Then you have something wrong like you didn't set up IVS correctly.
SMD will work, but we have found that it will trigger for shadows and just about anything. IVS with AI is much more reliable.
In your field of views, you should use zigzagged trip wires instead of intrusion.
Think in 3d when drawing the trip wires. You want roughly for the persons waist to be in line with the tripwires when they walk through.
It's ok to use both, but the way you have your intrusion zone's drawn they won't likely catch much of anything.Like this? Is it okay to use both?
It's ok to use both, but the way you have your intrusion zone's drawn they won't likely catch much of anything.
You need to test and verify, test the trip wires by having someone walk through them, and you can watch what is being triggered in real time.
Be sure to watch with the WEB gui, to see the tripwires in action.
Think of the tripwire or intrusion box as lasers on the ground, some of yours are way too high. You also need to try and leave an area around so that the person then when they walk will cross the tripwire/intrusion box.
There are 3 different places you have to enable ONVIF in BI. Your pics in post #5 and #7 are two of them. You also need to go to the camera Alert tab and select for When "This camera is triggered" for alerts from ONVIF events.
Also, back on the Trigger tab, when you hit the Configure button for ONVIF/camera events, are you seeing a "GetEvents: OK" at the top right? If not, then BI is not getting ONVIF events at all from your cams which is usually a permission issue.
Yes, some of those trip wires are still too high. Did you have someone walk through and while you watch how the trip wires react.Okay I was told to try and have them at peoples waist, guess I over shot, I will change that
Please see attached screenshots, sidenote, I just added the confirm with AI late last night, when I posted it.