connection. Colour Mode CVBS...
  • Page 6: Getting Started

    IP address from the private IP range 169.254.0.1 - 169.254.255.254. In this case in order to find the chosen IP address you have two options. You can use Teleste MPH Discovery Tool to browse all the available ONVIF compliment devices in the network, note that your PC IP address should be in the same IP range.
  • Page 7: Mph200 Series Models

    One video input (digital HD-SDI or analog CVBS). Two video inputs (analog CVBS). MPH241 encoder supports both digital HD (HD-SDI) and analog CVBS video formats. For HD-SDI operation the MPH241 needs to have the HD encoding license MLH213 enabled. MPH200 series video encoders WebUI user manual...
  • Page 8: Ethernet Interface

    Fast Ethernet and Gigabit Ethernet connection speeds. Ethernet interface type is either a fixed electrical (copper), or has support for a small form-factor pluggable transceiver (SFP) module. Supported SFP transceivers are specified by Teleste. Please see the latest list of available Electrical Ethernet connector (RJ-45). SFP products.
  • Page 9: How To Unplug Or Plug-In The Sfp Transceiver Module

    How to unplug or plug-in the SFP transceiver module If your up-link port requirements change, simply unplug the existing SFP module, and plug-in the new module. The SFP transceiver modules must be installed before the encoder is powered on. Installing SFP: 1.
  • Page 10: Management Interface

    2 to the CLI mode). Local CLI connection The local CLI session can be establish via data channel 2 by using a serial data connection (RS232) cable (type Teleste CIC506). Note! Data 2 port must be set to CLI mode . Remote CLI connection Over the IP network you can make Telnet or SSH connection to open the command line interface remotely.
  • Page 11: Web User Interface (Webui)

    Web user interface (WebUI) General The MPH series video encoders can be fully configured using Web user interface (WebUI). You can access the Web user interface via your web browser, eg. Mozilla Firefox (recommended), Internet Explorer, Apple Safari and Google Chrome. The Secure HTTP (HTTPS, SSL 3.0 or TLS 1.0) feature is supported in MPH encoders.
  • Page 12: Starting Webui Session

    Starting WebUI session To create a WebUI session, first enter the device IP address into the web browser’s address bar (see section Device’s IP address). The following LOGIN window appears on the screen. Enter the required username and password (see bottom) in the fields and then click to continue -->...
  • Page 13: Main Page

    Hint! You can open sdp file with the VLC player to view the stream, but notice the following requirements: Shows installed and available Stream port number should be even number. If you licenses for device. are using multicast stream, ensure that you have set valid multicast IP address.
  • Page 14: Event Management System

    Event management system MPH event management system MPH encoders internally controls events as specified by ONVIF. Events are generated from Digital IO inputs, motion detection, tampering detection and video signal loss and each of those generate event with different Topic. In addition to event topics, events contain data describ- ing the event such as the video interface related, amount of motion and threshold, etc.
  • Page 15: Event Management For Video

    Event management for video For video it can trigger actions such as changing video settings, frame rate, bit rate and video quality for each video profile based on events. An example when the video bit rate and frame rate change when an event triggered.
  • Page 16: Configuring Video Channels

    Configuring video channels Video connection MPH encoder is available in one and two video input models. One Note! MPH encoder has automatic channel model has support for CVBS or HD-SDI video signal, two NTSC/PAL video format detection. channel model has support only for CVBS video signal. One channel When changing the video format, the (CVBS input) model has equipped with additional loop-though output device must reboot.
  • Page 17: Video Streaming Methods

    MPH241 contains one video input any other standard video source. The default video input mode is set to (with loop-through). PAL/NTSC format (CVBS). MPH241 model has also support fot HD-SDI. Note! One channel MPH encoder’s High-definition serial digital interface (HD-SDI) second video connector is loop- through port for an analog monitor.
  • Page 18: Media Profile (Video)

