Pelco Security Camera C1640M B User Manual

Endura™  
Network Design Guide  
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Video Security System  
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Contents  
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List of Illustrations  
List of Tables  
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Welcome to the Endura Network Design Guide  
Welcome to the EnduraNetwork Design Guide. This document is specifically designed as a guide and reference source for designing Endura  
networks.  
This guide is designed to help you with the following:  
Understand the primary building blocks of the Endura network and the role each one plays  
Understand the networking technologies applicable for Endura  
Determine which approach to use for networking and which technologies are best for your security network business requirements  
Information in this guide is organized as follows:  
AUDIENCE  
This guide is written for network administrators and engineers who have in-depth networking knowledge and experience.  
HOW TO USE THIS GUIDE  
If you are new to Endura, the Endura Network Design Guide serves as a high-level tutorial and network design source. If you are experienced  
with Endura, this guide serves as a reference source.  
If you are new to Endura, you should read this guide from start to finish to get a good understanding of the Endura system network  
requirements.  
If you are experienced with Endura, you should always consult this document as a reference source as new information might be available  
periodically.  
As you read this guide, ensure that you complete the Endura Network Requirements Worksheet. Use this worksheet to validate that your  
network meets the minimum requirements to support an Endura system. For information on the Endura Network Requirements Worksheet,  
ENDURA OVERVIEW  
Endura is a high-quality, high-performance network-based video security system, which is based on a powerful distributed system architecture  
and hardware/software platform for the total utilization of todays Ethernet networks. This noncentralized system allows customers to make use  
of a facilitys network and network infrastructure, representing a significant savings in cabling, hardware, and manpower resources.  
No longer limited by traditional, centralized approaches, Endura offers an unconstrained platform for designing and implementing video security  
systems. There is virtually no end to how a system and its components can interact and share video, audio, and control information.  
The Endura hardware platform offers all the components necessary for designing, installing, and utilizing complete networked digital video  
systems. With encoders, decoders, network video recorders, PC workstations, video console displays, storage expansion boxes, and advanced  
management technologies, customers now have all the tools necessary for building a high-performance video security system—all delivered  
over an Ethernet network with total access flexibility.  
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ENDURA COMPONENTS  
Endura components take full advantage of leading edge technologies such as Universal Plug and Play (UPnP), allowing for fast, error-proof  
installations and set up. Essentially, when an Endura device is added to a system, it announces itself and the services it has available.  
The existing devices acknowledge the new unit and then begin exchanging information as user preferences and profiles dictate.  
Table A lists the Endura components. Information in this table is updated periodically and might not describe the latest Endura products.  
Table A. Endura Components  
Endura Component  
Description  
NET5301T encoder  
The NET5301T encoder is a high-performance MPEG4 video encoder. It accepts analog video and audio  
signals and converts them into digital TCP/IP packets, as well as provides an interface for relays and  
alarms.  
NET5301R decoder  
The NET5301R is a high-performance video decoder. It converts digital video and audio streams back  
into video output for viewing on a composite, S-Video, or VGA monitor.  
WS5050 workstation  
The WS5050 Endura workstation (WS) is a Windows®-compatible system that is used for viewing video  
and configuring an Endura system. The WS5050 is supplied with all PC hardware in a stand-alone box.  
VCD5000 video console display  
The VCD5000 video console display (VCD) is a high-performance, multiple-stream decoding unit. It  
converts multiple digital MPEG4 streams into video signals to be viewed on either composite, S-Video,  
or VGA monitors. Up to four decoding cards can be added to this unit. Four models are available that  
allow users to tailor their viewing systems with up to 64 displays. An unlimited number of video  
console displays (VCDs) and decoders can be controlled from a single VCD. Using an Endura keyboard  
or a standard USB-compatible PC mouse and keyboard, users can access the on-screen menus and  
control an Endura system.  
SM5000 system manager  
The SM5000 system manager (SM) is an integrated hardware/software component that provides  
distributed administration of multiple devices. The SM5000 also manages system security, functioning  
as a key server for user and device authentication.  
NVR5100 Series network video recorder  
The NVR5100 Series network video recorder (NVR) represents a whole new generation of flexibility and  
integration for network-based video system recording. It sits at the center of Endura, Pelco’s most  
advanced integrated video security system. The NVR represents the state of the art in scalability,  
features, and reliability.  
The NVR5100 is capable of continuous, scheduled, alarm/event, and motion recording. Pre- and post-  
alarm, event, and motion recording is also available and is fully programmable on a per-channel basis.  
The unit maximizes storage efficiency using EnduraStor, a time- and priority-based system that  
identifies data to be removed when storage reaches capacity.  
SEB5000 storage expansion box  
EnduraStor storage optimization  
The SEB5000 storage expansion box (SEB) is a high-performance storage solution. Each SEB box can  
add up to 3.9 TB of network storage. Multiple SEBs can be attached to a single NVR unit, providing a  
very large, very scalable network storage solution.  
EnduraStor offers the ability to reduce the frame rate of previously recorded video on an Endura system  
after a specified period of time. After captured video has reached a user-defined age, EnduraStor goes  
to work to “prune” the database and reduce the number of recorded frames. By enabling EnduraStor  
within the system, a user has the unique ability to dramatically extend recording duration at a lower  
frame rate.  
ENDURA PRODUCT SUPPORT  
Pelco provides 24-hour, seven-day-a-week product support designed to assist any customer with a technical problem involving Pelco equipment;  
just dial (800) 289-9100 or (559) 292-1981 and ask for technical assistance.  
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Network Architecture  
The Endura network topology is based on using current networking technology. Pelco suggests that you recommend or select networking devices  
and technologies that meet or exceed the features and functionality described in this section.  
PHYSICAL MEDIA  
Physical media used in the Endura network is as follows:  
100baseT minimum.  
1000baseT (gigabit) is recommended. One gigabit uplinks are required for some components.  
CAT5e cabling (minimum).  
CAT6 is recommended for gigabit links.  
NETWORK PROTOCOLS  
This section provides a summary of the networking protocols that are required to implement an Endura network and describes the features/  
functionality that the protocols must exhibit.  
UNICAST ROUTING PROTOCOLS  
Basic unicast connectivity is required to implement an Endura network. At least one of the protocols listed below can be used to meet this  
requirement:  
Routing Information Protocol (RIP): RIP is a simple routing protocol that is part of the Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol  
(TCP/IP) protocol suite. It determines a route based on the smallest hop count between source and destination. RIP is a distance vector  
protocol that routinely broadcasts routing information to its neighboring routers and is known to waste bandwidth. It also has a limit of  
15 hops. If a route is advertised as having 16 hops, it is flagged as unreachable.  
Open Shortest Path First (OSPF): OSPF is a routing protocol that determines the best path for routing IP traffic over a TCP/IP network  
based on distance between nodes and several quality parameters. OSPF is an interior gateway protocol (IGP), which is designed to work  
within an autonomous system. It is also a link state protocol that provides less router-to-router update traffic than the RIP protocol (distance  
vector protocol) that it was designed to replace.  
Static routing: This protocol forwards data in a network via a fixed path. Static routing cannot adjust to changing line conditions as can  
dynamic routing.  
MULTICAST ROUTING PROTOCOLS  
Multicast routing is required to allow Endura components to communicate with one another. At least one of the protocols listed below can be  
used to meet this requirement:  
Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM): PIM is a multicast routing protocol that is used in conjunction with an existing unicast routing  
protocol. PIM comes in two versions: Dense Mode (PIM-DM) and Sparse Mode (PIM-SM).  
Dense mode is most useful in the following instances:  
Senders and receivers are in close proximity to one another.  
There are a few senders and many receivers.  
The multicast traffic volume is high. Dense mode forwards multicast data everywhere, and lets switches prune out traffic that is  
not requested.  
Multicast data is periodically flooded everywhere.  
The multicast traffic stream is constant.  
PIM-DM uses Reverse Path Forwarding and looks a lot like Distance Vector Multicast Routing Protocol (DVMRP). The most significant  
difference between DVMRP and PIM-DM is that PIM-DM works with whatever unicast protocol is being used. Also, PIM-DM does not  
require any particular unicast routing protocol.  
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Sparse Mode is most useful in the following instances:  
There are few receivers in a group. Switches send multicast traffic only to the devices that request it.  
Senders and receivers are separated by Local Area Network (LAN) links.  
The type of traffic is intermittent.  
PIM-SM is optimized for environments where there are many multipoint data streams. Each data stream is sent to a relatively small  
number of the LANs in the internetwork. For these types of groups, Reverse Path Forwarding techniques waste bandwidth. PIM-SM  
works by defining a rendezvous point. When a sender wants to send data, it first sends to the rendezvous point. When a receiver  
wants to receive data, it registers with the rendezvous point. Once the data stream begins to flow from sender to rendezvous point to  
receiver, the routers in the path will optimize the path automatically to remove any unnecessary hops. PIM-SM assumes that no hosts  
want the multicast traffic unless they specifically ask for it.  
