Turbine 4.11 - Release notes
From Zenitel Wiki
Contents
- 1 Release info
- 2 VSF-TURBINE 4.11.2.5
- 2.1 New Features - Turbine Intercom
- 2.1.1 SNOW-496 IP Station support for RFC3891 SIP "Replaces" Header
- 2.1.2 SNOW-818 Keep-alive for improved VoIP NAT traversal
- 2.1.3 SNOW-330 IP Multicast audio support for Pulse Intercom
- 2.1.4 SNOW-192 Chinese font on Turbine OLED display
- 2.1.5 SNOW-871 TCIV-5 firmware support
- 2.1.6 SNOW-1165 Image quality improvements for TCIV
- 2.1.7 SNOW-83 ONVIF Profile-S support on TCIV
- 2.1.8 SNOW-1166 RTSP support for TCIV video stream
- 2.1.9 SNOW-1169 Dual stream functionality on TCIV
- 2.1.10 SNOW-1167 RTSP audio stream support for all Turbine devices
- 2.1.11 SNOW-1168 Lip-sync of Audio and Video on TCIV
- 2.2 New Features - Exigo Network Amplifiers
- 2.3 Technical Preview
- 2.4 Bugfixes and Improvements
- 2.5 Known Issues
- 2.1 New Features - Turbine Intercom
Release info
Name: VSF-Turbine
Description: VSF-Turbine is a firmware archive for all Turbine Family Intercom stations including devices:
TCIS-x, TKIS-2, TCIV-x, TMIS-x, TFIE-x, TKIE-x, TFIX-x, ECPIR-3P, ENA-2060AC (only in SIP mode), Exigo IP speakers and Exigo Network Amplifiers (AlphaCom mode only).
Version: The firmware is delivered in two different ZIP archives:
- vsft-4.11.2.x - Used for standard in-field upgrades
- vsft-prod-4.11.2.x - Used in production- and recovery upgrades.
Version: 4.11.2.5
Date: 15.01.2019
Status: Limited Availability
VSF-TURBINE 4.11.2.5
New Features - Turbine Intercom
SNOW-496 IP Station support for RFC3891 SIP "Replaces" Header
The IP Station (Turbine and INCA) now support Reinvite / INVITE with replaces, which is quite common function used in SIP environments. The needed function is described in RFC3891.
SNOW-818 Keep-alive for improved VoIP NAT traversal
NAT keep-alive is a feature that sends very tiny UDP data packets from a VoIP client to the router to show that the port is still in use. Turbine and INCA are now sending keep-alives every 25 seconds if have enabled "NAT Keep Alive" under Call Settings.
SNOW-330 IP Multicast audio support for Pulse Intercom
Turbine and INCA IP intercom stations now support IP multicast audio when configured in Pulse mode. Previously, only SIP mode was supported. Up to 10 multicast IP addresses can be configured.
SNOW-192 Chinese font on Turbine OLED display
Turbine now supports Chinese language characters with new font package. New vsf-chinese-font_x.x.x.x_armel.ipk package is made, which can be installed on the turbine (download can be found on our Wiki)
SNOW-871 TCIV-5 firmware support
Turbine firmware now supports a new TCIV-5 Turbine IP station model.
SNOW-1165 Image quality improvements for TCIV
Low-level optimizations were made for AEWB engine (Automatic Exposure and White Balancing) resulting in following image quality improvements: Better low-light performance, Better overall color accuracy and contrast, Smoother dynamic dark-light transitions.
SNOW-83 ONVIF Profile-S support on TCIV
TCIV now fully supports and is compliant with ONVIF Profile-S specification. As a standard in the industry, Profile-S can be used to integrate with a variety of VMS and NVR products.
SNOW-1166 RTSP support for TCIV video stream
RTSP is an industry standard network control protocol for establishing and controlling media streams. TCIV now comes with a full support for RTSP video streams.
SNOW-1169 Dual stream functionality on TCIV
TCIV now supports dual-streaming functionality where two independent video streams can be separately initiated and controlled. Streams can be configured with different protocols (SIP, RTSP, ONVIF, HTTP), different codec and resolution, and are both lip-synced if audio and video is being used - using the industry standard RTCP protocol.
SNOW-1167 RTSP audio stream support for all Turbine devices
RTSP is an industry standard network control protocol for establishing and controlling media streams. All Turbine intercom devices and kits now fully support RTSP for outgoing audio streams.
SNOW-1168 Lip-sync of Audio and Video on TCIV
Audio and Video streams initiated using ONVIF or RTSP protocols are lip-synced for both streaming and recording, implemented using the industry standard RTP Control Protocol (RTCP).