    Media profile (video) MPH series encoders has a total of six (6) media profiles. Each media profile can be set separately for individual resolution, frame rate, GOP structure and bitrate, within the processing power of the device. Click “Media Profiles” under the Media Configuration menu. Media Profile Configurations page appears on the screen.
  • Page 19: Video Interfaces

    Video interfaces Click “Video Interfaces” under the Interface Configuration menu. Video Interfaces page appears on the screen. In this page you can see the number of physical video inputs available and adjust the brightness, contrast and saturation values for them. Video status.
  • Page 20: Jpeg Snapshot Configuration

    JPEG snapshot configuration Additionally there is a JPEG image capture feature that allows taking Continuous: Device generates a JPEG snapshots from the video and storing them into a ftp server. It is snapsthot at specified interval (period) and sends the images to configured also possible view JPEG captures with http.
  • Page 21: Video Source And Sinks

    Video source and sinks Click “Video Source and Sinks” under the Media Configuration menu. Video Source Configurations page appears on the screen. Video overlay settings can be changed on this page, you can enter a text and time/date on the video. Note! Date and time settings can be changed from Date &...
  • Page 22: Video Encoders

    Video encoders Click “Video Encoders” under the Media Configuration menu. Video Encoder Configurations page appears on the screen. Video encoding settings can be configured on this page, e.g. select format (MJPEG, MPEG-2, MPEG-4 and H.264), set resolution, bit rate, frame rate and multicast IP/port settings for each profile.
  • Page 23 VBR (Variable Bit Rate) video aims at constant quality, but as the bit rate fluctuates over time. CBR (Constant Bit Rate) video fluctuates in quality, while its multi- plexing behaviour is easy to predict. Because in unconstrained VBR video the bit rate fluctuation might be too large, capped VBR video is proposed as an alternative.
  • Page 24 Usage _________________________________________________________ Profiles: Here you see how the media profile is assigned to a video source. MPEG-2 Options: _________________________________________________________ P frame interval: There are three options; Every frame = IP, Every second frame = IBP, Every third frame = IBBP. GOP format: MPEG-2 GOP format.
  • Page 25: Video Stream Multiplication

    In practise this means that the number of I-frames is the common nominator. As an example, one MPH241 unit can stream (unicast or multicast) 2 x D1@25fps for monitor- ing and 4 x 2CIF@3fps (unicast or multicast) for recording simultaneously.
  • Page 26: Video Streaming Performance

    Video streaming performance The following performance table shows the performance of MPH200 devices in encoding and streaming video signal per video input simultaneously. Total video sessions = original video stream + multiplied streams. SRTP (Secure Real-time Transport Protocol) = encrypted RTP stream. De-interlacing is done by choosing right profile.
  • Page 27 *Note! Minimum (Min) values may Resolution Bitrate (kbps) be smaller without any picture Min* Recommended quality degradation. Interlacing Interlacing toolsets OFF toolsets ON CapVBR CapVBR CapVBR Recommended bitrates for H.264 encoding. 1900 1900 5500 2500 2500 2800 2300 4CIF 1900 1900 5500 2500...
  • Page 28 Rate Control Mode Recommended Recommended GOP sizes 3000 60 --> for H.264 encoding. Capped VBR 3000 15 --> 3000 7 --> Rate Control Mode Recommended Recommended GOP sizes 60...120 for MPEG-4 encoding. Capped VBR 15...120 7...120 Rate Control Mode Recommended Recommended GOP sizes 60...120 for MPEG-2 encoding.
  • Page 29: Configuring Audio Channels