PIM is able to simultaneously support dense mode for some multipoint groups and sparse mode for others.  
DVMRP: DVMRP is a routing protocol that supports multicast. Stemming from RIP and used in the Internet's Mbone (multicast backbone),  
DVMRP allows for tunneling multicast messages within unicast packets. It also supports rate limiting and distribution control based on  
destination address and is responsible for the following:  
Routes multicast datagrams  
Periodically floods multicast traffic (similar to PIM-DM)  
Allows use of non-multicast aware edge devices  
INTERNET GROUP MANAGEMENT PROTOCOL  
Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) is a communications protocol used to manage the membership of multicast groups. IGMP is a  
required protocol in the Endura network and is used by IP hosts and adjacent multicast routers to establish multicast group memberships.  
The specification that defines how to handle “unknown” multicast groups is not definitive. In this case, some vendors block multicast streams  
that have no members, while other vendors will flood this same traffic. Flooding multicast streams that have no members can present a problem  
in the Endura network because each video stream can be approximately 2 Mbps. In even a relatively small network, flooding Endura traffic can  
significantly reduce network performance and the overall performance of the Endura system.  
Endura Network Design Considerations  
The Endura network is based on switching and routing technologies. When planning an Endura network, you need to know and understand the  
difference between the traditional “Core” and “Intelligent Edge” network topology design approach.  
Traditional network design approach  
The traditional network design topology is based on a central network core, which is responsible for all routing decisions. This approach  
requires the use of high-performance and high-cost core network equipment. This approach will work if the specified core switch is capable  
of managing all of the following:  
Making all of the unicast routing decisions  
Making all of the multicast routing decisions  
Handling all Endura network traffic: video, audio, PTZ, and UPnP  
Handling all other existing network traffic  
This approach may meet your network design requirements. However this approach might not be as scalable as the intelligent edge design,  
because the volume of network traffic can easily consume the capacity of the core switch.  
If network expansion is a future goal, then the intelligent edge design offers a scalable networking solution.  
Intelligent edge design approach  
The alternative to the traditional design is the intelligent edge design. This design is based on placing smart switches at the network edge,  
which reduces the need for a centralized core to make all routing decisions. Instead of a single core switch managing all of the routing and  
network traffic decisions, in the intelligent edge design, processing is distributed across all managed switches. The intelligent edge design  
allows the network to scale because managed switches can be easily added to the network without burdening a single core switch.  
As compared to the traditional design, the intelligent edge design does not use the concept of a “core switch.”  
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Understanding the Endura Network Structure  
The primary structure of an Endura network topology is organized into functional entities, which are called “blocks.” Grouping the functional  
entities into individual blocks provide the following benefits:  
Blocks control and isolate traffic.  
Block design can be physical or logical.  
Each block is separated by VLANs.  
Blocks help determine network requirements.  
The block concept makes it easy to understand and implement the Endura network design.  
A Block: The A Block is functionally responsible for encoding, recording, and storage of the video streams entering the Endura network  
(both live and playback video).  
B Block: The B Block is functionally responsible for decoding and displaying the video streams, as well as providing the control and  
configuration of all Endura components.  
Core Block: The Core Block is functionally responsible for Network layer 3 tasks, authentication and security, and interconnects the A and  
B blocks.  
C Block: The C Block includes the entire block structure: A, B, and Core.  
VLANS  
VLANs are an essential network topology requirement in the Endura network.  
Each Endura block is separated by VLANs.  
VLANs are groupings of switch ports creating different network segments for each group.  
Switches using VLANs create the same division of the network into separate broadcast domains are also a more cost-effective  
solution.  
It is necessary to use a router when moving between VLANs.  
VLANs reduce the size of the broadcast domain.  
VLANs are used to managed and restrict Endura traffic.  
VLANs operate at layer 2 of the Open System Interconnection (OSI) model.  
All VLANs should be assigned an IP address to support routing.  
UPnP  
Endura uses UPnP to enable easy and dynamic connectivity between devices on a network. Devices may dynamically add themselves to a  
network without the need for user intervention or configuration. UPnP also allows devices on the network to check in with each other  
periodically. This means the user can know which devices are available at any one time. If a device goes off line, users can be notified so the  
problem may be addressed quickly, with minimal down time.  
UPnP traffic stays isolated to VLANs because of Time-To-Live (TTL) settings. TTL determines how many network segments a packet can cross into  
before it is discarded. TTL for UPnP packets is set to 1 so that the UPnP packets do not cross out of their originating block. TTL for video packets  
is set much higher so that the video packets can traverse the entire network. For more information on TTL is used in the Endura network, refer to  
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ENDURA A BLOCK  
The A Block is the most important design entity of the network. The A Block is functionally responsible for encoding, recording, and storage of  
the video streams entering the Endura network (both live and playback video).  
The A Block is summarized as follows:  
Each A Block can support up to 48 Encoders and one NVR5100.  
Each A Block is assigned to a specific VLAN.  
The number of A Blocks is unlimited.  
Each A Block has only one NVR5100 for recording of video streams from all Encoders in the A Block. Additional storage is provided by  
SEB5000 storage expansion boxes.  
Figure 1 shows the Endura components that comprise the A Block. The SEB5000 is shown directly connected to the NVR5100 using a patch  
cable. If multiple SEB5000s are required, you can use a dedicated, Pelco-approved gigabit Ethernet switch to expand the video storage of the  
NVR5100. For more information about connecting SEB5000s to the NVR5100, refer to Connecting the NVR5100 and SEB5000s on page 26 and  
A BLOCK  
LAYER 2 SWITCH  
INTERFACES WITH  
THE CORE BLOCK  
ENCODER  
ENCODER  
NVR  
SEB  
Figure 1. A Block: Encoding, Recording, and Playback  
BROADCAST DOMAINS AND VLANS  
In a network, the logical area within which all devices can see each others broadcasts is referred to as a broadcast domain. Endura components  
generate multicast traffic, which in some cases can be treated like broadcast traffic, depending on the switch. For this reason, it is important to  
isolate these broadcasts and to create a separate broadcast domain for each Endura block on the network. The most efficient approach is to use  
VLANS to separate the broadcast domains (refer to Figure 2).  
B BLOCK  
BROADCAST DOMAIN 2  
VLAN 4  
A BLOCK  
BROADCAST DOMAIN 1  
VLAN 3  
CORE SWITCH  
LAYER 3 SWITCH  
VLAN 1  
A BLOCK 1  
LAYER 2 SWITCH  
VLAN 3  
VLAN 3  
VLAN 3  
ENCODER  
ENCODER  
NVR  
SEB  
Figure 2. Using VLANs to Segment the Network into Separate Broadcast Domains for Each Block  
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USING TTL TO CONTROL NETWORK TRAFFIC IN BROADCAST DOMAINS  
In the Endura network, TTL is used to set the maximum amount of router hops that a packet is allowed to propagate through the network before  
the packet is discarded. Using TTL provides an effective method to determine how many broadcast domains a given packet can traverse.  
For Endura components (excluding the SM5000), the default TTL settings are as follows:  
UPnP traffic: The TTL is set to 1. In this case, each block is assigned to a specific VLAN, keeping UPnP traffic isolated within that block  
(refer to Figure 3).  
Video packets: The TTL is set to 3 so that the video packets can traverse the entire network.  
For the SM5000 in the Core Block, the default TTL setting is 4. In this case, the SM5000 Locator broadcasts can traverse across  
subnetworks to discover Endura components.  
This approach ensures that two networking functions be efficiently accomplished:  
Each NVR5100 only records video streams from encoders from which it sees in its block. The NVR5100 sends a query with a TTL of 1, which  
means it will only discover devices on its VLAN.  
Unnecessary traffic is eliminated from traversing across the Core Block.  
Figure 3 illustrates how the broadcast traffic is localized to A Block 1 in broadcast domain 1. In this case, the broadcast traffic from VLAN 1 never  
traverses the network because TTL is decremented to 0 at the core switch and the packet is dropped.  
A BLOCK  
VLAN 3  
CORE SWITCH  
VLAN 1  
B BLOCK  
VLAN 5  
LAYER 2 SWITCH  
TTL = 0  
VLAN 3, TTL=1  
ENCODER  
ENCODER  
VLAN 3, TTL=1  
VLAN 3, TTL=1  
NVR  
SEB  
Figure 3. TTL Is Set to 1 in VLAN 2 and Keeps UPnP Traffic Within the A Block  
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ENDURA B BLOCK  
The Endura B Block generally determines the bandwidth requirements for the network. The B Block is functionally responsible for decoding and  
displaying the video streams, as well as providing the control and configuration of all Endura components.  
