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SOFTWARE HOUSE
From Tyco Security Products
C•CURE 9000
Version 2.50
Areas and Zones Guide
REVISION KO
UM-2. KO
EFTA01224642
C•CURE and Software House are registered trademarks of Tyco Security Products.
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wherever necessary. MI trademarks not owned by Tyco Security Products are the property of their respective
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Product offerings and specifications are subject to change without notice. Actual products may vary from photos.
Not all products include all features. Availability varies by region; contact your regional sales manager.
Software version: 250
Document Number: UM-228
Revision Number: KO
Release Date: December 2015
This manual is proprietary information of Software House. Unauthorized reproduction of any portion of this
manual is prohibited. The material in this manual is for information purposes only. It is subject to change
without notice. Software House assumes no responsibility for incorrect information this manual may contain.
O 2015 Tyco Security Products.
MI rights reserved.
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Table of Contents
Preface 9
How to Use this Manual 10
Finding More Information 11
Conventions 12
Software House Customer Support Center 13
Chapter 1 - ISTAR Areas 15
iSTAR Areas Overview 16
Reasons for Using Areas 16
Setting Up Areas 18
Antipassback 21
Cluster Antipassback/Global Antipassback 21
Antipassback Types 21
Configuring Antipassback 24
Carpool Antipassback .26
Cards and Carpool Groups 26
Carpool Regular Antipassback 26
Carpool Timed Antipassback 27
Carpool Antipassback Limitations 27
Carpool Antipassback Exemptions 27
Using Personnel Antipassback and Carpool Antipassback 29
Antipassback Grace 30
Grace All Partitions/Grace All 30
Carpool Grace 37
Antipassback Decision Making 32
Cluster Antipassback Decision Making 32
Global Antipassback Decision Making 32
Global Antipassback Configuration Guidelines 34
Occupancy Restrictions 37
Carpool Antipassback and Occupancy 38
Pass-through Areas 39
Escorted Access 40
Dynamic Area Manager 42
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Tracking the Location of Personnel 43
Area User Count 43
iSTAR Area Configuration Steps 45
Basic iSTAR Area Tasks 51
Accessing the STAR Area Editor 51
Creating an STAR Area 52
Creating an STAR Area Template 52
Configuring an STAR Area 53
Configuring an STAR Carpool Area for Carpool Antipassback 54
Viewing a List of STAR Areas 56
STAR Area List Context Menu 57
Viewing Personnel in an Area 60
Viewing Personnel Groups Associated with an Area 60
Viewing the Status of an STAR Area 61
Viewing STAR Area Status on the Dynamic View 61
Viewing Occupancy Mode Causes for an Area 64
Modifying an STAR Area 64
Deleting an STAR Area 65
Setting a Property for an STAR Area 66
Adding an STAR Area to a Group 66
iSTAR Area Editor 67
STAR Area General Tab 67
General Tab Tasks 68
STAR Area Editor Definitions 68
STAR Area General Tab Definitions 69
Configuring STAR Area Doors, Readers, and Adjacent Areas 70
Deleting STAR Area Doors, Readers, and Adjacent Areas 72
Configuring a Global Antipassback Area 72
STAR Area Antipassback Tab 74
Antipassback Tab Tasks 74
STAR Area Antipassback Tab Definitions 74
Configuring Regular Antipassback for STAR Areas 76
Configuring Timed Antipassback for STAR Areas 76
Configuring Carpool Antipassback for STAR Areas 77
Configuring Lockout for STAR Areas 77
STAR Area Occupancy Tab 78
Occupancy Tab Tasks 79
STAR Area Occupancy Tab Definitions 79
How Area Occupancy Configuration Affects Occupancy Mode 81
Rules for Area Occupancy Access 82
Configuring Area Occupancy Restrictions for All Personnel 84
Configuring Area Occupancy Restrictions for Personnel Groups 85
Configuring Dynamic Area Manager 85
Configuring Pass-through Areas 86
Deleting a Personnel Group from an STAR Area 87
STAR Area Escort Tab 87
Escort Tab Task 88
STAR Area Escort Tab Definitions 88
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Configuring Escorted Access for STAR Areas 89
How Area Escort Configuration Affects Escorted Access 90
STAR Area Muster Tab 90
Muster Tab Tasks 91
STAR Area Muster Tab Definitions 91
Configuring a Muster Area 92
Configuring Muster/De-muster Areas for Personnel Groups 92
STAR Area Triggers Tab 94
Triggers Tab Tasks 94
How to Use the Triggers Tab 94
STAR Area Triggers Tab Definitions 95
Configuring Triggers for STAR Areas 96
Deleting a Trigger from an STAR Area 98