    Configuring audio channels Audio connection MEDIA PROFILE AUDIO INTERFACE MPH200 encoder supports two bi-directional audio channels, which can • Balanced or unbalanced be used for one stereo audio or two mono audio purposes. The audio interface supports both balanced (both channels separately) and unbal- AUDIO SOURCE anced wiring.
  • Page 30 AUDIO INTERFACES Balanced or unbalanced AUDIO SOURCE AUDIO ENCODER AUDIO SINKS AUDIO DECODER Stereo, Mono L/R Audio format Stereo, Mono L/R MEDIA PROFILE CONFIGURATIONS (add audio to media profile) Audio configuration flowchart. Adding audio encoder to media profile: 1. Add to media profile (Media Configuration/Media Profiles) desired audio source configuration.
  • Page 31 1. Audio interfaces Click “Audio Interfaces” under the Interface Configuration menu. Audio Interfaces page appears on the screen. In this page you can see the number of physical audio inputs available and choose audio input mode (balanced or unbalanced). Audio interface mode selection. Affects both input and output connection.
  • Page 32 2. Audio source and sinks Click “Audio Sources” under the Media Configuration menu. Audio Source & Sink Configurations page appears on the screen. You can rename the audio settings name but by default the name describes the physical port location in connector, e.g.“Mono Audio In 1 (pins 1, 2)”. MPH200 series video encoders WebUI user manual...
  • Page 33 3. Audio encoders Click “Audio Encoders” under the Media Configuration menu. Audio Encoder Configurations page appears on the screen. Audio encoding settings can be configured on this page, e.g. select format: G.711 (uLaw), G.726 (ADPCM), AAC-LC or HE-AAC, set samplerate, bit rate, format and multicast IP/port settings for each profile.
  • Page 34 Note! Samplerate value has to be same at both encoder and corre- sponding decoders. Trigger Configuration See section “Event management system” from page 60 for more details. Note! Only even port numbers can be used for RTP, and then the following odd port number shall be used for RTCP (RFC 1889).
  • Page 35 Trigger configuration: _________________________________________________________ Enabled: Enables or disables the trigger feature Timeout: Keeps the event state unchanged for the defined period for instance if an event clears quickly, it does not change its state for the defined timeout, recommended 5 seconds. Event subscription (for triggering): _________________________________________________________ Events:...
  • Page 36 Audio stream multiplication Each audio encoding profile can be assigned with five (5) different destina- tion addresses (primary stream and additional streams). These addresses can be freely set to unicast, multicast or a combination of these. The use of multiple destination addresses up to a certain degree doesn’t load the MPU;...
  • Page 37: Configuring Data Channels

    Configuring data channels Data connections The MPH200 encoder provides two independent bi-directional data channels. Supported data modes for data channel 1 are RS422, RS485- 2w and RS485-4w. Data channel 2 is fixed for RS232 mode only. Data port settings can be configured from web user interface (WebUI) or Command Line Interface (CLI).
  • Page 38 Data type descriptions MPH Encoder Slave RS232 is an unbalanced data format (i.e. the signal wire working Tx / Rx against a reference – ground). Simplex RS232 requires two connections (signal and ground). Full-duplex RS232 requires three connections DATA2 TX (signal TX, signal RX and ground).
  • Page 39 Data interfaces configuration An analog PTZ camera can be controlled remotely over an IP network via the MPH encoder’s serial port (RS-232/422/485). MPH encoders supports two ways to control PTZ camera, ONVIF PTZ service and transparent RS-data tunneling. Click “Terminal Server” under the Interface Configuration menu. Terminal Server - Data Ports page appears on the screen.
  • Page 40 Tunneling protocol Tunnelling Protocol enables you to establish point to point connection between encoder, decoder and management system. There are three options, TCP server, TCP client and UDP multicast. Data port mode can be set to the tunneling protocol usage from the Terminal Server page.
  • Page 41 ONVIF PTZ service ONVIF PTZ service lets you control the camera from ONVIF client application. ONVIF PTZ service is available from data channel 1. It means that MPH converts ONVIF PTZ commands to Pelco D In order to activate the ONVIF PTZ commands and transmits that to the camera via Data channel 1.
  • Page 42: Configuring Contact Closure Channels