The B Block functionality is summarized as follows:  
Based on permissions, can view and control any camera on entire system  
Each B Block is assigned to a specific VLAN  
The B Block can be replicated any number of times (limited only by network capacity)  
Contains all viewing devices  
NET5301R decoders  
VCD5000 video console displays  
WS5050 Endura Workstations (WS)  
Figure 4 illustrates the B Block.  
CORE SWITCH  
VLAN 2  
LAYER 2 SWITCH  
VCD  
WS  
DECODER  
Figure 4. B Block: Decoding and Viewing Video  
ENDURA TRAFFIC SUMMARY DETAILS  
This section provides information that allows you to calculate the bandwidth requirements for the Endura network. The Endura traffic details are  
summarized as follows:  
Maximum video stream from an NET5301T encoder is 5.0 Mbps plus overhead:  
Up to 3.0 Mbps total for both multicast live streams  
Up to 2 Mbps for stream 1 (4CIF)  
Up to 1 Mbps for stream 2 (CIF)  
Up to 2.0 Mbps for unicast recording stream  
For information on calculating the bandwidth, refer to Calculating Bandwidth and Storage Requirements on page 13.  
5.5 Mbps total with audio and data.  
Network utilization should always be figured for the worst-case scenario. For information on calculating the worse-case bandwidth, refer to  
Playback is not a stream, but a “burst” of data.  
Each NVR5100 has a 100 Mbps cap on playback data:  
The NVR5100 will use as much of 100 Mbps bandwidth as necessary to transmit the requested clip data.  
The NVR5100 will divide that 100 Mbps up among multiple playback requests if necessary.  
NVR5100 playback is unicast.  
Constant and frequent requests for playback video must be included when determining worse-case bandwidth.  
.
NOTES:  
Live video traffic is only steamed across the network when requested by a view station.  
Throughput needs to be calculated at various points on the network, depending on how many cameras are going to be viewed and at  
what size.  
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CALCULATING BANDWIDTH AND STORAGE REQUIREMENTS  
You must ensure that the B and C blocks are able to handle the worse-case bandwidth (B ) requirements. The following examples describe how  
WC  
to calculate the worse-case bandwidth based on the playback video stream.  
NOTE: Playback steams are used for calculating worse-case bandwidth requirements because each video stream is played back at the same  
rate that it was recorded, no matter in what layout mode the video stream is being displayed.  
In contrast, when viewing live video, the Endura WS5050, VCD5000, and NET5301R use EnduraView to select the appropriate video stream  
automatically based on the layout mode.  
WS5050: The WS5050 pulls the highest value stream in either the single camera or quad layout mode.  
VCD5000: The VCD5000 pulls the lowest stream in quad layout mode.  
WS5050 or VCD5000: The WS5050 or VCD5000 pulls the lowest value stream in the 9- or 16-camera layout mode.  
NET5301R Encoder:  
The NET5301R pulls the highest value stream in the single layout mode.  
The NET5301R pulls the lowest value stream in the quad layout mode.  
The following examples demonstrate that the playback video mode requires more bandwidth than does the live video mode. Typical applications  
do not require displaying the maximum amount of simultaneous playback streams. A more realistic application might require more live video  
streams are displayed than playback video streams. For this reason both playback and live video calculations are shown to aid in calculating  
bandwidth.  
To ensure that your network resources are more than adequate to support the Endura system, it is recommended that you use the bit rate  
applicable for the playback video mode when calculating worse-case bandwidth requirements.  
For information on calculating bandwidth for the live video mode, refer to Examples of Worse-Case Bandwidth Calculation in Live Video  
The worse-case bandwidth, B , requirements for live and playback video is given by the equation:  
WC  
B
= B + O  
H
WC  
W
where:  
= Bandwidth and is given by the equation: B = N x B  
B
W
W
S
R.  
O = Overhead and is given by the equation O = 25% x B  
H
H
W .  
N = Number of streams.  
S
B = Bit rate  
R
The above equations are general and assume that all playback streams are of the same quality. For information about B values, refer to NTSC  
R
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NTSC Frame Rates  
This section describes the National Television System Committee (NTSC) frame rates at high, medium, and low resolution with a dual stream  
NET5301T encoder. You can select 6, 10, 15, and 30 IPS across all resolutions (CIF, 2CIF, and 4CIF) for each camera.  
Table B describes the expected performance at high resolution for NTSC frame rates.  
Table B. High Resolution: NTSC Frame Rates with Dual Stream NET5301T Encoder  
Description  
High Resolution and Supported Frame Rates  
Layout Mode Stream/Device  
1
2
3
4
Stream 1  
Bitrates  
4CIF/30 IPS  
2.0 Mbps  
4CIF/15 IPS  
1.5 Mbps  
4CIF/10 IPS  
1.0 Mbps  
4CIF/6 IPS  
800 Kbps  
4CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
1.0 Mbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
4CIF/6 IPS  
4CIF/6 IPS  
4CIF/6 IPS  
Stream 1-I  
Stream 2  
Birates  
Stream 2-I  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
NET5301R  
4CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
1.0 Mbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
4CIF/30 IPS  
4CIF/30 IPS  
4CIF/30 IPS  
4CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
1.0 Mbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
4CIF/15 IPS  
4CIF/15 IPS  
4CIF/15 IPS  
4CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
1.0 Mbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
4CIF/10 IPS  
4CIF/10 IPS  
4CIF/10 IPS  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
NET5301R  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
4CIF/30 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
4CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
4CIF/10 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
4CIF/6 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
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Table C describes the expected performance at medium resolution for NTSC frame rates.  
Table C. Medium Resolution: NTSC Frame Rates with Dual Stream NET5301T Encoder  
Description  
Medium Resolution and Supported Frame Rates  
Layout Mode Stream/Device  
1
2
3
4
Stream 1  
Bitrates  
2CIF/30 IPS  
1.5 Mbps  
2CIF/15 IPS  
1.0 Mbps  
2CIF/10 IPS  
800 Kbps  
2CIF/6 IPS  
500 Kbps  
2CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
2CIF/6 IPS  
2CIF/6 IPS  
2CIF/6 IPS  
Stream 1-I  
Stream 2  
Birates  
Stream 2-I  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
NET5301R  
2CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
2CIF/30 IPS  
2CIF/30 IPS  
2CIF/30 IPS  
2CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
2CIF/15 IPS  
2CIF/15 IPS  
2CIF/15 IPS  
2CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
2CIF/10 IPS  
2CIF/10 IPS  
2CIF/10 IPS  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
NET5301R  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
2CIF/30 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
2CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
2CIF/10 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
2CIF/6 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
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Table D describes the expected performance at low resolution for NTSC frame rates.  
Table D. Low Resolution: NTSC Frame Rates with Dual Stream NET5301T Encoder  
Description  
Low Resolution and Supported Frame Rates  
Layout Mode Stream/Device  
1
2
3
4
Stream 1  
Bitrates  
CIF/30 IPS  
1.2 Mbps  
CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/30 IPS  
CIF/30 IPS  
CIF/30 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/10 IPS  
450 Kbps  
CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/10 IPS  
CIF/10 IPS  
CIF/10 IPS  
CIF/6 IPS  
350 Kbps  
CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/2.5PS  
CIF/6 IPS  
CIF/6 IPS  
CIF/6 IPS  
Stream 1-I  
Stream 2  
Birates  
Stream 2-I  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
NET5301R  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
NET5301R  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
CIF/30 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/15 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
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PAL Frame Rates  
This section describes the Phase Alternating Line (PAL) frame rates at high, medium, and low resolution with a dual stream NET5301T encoder.  
You can select 5, 8.3, 12.5, and 25 IPS across all resolutions (CIF, 2CIF, and 4CIF) for each camera.  
Table E describes the expected performance at high resolution for PAL frame rates.  
Table E. High Resolution: PAL Frame Rates with Dual Stream NET5301T Encoder  
Description  
High Resolution and Supported Frame Rates  
Layout Mode Stream/Device  
1
2
3
4
Stream 1  
Bitrates  
4CIF/25 IPS  
2.0 Mbps  
4CIF/12.5 IPS 4CIF/8.3 IPS  
4CIF/5 IPS  
800 Kbps  
4CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
1.0 Mbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
4CIF/5 IPS  
4CIF/5 IPS  
4CIF/5 IPS  
1.5 Mbps  
1.0 Mbps  
Stream 1-I  
Stream 2  
Birates  
Stream 2-I  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
NET5301R  
4CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
1.0 Mbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
4CIF/25 IPS  
4CIF/25 IPS  
4CIF/25 IPS  
4CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
1.0 Mbps  
4CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
1.0 Mbps  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
4CIF/12.5 IPS 4CIF/8.3 IPS  
4CIF/12.5 IPS 4CIF/8.3 IPS  
4CIF/12.5 IPS 4CIF/8.3 IPS  
4CIF/12.5 IPS 4CIF/8.3 IPS  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
NET5301R  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
4CIF/25 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
4CIF/5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
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Table F describes the expected performance at medium resolution for PAL frame rates.  
