Black Box EME149A-60, EME149D-60, EME149D-20, EME149A-20 manual Filters 6.1 Sensor Filters, Page

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Chapter 6: Filters

Chapter 6: Filters

6. Filters

6.1 Sensor Filters

1.The ServSensor comes equipped with the option to filter your sensor information that is displayed within the summary page. To enter the filter menu, select “Sensor Filters” from the drop-down tab on the left side of the page.

Figure 6-1. Select sensor filters.

2.Once you click the tab, you will be able to select your filter results by altering various fields of information contained within the sensor filter window.

Figure 6-2. Add information fields.

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Contents ServSensor V4E Lite with 20 or 60 VAC or VDC Dry Contacts Features an embedded Web server and Linux operating systemEME149A-20 EME149A-60 EME149D-20 EME149D-60 Customer Support InformationPage Trademarks Used in this ManualTrademarks Used in this Manual Page FCC and IC RFI StatementsNOM Statement Normas Oficiales Mexicanas Electrical Safety StatementInstrucciones de Seguridad Table of Contents Table of Contents1. Specifications Chapter 1 Specifications2. Overview 2.1 Introduction Chapter 2 Overview2.2 What’s Included 2.3.1 EME149A-20 Front Panel 2.3 Hardware DescriptionExpansion ports E1-E4 2.3.2 EME149A-20 Back Panelexpansion module EME1X8 and/or the 16 dry-contact expansion module Connect an external microphone for voice modem applicationssound sensor or use an external mic 2.3.3 EME149A-60 Front Panel2.3.4 EME149A-60 Back Panel 2.3.5 EME149D-20 Front Panel 2.3.6 EME149D-20 Back Panel 2.3.7 EME149D-60 Front Panel 2.3.8 EME149D-60 Back Panel 2.4.1 Extra Dry Contact Input Practical Applications 2.4 ServSensor with 20 or 60 Extra Dry Contact Inputs, VAC, or VDC2.4.2 ServSensor with 20 or 60 Extra Dry Contact Web Interface Setup Figure 2-13. Online selected Figure 2-12. Critical status screenFigure 2-14. Advanced settings screen 3. Installation 3.1 Setting Up the IP Address Chapter 3 InstallationFigure 3-3. Settings tab Figure 3-2. User Type/Password screenFigure 3-4. Ethernet Network screen 3.2 Testing the New IP Address with the “Ping” Command 3.3 Firmware Upgrade 1. Click “System Administrator” and then “System Maintenance.” 3.4 Multi-users and Groups Setup 3.4.1 Group Setup Figure 3-14. Groups page Figure 3-13. Group Setup screen4. Click on the “Add” button to add your groups as shown in Figure 3.4.2 User Setup Figure 3-19. Enter user details Figure 3-22. Services and Security screen 3.5 Services and Security 3.5.1 Active Services Application DisablingFIgure 3-21. Properties button 3.5.2 Closing or Changing Ports Disabling HTTP and Enabling HTTPS 3.5.3 The SNMPv3 SSL Security Feature 3.5.4 Active Security 3.6 Setting Up a Sensor 3.5.5 The NAC or Network Access Control Security FeatureFigure 3-29. Summary page 3.6.1 Notification Thresholds Figure 3-32. Normal status indicated Click on the Advanced Settings tab to get the options shown in Figure 3.6.2 Advanced Sensor SettingsFigure 3-36. Advanced Sensor Settings screen Figure 3-35. Select Sensor Type screenAdvanced Mode Functions FIgure 3-37. Advanced mode functions, units Figure 3-39. Advanced setings, reading offset Data Collection Type Figure 3-42. Gauge Style screen Figure 3-43. Sensor threshold levels Figure 3-45. Advanced Settings, Check Rate of Change screen Figure 3-44. Advanced Settings Text and Colors screenCheck rate of change 3.7 Using an Internal Mic as a Sound Detection Sensor Figure 3-48. Sound Detector tab Figure 3-49. Advanced options 3.8 Expansion Ports Figure 3-52. Extended Port1 selection Figure 3-54. Notification Thresholds page 4. Notifications Chapter 4 Notifications4.1 Adding a Notification 4.2 SNMP Trap Figure 4-4. Notification parameters Figure 4-6. Parameter Selection, screen #2 Figure 4-8. Select the sensor 4.3 E-mail Figure 4-12. Input e-mail name and message Figure 4-13. Attach graph Figure 4-14. Input SMTP server address 11. Click on “Create.” Figure 4-18. Create notification link Figure 4-17. Select status and action type12. Create the notification link as before. Then click “Next.” Figure 4-19. Create notification tab select board, select termperature 4.4 SMS Notification Figure 4-23. SMTP Action Wizard, screen #2 Figure 4-25. Macro script message 9. Select the sensor that you want to bind this notification to Figure 4-27. Select number of times to resend and intervals10. Choose the board and sensor, then click “Next.” Figure 4-28. Choose board and sensorFigure 4-29. Link sensor to action tab 4. Select the status you want to issue the alert for 5. Mapping Chapter 5 Mapping5.1 Adding a Map NOTE The maximum map file size is 512 KBFigure 5-3. Enter map name Figure 5-7. Add sensors to map Figure 5-6. Sensor map8. You can now drag sensor icons and position them on the map Figure 5-9. Click “Lock.” Figure 5-8. Position sensor icons on map10. Finally you click on the “Finish” button to save your changes 5.2 Monitoring via the Map Interface 6. Filters 6.1 Sensor Filters Chapter 6 Filters6.2 Syslog Filters Figure 6-6. Drop-down menu Figure 6-8. Change reload interval You can alter your reload interval by using the options shown belowFigure 6-9. Saved syslog filters display 7. Making the ServSensor Visible on the Internet Chapter 7 Making the ServSensor Visible on the Internet8. Frequently Asked Questions FAQs Chapter 8 Frequently Asked Questions FAQsFigure 8-2. LED patterns in Normal mode Figure 8-3. LED patterns in Safe mode LEDs run clockwise after the power is connected Figure 8-4. LED patterns in Recovery modeFrom left to right, each LED indicates 1st LED U-Boot init 2nd LED Kernel loaded with good CRC 3rd LED Board initQuestion I forgot my unit’s IP address Question How do I set up my routing table? E-Mail This sends a notification via e-mail Figure 8-8. Win Network screen 2. Initiate connection from a ServSensor to OpenPhone PC EME149A-20 Black Box Tech Support FREE! 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