    Configuring contact closure channels Contact closure loop (CCL) connection The MPH200 series video encoders provide two inputs and one contact closure output channel line. Contact closure inputs There are two different CC input connection types. First one is for a normal short circuit which is called “dry contact closure”.
  • Page 43 Device generates events from chang- es in digital input states. Events are used internally to trigger configuration changes in video encoding or provided for ONVIF clients through metadata streams and ONVIF notification inter- faces (Real Time Notification Interface and Base Notification Interface). Contact closure interfaces configuration Click “Digital I/O”...
  • Page 44 Bistable – After changing the state, the relay remains in this state. Monostable – After changing the state, the relay returns to its idle state after the specified time. Note! When Contact closure tunneling is used, Bistable mode is only applicable. Monostable mode is applicable when relay output is controlled by ONVIF commands from ONVIF client.
  • Page 45: Event Management

    Event management Triggering General Events Actions MPH internally controls events as specified by ONVIF. Events are gener- Video ated from digital IO inputs, motion detection, tampering detection and Changes video settings, video signal loss and each of those generate event with different topic. frame rate, bit rate and video quality Operation...
  • Page 46 Video triggering For video the triggering can trigger actions such as changing video settings, frame rate, bit rate and video quality for each video profile based on events. An example from Video Encoder Configurations page shows: The video bit rate and frame rate change when an event triggered.
  • Page 47: Video Analytics Configurations

    Video Analytics configuration is activated if the configuration is included in at least one of the profiles. Note! Profile does not need to be activated when configuring video analytics settings. User can add/remove rules (maximum of 5 rules are supported per configuration).
  • Page 48: Metadata Configurations

    Metadata is a data channel and one of the Onvif features which can carry events, PTZ status, and/or video analytics data for network video devices. Note! Only even port numbers can be used for RTP, and then the following odd port number shall be used for RTCP (RFC 1889).
  • Page 49: Network Settings

    Network settings Click “Network” under the Media Configuration menu. Ethernet Interface & Network Settings pages appears on the screen. Device’s network settings can be changed on thess pages. Ethernet interface Common _________________________________________________________ Type: Device’s Ethernet Interface type. Module: Shows the status of SFP module. Link status: Shows the current link status and connection type.
  • Page 50 DHCP server. Search domains: Searches the given DNS domain (e.g. teleste.com) for lookup an IP address; you can add up to three domain names. You can change the DNS domains’ priority by moving them up and down. The top of the list has the highest priority.
  • Page 51: Date & Time Settings

    Date & time settings Click “Date & Time” under the Administration menu. Date & Time Settings page appears on the screen. Device’s Date & Time settings can be changed on this page. This page also shows the system time and the local time calculated using the time zone set on the device.
  • Page 52: Device Management

    Note! After device reboots, wait until M-led is green again (wait at least 10 minutes). Note! Restores all setting to default Note! wait at least 4 min. rebooting. factory settings, including IP config Note! wait at least 15 min. rebooting. and admin password to defaults.
  • Page 53: Services Settings

    The Real Time Streaming Protocol (RTSP) ia a network protocol used to establish and control media sessions between devices. For example, a video Decoder sends RTSP play command to the video Encoder. Note! If port clash is detected while configuring RTSP server port, device gives an error message and disables RTSP server.
  • Page 54 Administrative scope: Range of multicast IP addresses advertised with SAP. When the stream multicast address is within the SAP scope, end of the scope is used. Otherwise default SAP-address 224.2.127.254 is used. Default SAP- scope is 239.0.0.0 - 239.255.255.255. Device Discovery _________________________________________________________ WS-Discovery enabled: This enables ONVIF device discovery feature.
  • Page 55 RSA key and generates RSA-signatures by it. You can have a certification (x509) for TPM RSA key pairs (e.g. signed by Teleste) mapped to the serial number of the MPH encoder, showing that particular device encoded the video. So any recording can be traced back to exact MPH unit.
  • Page 56: User Management

    User management Click “User management” under the Administration menu. User management page appears on the screen. This page allows you modify user settings. Users _________________________________________________________ Shows device user accounts. All user accounts are protected by a user name and a password. Administrator user can create and remove user. Username: Set username for user.
  • Page 57: Configuring Ethernet Switch