Table F. Medium Resolution: PAL Frame Rates with Dual Stream NET5301T Encoder  
Description  
Medium Resolution and Supported Frame Rates  
Layout Mode Stream/Device  
1
2
3
4
Stream 1  
Bitrates  
2CIF/25 IPS  
1.5 Mbps  
2CIF/12.5 IPS  
1.0 Mbps  
2CIF/8.3 IPS  
800 Kbps  
2CIF/5 IPS  
500 Kbps  
Stream 1-I  
Stream 2  
Birates  
2CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
800 Kbps  
2CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
800 Kbps  
2CIF/2 IPS  
2CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
800 Kbps  
Stream 2-I  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
NET5301R  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
NET5301R  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
2CIF/25 IPS  
2CIF/25 IPS  
2CIF/25 IPS  
2CIF/25 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
2CIF/12.5 IPS  
2CIF/12.5 IPS  
2CIF/12.5 IPS  
2CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
2CIF/8.3 IPS  
2CIF/8.3 IPS  
2CIF/8.3 IPS  
2CIF/8.3 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
2CIF/5 IPS  
2CIF/5 IPS  
2CIF/5 IPS  
2CIF/5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
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Table G describes the expected performance at low resolution for PAL frame rates.  
Table G. Low Resolution: PAL Frame Rates with Dual Stream NET5301T Encoder  
Description  
Low Resolution and Supported Frame Rates  
Layout Mode Stream/Device  
1
2
3
4
Stream 1  
Bitrates  
CIF/25 IPS  
1.2 Mbps  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/8.3 IPS  
450 Kbps  
CIF/5 IPS  
350 Kbps  
Stream 1-I  
Stream 2  
Birates  
CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/2 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
800 Kbps  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
800 Kbps  
Stream 2-I  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
NET5301R  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
NET5301R  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/25 IPS  
CIF/25 IPS  
CIF/25 IPS  
CIF/25 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5 IPS  
CIF/8.3 IPS  
CIF/8.3 IPS  
CIF/8.3 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5PS  
CIF/5 IPS  
CIF/5 IPS  
CIF/5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
WS5050  
VCD5000  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5PS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5PS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5PS  
CIF/12.5 IPS  
CIF/2.5PS  
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Examples of Worse-Case Bandwidth Calculation in Playback Mode  
NOTE: For the examples below, assume that all recorded video is at 4CIF (2 Mbps) at 30 IPS:  
In this case, if playback video is displayed in the single layout mode, then the display rate is at 30 IPS.  
However, if playback video is displayed in 4 x 4 layout mode, the display rate is at 2 IPS. In this case, the bandwidth is still 2 Mbps.  
Example 1: WS5050 Endura Workstation—Playback Video Stream  
Each WS5050 can display 16 simultaneous playback streams.  
To calculate the worse-case bandwidth for the WS5050:  
1. Find the bandwidth.  
B
= N x B = 16 x 2 Mbps = 32 Mbps  
W
S
R
2. Find the overhead.  
O = 25% x B = 16 x 2 Mbps x 25% = 8 Mbps  
H
W
3. Find the worse-case bandwidth.  
= (N x B ) + O = 32 Mbps + 8 Mbps = 40 Mbps  
B
WC  
S
R
H
Example 2: VCD5000 Video Console Display—Playback Video Stream  
The Model VCD5001 has one monitor output and can display up to 16 simultaneous playback streams. A Model VCD5004 has four monitor  
outputs and can display 64 simultaneous playback streams.  
To calculate the worse-case bandwidth for the VCD5004:  
1. Find the bandwidth.  
B
= N x B = 64 x 2 Mbps = 128 Mbps  
W
S
R
2. Find the overhead.  
O = 25% x B = 64 x 2 Mbps x 25% = 32 Mbps  
H
W
3. Find the worse-case bandwidth.  
= (N x B ) + O = 128 Mbps + 32 Mbps = 160 Mbps  
B
WC  
S
R
H
Example 3: NET5301R Decoder—Playback Video Stream  
Each NET5301R decoder can playback 4 simultaneous video streams.  
To calculate the worse-case bandwidth for the NET5301R decoder:  
1. Find the bandwidth.  
B
= N x B = 4 x 2 Mbps = 8 Mbps  
W
S
R
2. Find the overhead.  
O = 25% x B = 4 x 2 Mbps x 25% = 2 Mbps  
H
W
3. Find the worse-case bandwidth.  
= (N x B ) + O = 8 Mbps + 2 Mbps = 10 Mbps  
B
WC  
S
R
H
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Examples of Worse-Case Bandwidth Calculation in Live Video Mode  
Example 1: WS5050 Endura Workstation—Live Video Stream  
Each WS5050 can display 16 simultaneous playback streams.  
To calculate the worse-case bandwidth for the WS5050:  
1. Find the bandwidth.  
B
= N x B = 16 x 1 Mbps = 16 Mbps  
W
S
R
2. Find the overhead.  
O = 25% x B = 16 x 1 Mbps x 25% = 4 Mbps  
H
W
3. Find the worse-case bandwidth.  
= (N x B ) + O = 16 Mbps + 4 Mbps = 20 Mbps  
B
WC  
S
R
H
Example 2: VCD5000 Video Console Display—Live Video Stream  
The Model VCD5001 has one monitor output and can display up to 16 simultaneous live video streams. A Model VCD5004 has four monitor  
outputs and can display 64 simultaneous live video streams.  
To calculate the worse-case bandwidth for the VCD5004:  
1. Find the bandwidth.  
B
= N x B = 64 x 1 Mbps = 64 Mbps  
W
S
R
2. Find the overhead.  
O = 25% x B = 64 Mbps x 25% = 16 Mbps  
H
W
3. Find the worse-case bandwidth.  
= (N x B ) + O = 64 Mbps + 16 Mbps = 80 Mbps  
B
WC  
S
R
H
Example 3: NET5301R Decoder—Live Video Stream  
Each Encoder can playback 4 simultaneous video streams.  
To calculate the worse-case bandwidth for NET5301R Decoder:  
1. Find the bandwidth.  
B
= N x B = 4 x 1 Mbps = 4 Mbps  
W
S
R
2. Find the overhead.  
O = 25% x B = 4 Mbps x 25% = 1 Mbps  
H
W
3. Find the worse-case bandwidth.  
= (N x B ) + O = 4 Mbps + 1 Mbps = 5 Mbps  
B
WC  
S
R
H
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ENDURA CORE BLOCK  
The Core Block is functionally responsible for Network layer 3 tasks, discovery, authentication, and security, and interconnects the A and B blocks  
(refer to Figure 5).  
The Core Block is summarized as follows:  
There is only one Core Block for each Endura network.  
The Core Block contains the SM5000 and the redundant SM5000, which provides authentication and security for Endura network.  
The Core Block is on its own VLAN.  
The Core Block includes the core layer 3 switch and any necessary subcore switches.  
INTERFACES WITH  
THE A BLOCK  
INTERFACES WITH  
THE B BLOCK  
LAYER 3 SWITCH  
SM  
Figure 5. Core Block: Authentication and Security  
Live video streams flow from the encoder, and playback video streams flow from the NVR5100. Both streams flow through the Core Block to the  
B Block (refer to Figure 6). The Core Block must be able to handle maximum anticipated system usage.  
C BLOCK  
CORE BLOCK  
SM  
REDUNDANT SM  
A BLOCK  
B BLOCK  
A BLOCK  
LAYER 2 SWITCH  
CORE BLOCK  
LAYER 3 SWITCH  
B BLOCK  
LAYER 2 SWITCH  
DISPLAY  
VIDEO OUT  
ENCODER  
ENCODER  
VCD  
WS  
DISPLAY  
VIDEO OUT  
DISPLAY  
VIDEO OUT  
DECODER  
NVR  
SEB  
A BLOCK  
LAYER 2 SWITCH  
B BLOCK  
LAYER 2 SWITCH  
DISPLAY  
VIDEO OUT  
VCD  
WS  
ENCODER  
ENCODER  
DISPLAY  
VIDEO OUT  
DISPLAY  
VIDEO OUT  
DECODER  
NVR 2  
SEB 2  
LEGEND:  
PLAYBACK VIDEO TRAFFIC  
LIVE VIDEO TRAFFIC  
Figure 6. Video Traffic Path Through the Core Block  
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ENDURA C BLOCK  
Figure 7 illustrates how the A, B, Core, and C Blocks concept is implemented to form a complete Endura network. The Endura network is scaled  
by replicating the A and B Blocks to accommodate the video input and performance requirements for the network application.  
