Glossary for Sipelia - Sipelia 2.13

Sipelia™ User Guide 2.13

Product
Sipelia
Content type
Guides > User guides
Version
2.13
Language
English
Last updated
2023-04-11

call dialog box

The call dialog box is a Sipelia-related dialog box that appears from the notification tray within Security Desk once an incoming call comes in from a SIP endpoint. In the call dialog box, users can manage their calls and their list of contacts and favorites, and set their availability status.

Call report

The Call report task is an investigation task. You can use it to review call sessions and generate reports. Among the possible actions that can be performed in this task, users can view the call logs for all sessions, watch playback video of all recorded call sessions, and see the bookmarks that have been added to video sequences of associated cameras.

call session

A call session is the sequence of events or activities that occur from the time a SIP call is started to the time that it ends, including all call transfers. For example, if a call is transferred twice, the sequence of events that occur in both those transfers are all part of the same call session. In a Security Center system equipped with the Sipelia™ module, call sessions can be reviewed and exported through the Call report task within Security Desk.

Config Tool

Config Tool is the Security Center administrative application used to manage all Security Center users and to configure all Security Center entities such as areas, cameras, doors, schedules, cardholders, patrol vehicles, ALPR units, and hardware devices.

conversation window

The conversation window is a Sipelia™-related window that opens within Security Desk once a SIP call has been accepted by either the caller or the recipient of a call. From the conversation window, Security Center users can manage conversations, forward calls, and view associated video when available.

dial plan

A dial plan is a collection of rules that defines how calls are routed locally or between two SIP trunks. Dial plans ensure that calls are routed and rerouted correctly, and they also allow administrators to block calls to certain geographic locations or ensure the privacy of the callers.

entity

Entities are the basic building blocks of Security Center. Everything that requires configuration is represented by an entity. An entity can represent a physical device, such as a camera or a door, or an abstract concept, such as an alarm, a schedule, a user, a role, a plugin, or an add-on.

Genetec™ Server

Genetec™ Server is the Windows service that is at the core of Security Center architecture, and that must be installed on every computer that is part of the Security Center's pool of servers. Every such server is a generic computing resource capable of taking on any role (set of functions) you assign to it.

notification tray

The notification tray contains icons that allow quick access to certain system features, and also displays indicators for system events and status information. The notification tray display settings are saved as part of your user profile and apply to both Security Desk and Config Tool.

regular expression

A regular expression is a sequence of symbols used by a regular expression engine to identify all the strings of characters that match a specific search pattern without having to list all the possible discrete values that must be returned. The Microsoft's .NET Framework Regular Expression engine is the engine used in Sipelia™.

ring group

A ring group is a group of SIP entities that has its own unique SIP phone extension. All entities (or members) within a ring group are part of a call list, and all members get called when the ring group extension is called. The members of a ring group can either be called all at the same time, or successively at a set interval. The call stops ringing when any one of the members within a call list answers the call.

role

A role is a software component that performs a specific job within Security Center. To execute a role, you must assign one or more servers to host it.

Security Center

Security Center is a truly unified platform that blends IP video surveillance, access control, automatic license plate recognition, intrusion detection, and communications within one intuitive and modular solution. By taking advantage of a unified approach to security, your organization becomes more efficient, makes better decisions, and responds to situations and threats with greater confidence.

Security Desk

Security Desk is the unified user interface of Security Center. It provides consistent operator flow across all of the Security Center main systems, Omnicast™, Synergis™, and AutoVu™. The unique task-based design of Security Desk lets operators efficiently control and monitor multiple security and public safety applications.

Sipelia™

Sipelia™ is a core module of Security Center. Using this module, Security Center users can make, receive, and manage SIP-based voice and video calls over a network. Running on the open source Session Initiation Protocol (SIP), Sipelia also integrates existing video and access control platforms with intercom systems, and allows users to log call activities.

SIP client

A SIP client is a program with softphone functionality that users can install on their computers or mobile devices to make and receive voice or video calls from other SIP clients. A SIP client requires a SIP account, and typically includes a user interface from which users can manage calls and also view call-related video streams, if such a feature is supported. Examples of SIP clients are SIP phones, softphones, and SIP intercoms. Once Sipelia™ Client is installed and configured, Security Desk is also an example of a SIP client.
Also known as: softphone

Sipelia™ Mobile

The Sipelia™ Mobile component is a separate plugin that offers Sipelia functionality in the Genetec™ Mobile application. You can now make, receive, and manage voice and video calls from your smartphone. This enables you to respond to critical situations while away from your workstation, reducing response times.

Sipelia™ Server

Sipelia™ Server is the SIP server component of Sipelia. It receives and administers information about the different SIP endpoints, and essentially facilitates the communication between two or more endpoints that are communicating in a SIP environment. Sipelia Server also collates and stores important data, such as contact list information, SIP server settings, and call session recordings. Sipelia Server must be run by a Security Center plugin role, and therefore, must be installed on every Security Center server on which you intend to host the plugin role.

SIP endpoint

A SIP endpoint is the device or system that is at each end of a SIP call session. Examples of endpoints are hard-wired phones, voice mail systems, and intercoms. A SIP client such as a softphone, is another example of an endpoint. Once Sipelia™ Client is installed and configured, Security Desk is considered both an endpoint and a SIP client.
Also known as: user agent

SIP entity

A SIP entity is a Security Center entity that has SIP-related capabilities. In Security Center, examples of SIP entities are users, ring groups, and SIP devices such as SIP intercoms.

SIP extension

A SIP extension is a numeric value assigned to a SIP device so that the device can make and receive SIP calls. Typically, a SIP extension is also used to register the SIP device (to which it is assigned) to a SIP server. To be able to communicate with other SIP endpoints, every SIP entity (user, ring group, or intercom) in Security Center must have a unique SIP extension assigned to it.

SIP intercom

A SIP intercom is an intelligent SIP endpoint that provides two-way phone connectivity in a SIP environment. In Security Center, a SIP intercom is one of the established SIP entities, and it is the only SIP entity that is an actual device. The other SIP entities are Security Center users and ring groups.

SIP trunk

A SIP trunk is a SIP server that allows users to connect their existing SIP servers to other servers, thus extending their VoIP capabilities and allowing them to migrate their old PBX systems to a unified VoIP system. With an integrated dial plan, SIP trunks make it possible for SIP extensions that reside on different SIP servers to communicate with one another.

VoIP inventory

The VoIP inventory task is a maintenance task that reports on the SIP entities and all of the Security Center users with SIP accounts in your system.