    Configuring ethernet switch Switch inroduction and features MPH200 has a built-in four port tri-speed Ethernet Switch with two integrated copper transceivers and two SFP ports. Switch is a fully managed field hardened stand-alone Gigabit Ethernet switch for video networking applications. The product is designed for use in harsh environment applications.
  • Page 58 The categorizer analyzes all received frames. It assigns each frame to one of four QoS classes based on: 1. Port-based priority 2. User priority in the VLAN tag header (IEEE Std 802.1p) 3. Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP/DiffServ ) from the IP-header (IPv4 and IPv6 supported) Based on the priority assigned by the categorizer, higher priority frames take precedence over lower priority frames during forwarding through...
  • Page 59 Flooding storm control MPH200 Ethernet Switch features a flooding control system for con- straining undesired behavior caused by, for example, loops in the network or denial-of-service attacks. SNMP – simple network management protocol MPH200 Ethernet Switch supports SNMPv2c. SNMP enables network administrators and control engineers to manage network performance, find and solve network problems, and plan for network growth.
  • Page 60 RSTP – rapid spanning tree protocol Spanning Tree can take 30...60 seconds for each host to decide whether its ports are actively forwarding traffic. Rapid Spanning Tree (RSTP) detects uses of network topologies to enable faster conver- MPH100/400 gence, without creating forwarding loops. MPH200 Port mirroring Port mirroring monitors and mirrors network traffic by forwarding copies...
  • Page 61 Web user interface You can manage the switch via Web User Interface (WebUI). Following options are available: Configuration • Set port speed • Configure simple port-based VLAN • Enable/disable flow control • Storm Control Configuration • Configure RSTP parameters • Configure QoS •...
  • Page 62 Ethernet switch settings Click “Ethernet Switch” under the Administration menu. ETHERNET SWITCH SETTINGS / System Configuration page appears on the screen. System configuration Mac address: Device mac address Active IP Address: Valid IP address Active Subnet Mask: Valid subnet mask Active Gateway: Valid gateway address DHCP Server:...
  • Page 63 Ports Click “Ports” under the Configuration menu. Port Configuration page appears on the screen. Port configuration Enable Jumbo Frames: Allows you to enable Jumbo (giant) frames which are bigger than the standard frame size (1518 bytes of payload). PERFECT_REACH/Power Saving Mode: PerfectReach is an intelligent algorithm, it detects the presence of a shorter cable and then adaptively lowers the power level, saving energy for links shorter than the full 100 meters of cable length specified by...
  • Page 64 Virtual LANs (VLANs) – introduction VLANs are logical partitions of the physical LAN. VLANs are collections of switching ports that comprise a single broadcast domain. Packets are classified as belonging to a VLAN based on either the VLAN tag or based on a combination of the ingress port and packet contents.
  • Page 65 Ingress VLAN classification The switch always classifies incoming frames to a VLAN. In the VLAN- unaware mode, this classification does not influence the forwarding of the frame, whereas in the VLAN-aware mode, then classification is used to make forwarding decisions. If VLAN tags are available in a frame, the VLAN classification is always based on the outer tag in the frame.
  • Page 66 VLANs configuration Click “VLANs” under the Configuration menu. Port Segmentation (VLAN) Configuration page appears on the screen. Adds a new VLAN Shows the list of available VLANs Opens VLAN Setup subpage Opens VLAN Per Port Configuration subpage Port segmentation (VLAN) configuration VLAN ID: Sets VLAN ID (identification of the VLAN).