C BLOCK  
VLAN 4  
VLAN 3  
CORE BLOCK  
LAYER 3 SWITCH  
A BLOCK  
LAYER 2 SWITCH  
B BLOCK  
LAYER 2 SWITCH  
CAMERA  
VIDEO IN  
VLAN 3  
VLAN 4  
VLAN 2  
DISPLAY  
VIDEO OUT  
ENCODER  
ENCODER  
VCD  
WS  
VLAN 3  
VLAN 3  
VLAN 4  
VLAN 4  
DISPLAY  
VIDEO OUT  
SM  
DISPLAY  
VIDEO OUT  
NVR  
SEB  
DECODER  
REDUNDANT SM  
A BLOCK-VLAN 3  
CORE BLOCK-VLAN 2  
B BLOCK-VLAN 4  
Figure 7. C Block: Encompasses A, B, and Core Blocks  
Table H lists the Endura network blocks and summarizes the functionality for which each block is responsible.  
Table H. Endura Network Structures  
Entity  
Function  
Network Devices  
A Block  
The A Block is functionally responsible for encoding, recording, and storage of the video streams  
entering the Endura network (both live and playback video).  
NET5301T encoders, NVR5100,  
SEB5000 storage expansion  
box, and a layer 2 switch  
The A Block is summarized as follows:  
Each A Block can support up to 48 NET5301T encoders and one NVR5100.  
Each A Block is assigned to a specific VLAN.  
The number of A Blocks is unlimited.  
Each A Block has only one NVR5100 for recording all NET5301T video streams: video is  
recorded on the NVR5100 and stored on the SEB5000.  
B Block  
The B Block is functionally responsible for decoding and displaying the video streams, as well as  
providing the control and configuration of the Endura networking components.  
NET5301R decoders, VCD5000  
video console display,  
WS5050 Endura Workstation,  
and a layer 2 switch  
The B Block is summarized as follows:  
Based on permissions, operators can view and control any camera on entire system.  
Each Block is assigned to a specific VLAN.  
The B Block can be replicated any number of times (limited only by network capacity).  
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Table H. Endura Network Structures (Continued)  
Entity  
Function  
Network Devices  
Core Block  
The Core Block is functionally responsible for Network layer 3 tasks, authentication and security,  
and interconnects the A and B blocks.  
SM5000, redundant SM5000s,  
and a layer 3 switch  
The Core Block is summarized as follows:  
There is only one Core Block for each Endura network.  
The Core Block provides authentication and security for Endura network.  
The Core Block is on its own VLAN.  
The Core Block includes the core layer 3 switch and any necessary subcore switches.  
C Block  
The C Block includes the entire block structure: A, B, and Core.  
Includes all networking  
equipment  
EXAMPLES OF ENDURA NETWORK DESIGNS  
This section describes various Endura network configurations that are scalable and allow you to structure the network for the current as well as  
future application requirements. Since Endura is a system comprised of high bandwidth IP products, there are specific networking approaches  
that must be observed.  
If Endura is going to be integrated into an existing network, the existing network must meet the requirements as listed in Endura Network  
The Endura Block design approach must be implemented to manage Endura network traffic efficiently.  
There are two types of Endura network designs:  
Unmanaged  
Managed  
UNMANAGED NETWORK CONFIGURATION  
The unmanaged Endura network only supports viewing of live video. As shown in Figure 8, an unmanaged Endura network can include NET5301T  
encoders and NET5301R decoders, a WS5050 Endura Workstation, VCD5000 video console display, and a switch. The unmanaged network can  
support up to 16 cameras.  
A unmanaged Endura network does not include the SM5000 system manager or NVR5100. In this case, there is no recording or security  
functionality. The WS5050 provides limited system manager functionality and can only handle up to 16 cameras on a system. If the security  
network application requires more than 16 cameras or an NVR5100, then the network must be designed as a managed network requiring a  
SM5000 system manager.  
LAYER 2 SWITCH  
DECODER  
VCD  
ENCODER  
WS  
Figure 8. Unmanaged Endura Network  
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MANAGED NETWORK CONFIGURATION  
The managed Endura network supports viewing of live and playback video, recording, and security. As shown in Figure 9, a managed Endura  
network includes the full assortment of Endura components: NET5301Ts, NET5301Rs, WS5050s, VCD5000s, NVR5100s, the SM5000, and  
switches.  
The managed Endura network is designed in a four-part block structure (A Block, B Block, C Block, and Core Block). For more information about  
the block design concept, refer to Endura C Block on page 23.  
A Block (VLAN 2): This is where all video streams enter the network (both live and playback) and where video is recorded by the  
NVR5100s and stored in SEB5000s. Each A Block can contain no more than 48 NET5301Ts and one NVR5100. The NVR5100 in each  
respective A Block records video steams from the Encoders in the same A Block.  
B Block (VLAN 4): This is where all video viewing takes place, and VCD5000s, NET5301Rs, and WS5050s are connected to the Endura  
network.  
Core Block (VLAN 3): This is where the SM5000 resides. The Endura Core Block interconnects the A and B Blocks.  
C Block: The entire structure including A Blocks, B Blocks and the Core Block is referred to as the C Block.  
For more information about the block design concept, refer to Endura Network Design Considerations on page 8.  
C BLOCK  
VLAN 3  
VLAN 4  
A BLOCK  
LAYER 2 SWITCH  
CORE BLOCK  
LAYER 3 SWITCH  
B BLOCK  
LAYER 2 SWITCH  
CAMERA  
VIDEO IN  
VLAN 3  
VLAN 4  
VLAN 2  
SM5000  
DISPLAY  
VIDEO OUT  
ENCODER  
ENCODER  
VCD  
WS  
VLAN 3  
VLAN 3  
VLAN 4  
VLAN 4  
DISPLAY  
VIDEO OUT  
DISPLAY  
VIDEO OUT  
NVR  
SEB  
DECODER  
A BLOCK-VLAN 3  
CORE BLOCK-VLAN 2  
B BLOCK-VLAN 4  
Figure 9. Managed Endura Network  
You can have multiple A Blocks in an Endura network.  
The number of cameras and amount of storage needed for the video security network determines how many SEB5000s are needed in an  
A Block.  
As with A Blocks, there can be multiple B Blocks in the network, but as many as the network can support. Generally, the B Block uses the  
most bandwidth across the network.  
The SM5000 is connected to the core switch and resides in the Core Block.  
The Core Block implements network connectivity between all Endura components to comprise the basic Endura network.  
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Connecting the NVR5100 and SEB5000s  
The SEB5000 storage expansion box can be connected to the NVR5100 in one of two ways:  
A patch cable is used to connect a single SEB5000 directly to an NVR5100 (refer to Figure 10). The NVR5100 and SEB5000 Ethernet port is  
autosensing.  
TO A BLOCK  
NVR  
SEB  
SWITCH  
Figure 10. Using a Patch Cable to Connect the NVR5100 and a Single SEB5000  
A dedicated, gigabit Ethernet switch can be used to expand the video storage of the NVR5100. In this case, no more than eight SEB5000s  
can be interface to a single NVR (refer to Figure 11).  
SEB A  
TO A BLOCK  
SEB B  
SEB C  
NVR  
GIGABIT SWITCH  
SWITCH  
Figure 11. Connecting the NVR5100 and Multiple SE5000Bs  
Connecting Multiple NVR5100s and SEB5000s  
In a large system it is possible to use one storage switch to network multiple NVR5100 and SEB5000 combinations. If multiple NVR5100s are  
used in the network, Pelco requires that VLANs be configured on the storage switches because it is important to segment communication so that  
each NVR5100 only communicates with the SEB5000s to which the NVR5100 is assigned.  
Figure 12 shows an example of how to segment the network using VLANs.  
NVR5100 #1 resides in VLAN 1 and NVR5100 #2 resides in VLAN 2.  
SEB5000 #1 resides in VLAN 1 and SEB5000 #2 and SEB5000 #3 reside in VLAN 2.  
In this case, NVR5100 #1 stores video streams on SEB5000 #1 and NVR5100 #2 stores video streams on SEB5000 #2 and SEB5000 #3.  
The segmenting of devices by VLANs prevents NVR5100 #1 from communicating with SEB5000 #2 or #3. Likewise, NVR5100 #2 is prevented  
from communicating with SEB5000 #1.  
SEB A  
TO A BLOCK  
NVR 1  
SWITCH  
VLAN 1  
VLAN 2  
VLAN 1  
VLAN 2  
VLAN 2  
GIGABIT SWITCH  
SEB B  
SEB C  
TO A BLOCK  
SWITCH  
NVR 2  
Figure 12. Using VLANs to Connect Multiple NVR5100s and SE5000Bs  
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Appendix A: Endura Network Configuration Example  
This section provides an example of how to configure an HP 5300 series chassis switch for an Endura Network. The information is this section is  
only an example of how to configure an HP 5300 series chassis switch. Although this example is typical, other network configurations can support  
Endura. For more information about advanced configurations, refer to HP Advanced Traffic Management Guide at www.hp.com/go/procurve.  
Figure 13 illustrates a high-level Endura network topology using the HP 5300 series switch.  
VLAN 1  
10.1.0.0/16  
10.2.0.10  
SM 5000  
CHASSIS A  
HP 5304  
10.1.0.1/16  
10.1.0.2/16  
PORTS A1-A16  
VLAN 2  
10.3.0.1  
.1  
VLAN 3  
10.3.0.0/16  
Figure 13. Example Endura Network and HP 5304 Switch Configuration  
The network diagram above will be used throughout this document to demonstrate how to set up a basic Endura system.  
The HP 5300 series chassis switches have multiple slots available to insert a variety of modules as follows:  
ProCurve Switch xl 16-port 10/100/1000 Module (J4907A)  
ProCurve Switch xl 10/100-TX PoE Module (J8161A)  
ProCurve Switch xl 10/100-TX Module (J4820A)  
ProCurve Switch xl 100/1000-T Module (J4821A)  
ProCurve Switch xl Mini-GBIC Module (J4878A)  
ProCurve Switch xl 100-FX MTRJ Module (J4852A)  
For the purposes of discussion in this section, assume the following:  
Switch A has one 16-Port 10/100/1000 Module in slot A (Ports A1-A16).  
Switch B has one 16-Port 10/100/1000 Module in slot B (Ports B1-B16).  
The switches are in their default state.  
The command ‘erase startup-config’ was issued before any configuration.  
Ports A16 and B16 are used to link the two switches together.  
NOTE: Use the serial cable that is supplied during all configurations. While this is not necessary, it allows you to view messages during the  
bootstrap process on the switch, which might be helpful if you have to perform troubleshooting.  
The following sections provide a procedure configuring switch A and B using RIPv2 as a routing protocol because RIPv2 is easier to configure.  
However, static routes or OSPF are alternative methods. Also, IP helper addresses are setup on VLAN 1, which is only required if a DHCP client  
resides on this VLAN. No device other than a switch should reside on VLAN 1 because there are multiple gateways on VLAN 1.  
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SETTING UP SWITCH A  
The following procedure is an example shows how to configure switch A from the HP 5300 series command line interface (CLI).  
To set up switch A:  
1. Access the HP ProCurve switch command line interface (CLI), and log into the switch.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL# prompt is displayed.  
2. Enter config to access the configuration mode.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL(config)# prompt is displayed.  
a. Enter ip routing to enable IP routing.  
b. Enter ip multicast-routing to enable multicast routing.  
c. Enter router rip to enable RIP routing.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL(rip)# prompt is displayed.  
d. Enter exit to exit the RIP configuration mode.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL(config)# prompt is displayed.  
3. Do the following:  
a. Enter router pim to access the PIM configuration mode and enable PIM-DM routing.  
b. Enter exit to exit the PIM configuration mode.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL(config)# prompt is displayed.  
4. Enter vlan 1 to access the VLAN 1 configuration mode.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL(vlan-1)# prompt is displayed.  
a. Enter ip address 10.1.0.1/16 to assign an IP address with a 16-bit network prefix to VLAN 1.  
b. Enter ip igmp to enable IGMP on VLAN 1.  
c. Enter ip rip to enable RIPV2 on VLAN 1.  
d. Enter ip pim to enable PIM on VLAN 1.  
e. Enter ip helper-address 10.2.0.10 to specify where to forward DHCP requests. (In this example, the SM5000 is providing DHCP  
service for the Endura network.)  
5. Enter vlan 2 to access the VLAN 2 configuration mode.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL(vlan-2)# prompt is displayed.  
a. Enter untagged A1 to assign ports A1 to A15 to VLAN 2. (This type of assignment is not necessary for VLAN 1 because all of VLAN  
1’s ports by default are in VLAN 1.)  
b. Enter ip address 10.2.0.1/16 to assign an IP address with a 16-bit network prefix to VLAN 2.  
c. Enter ip igmp to enable IGMP on VLAN 2.  
d. Enter ip rip to enable RIPV2 on VLAN 2.  
e. Enter ip pim to enable PIM on VLAN 2.  
f.  
Enter ip helper-address 10.3.0.10 to specify where to forward DHCP requests. (In this example, the SM5000 is providing DHCP  
service for the Endura network.)  
6. Enter vlan3 to access the VLAN 3 configuration mode.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL(vlan-3)# prompt is displayed.  
a. Enter untagged A2 to assign ports A2 to A15 to VLAN 3. (This type of assignment is not necessary for VLAN 1 because all of VLAN  
1’s ports by default are in VLAN 1.)  
b. Enter ip address 10.3.0.1/16 to assign an IP address with a 16-bit network prefix to VLAN 3.  
c. Enter ip igmp to enable IGMP on VLAN 3.  
d. Enter ip rip to enable RIPV2 on VLAN 3.  
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e. Enter ip pim to enable PIM on VLAN 3.  
f.  
Enter ip helper-address 10.3.0.10 to specify where to forward DHCP requests. (In this example, the SM5000 is providing DHCP  
service for the Endura network.)  
7. Enter exit to exit the VLAN configuration mode.  
8. Enter write memory to save your configuration.  
)
NOTE: The helper address in step 5f is not necessary since the system manager/DHCP server is on the same network.  
SETTING UP SWITCH B  
The following procedure is an example shows how to configure switch B from the HP 53XX command line interface (CLI).  
To set up switch B:  
1. Access the HP ProCurve switch command line interface (CLI), and log into the switch.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL# prompt is displayed.  
2. Enter config to access the configuration mode.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL(config)# prompt is displayed.  
a. Enter ip routing to enable IP routing.  
b. Enter ip multicast-routing to enable multicast routing.  
c. Enter router rip to enable RIP routing.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL(rip)# prompt is displayed.  
d. Enter exit to exit the RIP configuration mode.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL(config)# prompt is displayed.  
3. Do the following:  
a. Enter router pim to access the PIM configuration mode and enable PIM-DM routing.  
b. Enter exit to exit the PIM configuration mode.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL(config)# prompt is displayed.  
4. Enter vlan 1 to access the VLAN 1 configuration mode.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL(vlan-1)# prompt is displayed.  
a. Enter ip address 10.1.0.2/16 to assign an IP address with a 16-bit network prefix to VLAN 1.  
b. Enter ip igmp to enable IGMP on VLAN 1.  
c. Enter ip rip to enable RIPV2 on VLAN 1.  
d. Enter ip pim to enable PIM on VLAN 1.  
e. Enter ip helper-address 10.3.0.10 to specify where to forward DHCP requests. (In this example, the SM5000 is providing DHCP  
service for the Endura network.)  
5. Enter vlan 3 to access the VLAN 3 configuration mode.  
The HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL(vlan-3)# prompt is displayed.  
a. Enter untagged B1-B15 to assign ports B1 to B15 to VLAN 3. (This type of assignment is not necessary for VLAN 1 because all of  
VLAN 1’s ports by default are in VLAN 1.)  
b. Enter ip address 10.3.0.1/16 to assign an IP address with a 16-bit network prefix to VLAN 3.  
c. Enter ip igmp to enable IGMP on VLAN 3.  
d. Enter ip rip to enable RIPV2 on VLAN 3.  
e. Enter ip pim to enable PIM on VLAN 3.  
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f.  
Enter ip helper-address 10.3.0.10 to specify where to forward DHCP requests. (In this example, the SM5000 is providing DHCP  
service for the Endura network.  
6. Enter exit to exit the VLAN configuration mode.  
7. Enter write memory to save your configuration.  
EXAMPLE CONFIGURATION FILE FOR SWITCH B  
Figure 14 shows an example of the configuration file for switch B.  
; J4850A Configuration Editor; Created on release #E.08.44  
hostname “HP ProCurve Switch 5304XL”  
module 2 type J4907A  
ip routing  
snmp-server community “public” Unrestricted  
vlan 1  
name “DEFAULT_VLAN”  
untagged B16  
ip address 10.1.0.2 255.255.0.0  
no untagged B1-B15  
exit  
vlan 3  
name “VLAN3”  
untagged B1-B15  
ip address 10.3.0.1 255.255.0.0  
ip helper-address 10.3.0.10  
ip igmp  
exit  
ip multicast-routing  
router rip  
exit  
router pim  
exit  
vlan 1  
ip rip  
ip pim all  
exit  
vlan 3  
ip rip  
ip pim all  
exit  
Figure 14. Example of a Configuration File  
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Appendix B: WAN Configuration Example  
This appendix provides a sample configuration for multicasting over a generic routing encapsulation (GRE) tunnel as an example of how to  
configure an Endura network using WAN connectivity. Much of the information in this appendix is derived from the online document titled  
Multicasting Over a GRE Tunnel, published by Cisco Systems®. To view this document, go to or click http://www.cisco.com/en/US/tech/tk828/  
In an Endura application scenario, where you want to extend an existing Endura network across a network that does not support multicast, it is  
recommended that you configure a GRE tunnel to send multicast traffic between routers. In this case, the GRE tunnel is required because the  
multicast source and receiver are separated by an IP cloud that is not configured to support IP multicast traffic. In such network scenarios,  
configuring a tunnel across an IP cloud with PIM will allow multicast packets to be exchanged between the source and receiver.  