  • Page 67 VLAN per port configuration Click “Port Config” button on the VLANs page. VLAN Per Port Configuration page appears on the screen. This page allows you to configure the VLAN parameters for individual ports. VLAN aware Enabled: VLAN aware ports are able to use VLAN tagged frames to determine the destination of the frame.
  • Page 68 Aggregation – introduction Link aggregation (trunking) allows any number of ports to be grouped together automatically using Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP), or manually, to form an ultra-high-bandwidth connection to the network backbone, which helps prevent traffic bottlenecks. MPH200 Ethernet Switch supports LACP.
  • Page 69 LACP – introduction Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) is part of the IEEE specification 802.3ad. LACP configured ports can automatically negotiate a trunked link with LACP-configured ports on another device. You can configure any number of ports on the switch as LACP, as long as they are not already configured as part of a static trunk.
  • Page 70 Spanning tree (STP/RSTP) – introduction The Spanning Tree Algorithm (STA) can be used to detect and avoid network loops, and to provide backup links between switches, bridges or routers. This allows the switch to interact with other bridging devices (that is, an STA-compliant switch, bridge or router) in your network to ensure that only one route exists between any two stations on the network, and provide backup links which automatically take over when a primary link goes down.
  • Page 71 The port ID. It cannot be changed. Aggregations means any configured trunk group Protocol Enabled: Click on the tick-box to enable/disable the RSTP protocol for the port. Edge: Expect the port to be an edge port (linking to an end station) or a link to another STP device.
  • Page 72 Port: The port number. Admin State: Sets the authentication mode to one of the following options: Auto: Requires a 802.1X-aware client to be authorized by the authenti- cation server. Clients that are not 802.1X-aware will be denied access. Force-Authorized: Forces the port to grant access to all clients, either 802.1X-aware or otherwise.
  • Page 73 IGMP – introduction The Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) lets host and routers share information about multicast group memberships. IGMP snooping monitors IGMP service requests passing between multicast clients and servers, and dynamically configures the ports which need to receive the mulitcast traffic.
  • Page 74 Quality of service (QoS) – introduction QoS configuration enables the switch to use resources more efficiently to ensure high-quality performance for critical applications. QoS is a mechanism which is used to prioritize certain traffic as it is moves through the switch. Traffic can be classified as High, Medium, Normal or Low priority.
  • Page 75 802.1p configuration The 802.1p field is held within the VLAN-tag of a packet. The field is three bits long so can hold eight values; 0...7 inclusive. When QoS Mode is set to 802.1p, the 802.1p Configuration table appears which allows a priority to be set for each of the eight values. When QoS Mode is set to 802.1p, the 802.1p Configuration table appears which allows a priority to...
  • Page 76 Storm control – introduction This page allows you to set up a threshold for incoming broadcast and multicast packets. Too many incoming packets can severely cripple the switch and network performance. Rate limiting protects the switch and network by keeping the amount of data passing through the ports to a safe limit.
  • Page 77: Command Line Interface - Cli