This appendix describes the configuration, verification, and related issues pertaining to multicasting over a GRE tunnel. The information  
presented in this appendix was created from devices in a specific lab environment. All of the devices used in this appendix started with a cleared  
(default) configuration. If you are working in a live network, ensure that you understand the potential impact of any command before using it.  
NETWORK CONFIGURATION OVERVIEW  
As shown in Figure 15, the multicast source (10.1.1.1) is connected to R102 and is configured for multicast group 239.1.1.20. The multicast  
receiver (10.2.2.3) is connected to R104 and is configured to receive multicast packets for group 239.1.1.20. Separating R102 and R104 is an  
IP cloud, which is not configured for multicast routing.  
192.168.24.0 TUNNEL  
.1 Tu0  
Tu0  
.2  
.2  
.3  
ENDURA  
ENCODER  
CITY A ROUTER  
(R102)  
CITY B ROUTER  
(R104)  
ENDURA  
WORKSTATION  
.1  
.2  
IP CLOUD  
192.168.23.0  
192.168.34.0  
MULTICAST SOURCE  
GRP: 239.1.1.20  
MULTICAST RECEIVER  
GRP: 239.1.1.20  
Figure 15. Sample Endura Network Over a WAN  
A tunnel is configured between R102 to R104 sourced with their loopback interfaces. The ip pim sparse-dense mode command is configured on  
tunnel interfaces and multicast-routing is enabled on R102 and R104. Sparse-dense mode configuration on the tunnel interfaces allows sparse-  
mode or dense-mode packets to be forwarded over the tunnel depending on rendezvous point (RP) configuration for the group.  
For dense mode: With PIM dense mode configured over the tunnel, an ip mroute 10.1.1.0 255.255.255.0 tunnel 0 command is configured  
on R104 to ensure a successful RPF for multicast source address 10.1.1.1. Incoming (10.1.1.1, 239.1.1.20) multicast packets over Tunnel0  
(Tu0) are checked for Reverse Path Forwarding (RPF) using this mroute statement. After a successful check, the multicast packets are  
forwarded to outgoing interface list (OIL) interfaces.  
For sparse mode: With PIM sparse mode configured over the tunnel, ensure that the following points are addressed:  
For a successful RPF verification of multicast traffic flowing over the shared tree (*,G) from RP, an ip mroute rp-address nexthop  
command needs to be configured for the RP address, pointing to the tunnel interface.  
Assuming R102 to be the RP (RP address 2.2.2.2) in this case, the mroute would be the ip mroute 2.2.2.2 255.255.255.255 tunnel 0  
command, which ensures a successful RPF check for traffic flowing over the shared tree.  
For a successful RPF verification of multicast (S,G) traffic flowing over the Shortest Path Tree (SPT), an ip mroute source-address  
nexthop command needs to be configured for the multicast source, pointing to the tunnel interface.  
In this case, when SPT traffic is flowing over tunnel interface an ip mroute 10.1.1.0 255.255.255.0 tunnel 0 command is configured on  
R104 to ensure a successful RPF verification for incoming (10.1.1.1, 239.1.1.20) multicast packets over the Tu0 interface.  
The sample configuration files for R102 and R104 are described in the following sections:  
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CITY A ROUTER (R102) CONFIGURATION FILE  
r102#  
version 12.2  
!
hostname r102  
!
ip subnet-zero  
no ip domain-lookup  
!--- It stops IP domain lookup, which improves the show command response time.  
!
ip multicast-routing  
!--- Enables IP multicast routing.  
!
interface Loopback0  
ip address 2.2.2.2 255.255.255.255  
!--- Tunnel Source interface.  
!
interface Tunnel0  
!--- Tunnel interface configured for PIM and carrying multicast packets to R104.  
!
ip address 192.168.24.1 255.255.255.252  
ip pim sparse-dense-mode  
tunnel source Loopback0  
tunnel destination 4.4.4.4  
!
interface Ethernet0/0  
!
!--- Interface connected to Source.  
!
ip address 10.1.1.2 255.255.255.0  
ip pim sparse-dense-mode  
!
interface Serial8/0  
ip address 192.168.23.1 255.255.255.252  
!
!--- Note IP PIM sparse-dense mode is not configured on serial interface.  
!
router ospf 1  
log-adjacency-changes  
network 2.2.2.2 0.0.0.0 area 0  
network 10.1.1.0 0.0.0.255 area 0  
network 192.168.23.0 0.0.0.255 area 0  
!
ip classless  
ip pim bidir-enable  
!
line con 0  
line aux 0  
line vty 0 4  
login  
!
end  
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CITY B ROUTER (R104) CONFIGURATION FILE  
r104#  
version 12.2  
!
hostname r104  
!
ip subnet-zero  
no ip domain-lookup  
!
!--- It stops IP domain lookup, which improves the show command response time.  
!
ip multicast-routing  
!
!--- Enables IP multicast routing.  
!
interface Loopback0  
ip address 4.4.4.4 255.255.255.255  
!
!--- Tunnel Source interface.  
!
interface Tunnel0  
ip address 192.168.24.2 255.255.255.252  
!
!--- Tunnel interface configured for PIM and carrying multicast packets.  
!
ip pim sparse-dense-mode  
tunnel source Loopback0  
tunnel destination 2.2.2.2  
!
interface Ethernet0/0  
ip address 10.2.2.2 255.255.255.0  
ip pim sparse-dense-mode  
!
interface Serial9/0  
ip address 192.168.34.1 255.255.255.252  
!
!--- Note IP PIM sparse-dense mode is not configured on serial interface.  
!
router ospf 1  
log-adjacency-changes  
network 4.4.4.4 0.0.0.0 area 0  
network 10.2.2.0 0.0.0.255 area 0  
network 192.168.34.0 0.0.0.255 area 0  
!
ip classless  
no ip http server  
ip pim bidir-enable  
ip mroute 10.1.1.0 255.255.255.0 Tunnel0  
!
!--- This Mroute ensures a successful RPF check for packets flowing from the source.  
!--- 10.1.1.1 over Shared tree in case of dense mode and SPT in case of sparse mode.  
!
(Continued on next page)  
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ip mroute 2.2.2.2 255.255.255.255 tunnel 0  
!
!--- This Mroute is required for RPF check when sparse mode multicast traffic is  
!--- flowing from RP (assuming R102 with 2.2.2.2 as RP) towards receiver via tunnel  
!--- before the SPT switchover.  
!
line con 0  
line aux 0  
line vty 0 4  
login  
!
end  
VERIFYING THE CONFIGURATION  
Complete the following steps to verify your configuration:  
1. Use the show ip igmp groups command to verify that the receiver has sent its IGMP join membership request for group 239.1.1.20 to R104.  
r104# show ip igmp groups  
IGMP Connected Group Membership  
Group Address  
239.1.1.20  
Interface  
Ethernet0/0  
Uptime  
Expires  
Last Reporter  
00:00:04 00:02:55 10.2.2.3  
2. Use the show ip mroute group-address command to display that when the source 10.1.1.1 starts multicasting packets for the group  
239.1.1.20, R102 installs the (*,239.1.1.20) and (10.1.1.1, 239.1.1.20) entries in the R102 mroute table, as shown below.  
r102# show ip mroute 239.1.1.20  
IP Multicast Routing Table  
Flags: D - Dense, S - Sparse, B - Bidir Group, s - SSM Group, C - Connected,  
L - Local, P - Pruned, R - RP-bit set, F - Register flag,  
T - SPT-bit set, J - Join SPT, M - MSDP created entry,  
X - Proxy Join Timer Running, A - Candidate for MSDP Advertisement,  
U - URD, I - Received Source Specific Host Report  
Outgoing interface flags: H - Hardware switched  
Timers: Uptime/Expires  
Interface state: Interface, Next-Hop or VCD, State/Mode  
(*, 239.1.1.20), 00:00:09/00:02:59, RP 0.0.0.0, flags: D  
Incoming interface: Null, RPF nbr 0.0.0.0  
Outgoing interface list:  
Tunnel0, Forward/Sparse-Dense, 00:00:09/00:00:00  
Ethernet0/0, Forward/Sparse-Dense, 00:00:09/00:00:00  
(10.1.1.1, 239.1.1.20), 00:00:09/00:02:58, flags: T  
Incoming interface: Ethernet0/0, RPF nbr 0.0.0.0  
Outgoing interface list:  
Tunnel0, Forward/Sparse-Dense, 00:00:09/00:00:00  
NOTE: In the (10.1.1.1, 239.1.1.20) entry, the OIL is Tunnel0.  