    * PC equipped with terminal emulator application supporting VT100 / 102 or ANSI protocols, e.g. Hyper Terminal, PuTTY or Tera Term. * RS232-cable (type Teleste CIC506) Connection through Ethernet port remotely (Telnet/SSH): * PC equipped with terminal emulator application supporting Secure Shell (SSH) network protocol, e.g.
  • Page 78 “COM4 - PuTTY” window appears on the screen. 4. To activate the terminal connection first press Enter --> “MPH241-f login:” appears on the screen (MPH name depends on device in question). 5. Enter the required user name and the password (admin/ admin for administrator).
  • Page 79 Connection methods - TCP/IP This chapter describes how to connect to CLI via TCP/IP connection using Putty terminal emulator application. The same menus that are displayed on a local terminal are instantly available over an IP network. 1. Start the PuTTY application. Wait until the following “PuTTY Configura- tion”...
  • Page 80 Detailed descriptions of CLI commands CLI lets you enter several commands. To execute a command, press enter after typing command. By entering “Help” command you get a list of all available commands. To get more information about how to use a specific command you can enter “Help + specific command”.
  • Page 81 Devmgmt command Enter the devmgmt command to view devmgmt menu: ************************************** devmgmt menu ************************************** reboot softfactoryreset hardfactoryreset licenseupdate swversion swud getconf putconf help exit ------------------------- Available CLI commands in devmgmt menu. These commands allows you to manage device, as make factory resets, update firmware and save/restore device settings.
  • Page 82 Entering help licenseupdate displays information about the licenseupdate command: Use the licenseupdate command to licenseupdate [<license_key>] activate a new licence to the device. Description: Update product license key. The license key will be validated against device serial number before updating. The device will reboot after successfully updating the license key.
  • Page 83 Ethswitch command CLI lets you manage device’s internal Ethernet switch. Enter the ethswitch command to view ethswitch menu: ************************************** ethswitch menu Use the help command to see ************************************** information on a command (usage: enter “help + the specified command”, help for example: help help displays information from help command.
  • Page 84 System command Enter the system command to go to System level: Commands at System level: System Configuration [all] System Restore Default [keepIP] System Name [<name>] System Reboot System SNMP [enable|disable] System Trap [<IP Address>] System Readcommunity [<community string>] System Writecommunity [<community string>] System Trapcommunity [<community string>] System Power Saving [full|up|down|disable] Console command...
  • Page 85 MAC command Enter the mac command to go to MAC level: Commands at MAC level: MAC Configuration MAC Add <macaddress> <portlist>|none [<vid>] MAC Delete <macaddress> [<vid>] MAC Lookup <macaddress> [<vid>] MAC Table <vidlist> MAC Flush MAC Agetime [<agetime>] VLAN command Enter the vlan command to go to VLAN level: Commands at VLAN level: VLAN Configuration [<portlist>]...
  • Page 86 LACP command Enter the lacp command to go to system level: Commands at LACP level: LACP Configuration [<portlist>] LACP Mode [<portlist>] [enable|disable] LACP Key [<portlist>] [<key>|auto] LACP Status LACP Statistics RSTP command Enter the rstp command to go to console level: Commands at RSTP level: RSTP Configuration [<portlist>] RSTP sysprio [<sysprio>]...
  • Page 87 QoS command Enter the qos command to go to console level: Commands at QoS level: QoS Configuration [<portlist>] QoS Mode [<portlist>] [tag|port|diffserv] QoS Default [<portlist>] [<class>] QoS Tagprio [<portlist>] [<tagpriolist>] [<class>] QoS DiffServ [<dscpno>] [<class>] QoS Userprio [<portlist>] [<tagprio>] QoS Storm Control [<traffic type>] [enable|disable] [<rate>] <class>...
  • Page 88 Dot1x command Enter the dot1x command to go to system level: Commands at Dot1x level: Dot1x Configuration Dot1x Mode [enable|disable] Dot1x State [<portlist>] [Auto|ForceAuthorized|ForceUnauthorized] Dot1x Server [<IP Address>] Dot1x UDP Port [<value>] Dot1x Secret [<Shared Secret>] Dot1x Statistics [<portlist>] Dot1x Reauthenticate [<portlist>] [now] Dot1x Parameters [<parameter>] [<value>] IGMP command Enter the igmp command to go to console level:...
  • Page 89 Network command Enter the network command to view network menu: ************************************** network menu ************************************** linkstatus linklevel hostname help exit ------------------------- Use CLI commands in network menu to configure device IP settings. Entering help linkstatus displays information about the linkstatus command: Use the linkstatus command to see information from the network inter- linkstatus...
  • Page 90 Entering help hostname displays information about the hostname command: Use the hostname command to set hostname [<hostname_string>] a hostname to the device. Description: Sets the hostname. If no arguments are passed, the command will display current configuration [<hostname_string>]: Hostname upto 32 characters (without special characters or spaces) Entering help dns displays information about the dns command: dns <-mode=dns_mode>[<-domain=search_domains>][<-servers=dns_...
  • Page 91: Mph200 Specifications

    MPH200 specifications Video MPH241 MPH242 CVBS video input HD-SDI video input Encoding channels up to 4 up to 4 or 1 HD* Total streams up to 8 up to 6 or 1 HD* Coding H.264/MJPEG/MPEG-4/MPEG-2* Resolution QCIF/CIF/2CIF/4CIF , QCIF/CIF/2CIF/4CIF , ½D1/D1/720p*/1080i*...
  • Page 92: Legal Declarations

    This document is protected by copyright laws. Unauthorized distribution or reproduction of this document is strictly prohibited. Teleste reserves the right to make changes to any of the products described in this document without notice and all specifications are subject to change without notice.

This manual is also suitable for:

Mph242

Table of Contents