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3. Use the show ip mroute group-address command to verify that R104 has the (*,239.1.1.20) and (10.1.1.1, 239.1.1.20) entries while it is  
forwarding multicast packets for group 239.1.1.20 sourced from 10.1.1.1, as shown below.  
r104# show ip mroute 239.1.1.20  
IP Multicast Routing Table  
Flags: D - Dense, S - Sparse, B - Bidir Group, s - SSM Group, C - Connected,  
L - Local, P - Pruned, R - RP-bit set, F - Register flag,  
T - SPT-bit set, J - Join SPT, M - MSDP created entry,  
X - Proxy Join Timer Running, A - Candidate for MSDP Advertisement,  
U - URD, I - Received Source Specific Host Report  
Outgoing interface flags: H - Hardware switched  
Timers: Uptime/Expires  
Interface state: Interface, Next-Hop or VCD, State/Mode  
(*, 239.1.1.20), 00:07:10/00:00:00, RP 0.0.0.0, flags: DCL  
Incoming interface: Null, RPF nbr 0.0.0.0  
Outgoing interface list:  
Tunnel0, Forward/Sparse-Dense, 00:07:10/00:00:00  
Ethernet0/0, Forward/Sparse-Dense, 00:07:10/00:00:00  
(10.1.1.1, 239.1.1.20), 00:01:13/00:02:24, flags: CLT  
Incoming interface: Tunnel0, RPF nbr 192.168.24.1, Mroute  
Outgoing interface list:  
Ethernet0/0, Forward/Sparse-Dense, 00:01:13/00:00:00  
NOTE: In (10.1.1.1, 239.1.1.20), the incoming interface is Tunnel0 and the RPF neighbor is 192.168.24.1—the Tunnel head end on R102.  
The RPF verification is done based on the Mroute configured on R104, and the multicast packets are pushed out to the OIL to the receiver  
connected on the Ethernet 0/0 interface.  
4. Use the show ip rpf ip-address command to perform an RPF verification for packets sourced from 10.1.1.1. The following example confirms  
that RPF for 10.1.1.1 is via Tunnel 0, on which we are receiving the multicast (S,G) packets.  
r104> show ip rpf 10.1.1.1  
RPF information for ? (10.1.1.1)  
RPF interface: Tunnel0  
RPF neighbor: ? (192.168.24.1)  
RPF route/mask: 10.1.1.1/24  
RPF type: static  
RPF recursion count: 0  
Doing distance-preferred lookups across tables  
Certain show commands are supported by the Output Interpreter tool, which allows you to view an analysis of show command output.  
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TROUBLESHOOTING  
If your multicast over GRE tunnel is not working, one of the following could be the cause:  
Tunnel not UP/UP: The tunnel source and destination do not match on each end of the tunnel. For example, if the tunnel destination on  
R102 was changed to the IP address 10.2.2.2 instead of 2.2.2.2 while the configuration on R104 remained the same, the tunnel would not  
come up. To verify the status of the tunnel, use the show interface tunnel 0 command.  
RPF Failure: Use the show ip mroute count command to verify that the multicast packets are dropped because of RPF failure. A sample  
output of the show ip mroute count command and its increasing counters for RPF failure is shown in bold below:  
r104# show ip mroute count  
IP Multicast Statistics  
3 routes using 1642 bytes of memory  
2 groups, 0.50 average sources per group  
Forwarding Counts: Pkt Count/Pkts per second/Avg Pkt Size/Kilobits per second  
Other counts: Total/RPF failed/Other drops(OIF-null, rate-limit etc)  
Group: 224.0.1.40, Source count: 0, Packets forwarded: 0, Packets received: 0  
Group: 239.1.1.20, Source count: 1, Packets forwarded: 11, Packets received: 45  
Source: 10.1.1.1/32, Forwarding: 11/0/100/0, Other: 25/14/0  
!--- After some time, the show ip mroute count command is issued again.  
!--- You can see the RPF failed counter increasing:  
r104# show ip mroute count  
IP Multicast Statistics  
3 routes using 1642 bytes of memory  
2 groups, 0.50 average sources per group  
Forwarding Counts: Pkt Count/Pkts per second/Avg Pkt Size/Kilobits per second  
Other counts: Total/RPF failed/Other drops(OIF-null, rate-limit etc)  
Group: 224.0.1.40, Source count: 0, Packets forwarded: 0, Packets received: 0  
Group: 239.1.1.20, Source count: 1, Packets forwarded: 11, Packets received: 50  
Source: 10.1.1.1/32, Forwarding: 11/0/100/0, Other: 30/19/0  
r104#  
Use the show ip rpf source command to ensure that the RPF interface is the same as that on which the source multicast packets are  
received—Tunnel 0 in this example. For more information on RPF failures, go to or click http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/105/  
mcastguide0.html to access the IP Multicast Troubleshooting Guide.  
PIM Neighbors: Router R102 is not forwarding over the Tunnel0 interface because it is not seeing a PM neighbor R104. You can use the  
show ip pim neighbor command on R102 to show the neighbor R104 over the tunnel. You can also use the show ip pim int command to  
show that there is a neighbor. Verify that the interface level ip pim sparse-dense-mode command is configured on both ends of the tunnel  
and that IP multicast-routing is enabled.  
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Appendix C: Endura Network Requirements Worksheet  
The Endura Network Requirements Worksheet allows you to identify essential network resources that must be available to support the Endura  
system. It is recommended that you complete this worksheet before integrating the Endura system into a new or existing network.  
Please check all that apply.  
Unicast Routing  
The network supports one of the following unicast routing protocols:  
RIP  
OSPF  
Static  
Other: ___________________  
Comment/question: ____________________________________________________________________________  
Multicast Routing  
The network supports one of the following multicast routing protocols:  
PIM-SM  
PIM-DM  
DVMRP  
Other: ___________________  
Comment/question: ____________________________________________________________________________  
IGMP  
The network supports one of the following versions of IGMP:  
IGMP v1  
IGMP v2  
Comment/question: ____________________________________________________________________________  
Multicast Traffic  
Does the network device flood multicast traffic?  
Yes  
No  
Comment/question: ____________________________________________________________________________  
Bandwidth  
Does the network provide enough bandwidth to support the current Endura system  
and allow for future network growth?  
Yes  
No  
Comment/question: ____________________________________________________________________________  
Network Design  
Do you have an Endura network design in place?  
Yes  
No  
Comment/question: ____________________________________________________________________________  
C1640M-B (3/06)  
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Index  
Numerics  
A
G
GRE  
B
bandwidth, calculating  
H
blocks  
description of  
I
IGP  
Interior Gateway Protocol  
L
C
core  
M
managed Endura network  
multicast  
D
devices, network  
multicast protocols  
multicast streams  
E
Endura components  
N
Endura networks  
network devices  
structure of  
C1640M-B (3/06)  
39  
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T
traffic, network  
troubleshooting  
TTL  
O
P
tunnel  
physical media  
PIM  
U
unicast protocols  
unmanaged Endura network  
UPnP  
R
Reverse Path Forwarding  
V
video stream  
routing  
RPF  
video, viewing of  
VLANs  
S
scaling Endura network, using  
W
WANs  
switches  
40  
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REVISION HISTORY  
Manual #  
C1640M  
Date  
7/05  
Comments  
Original version.  
C1640M-A  
12/05  
The PC Workstation was renamed to WS5050 Endura Workstation. The VLAN references and descriptions in text and graphics on pages 10, 11, 17, and 19-24 were  
revised to clarify technical content.  
C1640M-B  
3/06  
Updates the Calculating Bandwidth and Storage Requirements section to add new NTSC and PAL frame rates supported in Version 1.3 across all resolutions (CIF,  
2CIF, and 4CIF).  
Pelco, the Pelco logo, Camclosure, Esprit, Genex, Legacy, and Spectra are registered trademarks of Pelco.  
Endura, EnduraStor, and ExSite are trademarks of Pelco.  
©Copyright 2006, Pelco. All rights reserved.  
DLP is a registered trademark of Texas Instruments, Inc.  
Windows is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries.  
UPnP is a trademark of UPnP Implementers Corporation.  
Cisco Systems is a registered trademark of Cisco Systems, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the U.S. and/or other countries.  
C1640M-B (3/06)  
41  
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Worldwide Headquarters  
3500 Pelco Way  
Clovis, California 93612 USA  
USA & Canada  
Tel: 800/289-9100  
Fax: 800/289-9150  
International  
Tel: 1-559/292-1981  
Fax: 1-559/348-1120  
ISO9001  
United States Canada United Kingdom The Netherlands Singapore Spain Scandinavia France Middle East  
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