STAR Area Groups Tab 98
STAR Area Groups Tab Definitions 98
STAR Area Status Tab 99
Viewing Area Status on the Status Tab 100
STAR Area State Images Tab 100
State Images Tab Tasks 101
Configuring a Carpool Group for Carpool Antipassback 102
Carpool Group Editor Definitions 102
Carpool Group Editor Tasks 103
Configuring a Carpool Group 103
Deleting a Person from a Carpool Group 104
Configuring iSTAR Clusters for APB Comm Fail Modes and Global Antipassback 105
Cluster Antipassback Communications Failure Mode 105
Global Antipassback for the Cluster 105
Area Tab Field Definitions 106
Configuring Escorted Access Mode 109
Configuring Personnel Antipassback Options 111
Configuring Personnel Escorted Access Options 112
Configuring Event Actions to Affect Areas 114
Setting System Variables That Affect Areas 116
Viewing Area Location of Personnel 119
Viewing Area Information on the Door Editor 121
Running Area Pre-defined Reports 123
Running Area Reports from the Administration Report Dynamic View 123
Running Area Reports from the Monitoring Station Report Status List 125
Using an Event to Run an Area Report 126
Gracing Personnel 127
Viewing Area Status with Map Icons 132
Chapter 2 - 'STAR Intrusion Zones 135
Introduction . . . 136
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iSTAR Intrusion Zone Modes and States 137
Armed 137
Disarmed 137
Violated 138
Ready to Arm/Not Ready to Arm 138
Controlling Intrusion Zone Mode 140
Card Control 141
Event Control 142
Direct Action at the Monitoring Station 144
Inputs 144
Intrusion Zone Status Triggers 147
Doors 149
iSTAR Intrusion Zone Configuration Steps 153
Basic Intrusion Zone Tasks 155
Accessing the STAR Intrusion Zone Editor 155
Creating an STAR Intrusion Zone 155
Creating an STAR Intrusion Zone Template 156
Configuring an STAR Intrusion Zone 157
Viewing a List of STAR Intrusion Zones 157
Viewing Doors/Inputs for an Intrusion Zone 159
Viewing the Status of an STAR Intrusion Zone 161
Viewing Intrusion Zone Status on the Dynamic View 161
Modifying an STAR Intrusion Zone 162
Deleting an STAR Intrusion Zone 163
Setting a Property for an STAR Intrusion Zone 163
Adding an STAR Intrusion Zone to a Group 164
iSTAR Intrusion Zone Editor 165
iSTAR Intrusion Zone General Tab 166
STAR Intrusion Zone Editor Definitions 166
STAR Intrusion Zone General Tab Definitions 167
Configuring STAR Intrusion Zone Entrance/Exit Doors 169
Deleting STAR Intrusion Zone Entrance/Exit Doors 171
iSTAR Intrusion Zone Inputs Tab 172
STAR Intrusion Zone Inputs Tab Definitions 172
Configuring STAR Intrusion Zone Controlled/Protected Inputs 174
Configuring Display Names for STAR Intrusion Zone Monitored Inputs 176
Deleting STAR Intrusion Zone Controlled/Protected Inputs 176
iSTAR Intrusion Zone Ann - Disarm Tab 177
STAR Intrusion Zone Arm - Disarm Tab Definitions 177
Configuring Arming for an STAR Intrusion Zone 179
Configuring Disarming for an STAR Intrusion Zone 181
iSTAR Intrusion Zone Triggers Tab 183
STAR Intrusion Zone Triggers Tab Definitions 183
Configuring Triggers for STAR Intrusion Zones 184
Deleting a Trigger from art STAR Intrusion Zone 187
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iSTAR Intrusion Zone Groups Tab 188
STAR Intrusion Zone Groups Tab Definitions 188
iSTAR Intrusion Zone Status Tab 189
Viewing Intrusion Zone Status on the Status Tab 189
iSTAR Intrusion Zone State Images Tab 191
State Images Tab Tasks 191
Configuring a Person to Arm/Disarm Intrusion Zones 192
Viewing Intrusion Zone Information on the Door Editor 193
Viewing Intrusion Zone Information on the Input Editor 195
Chapter 3 - Keypad Commands 197
Overview 198
Examples of Keypad Command Use 199
How Keypad Commands Work 200
Keypad Command Configuration Steps 202
Permissions Required to Configure Keypad Commands 203
Keypad Command Configuration Requirements 204
Keypad Command Format 205
Format Requirements 205
Example Formats 206
Defining Keypad Command Formats 207
System Variable STAR Variables Tab Definitions 209
Keypad Command Editor 210
Accessing the Keypad Command Editor 210
Keypad Command General Tab 211
Keypad Command General Tab Definitions 211
Keypad Command Permissions Tab 213
Keypad Command Permissions Tab Definitions 213
Keypad Command Groups Tab 215
Keypad Command Groups Tab Definitions 215
Keypad Command Tasks 216
Creating a Keypad Command 216
Creating a Keypad Command Template 216
Configuring a Keypad Command 217
Viewing a List of Keypad Commands 220
Modifying a Keypad Command 222
Deleting a Keypad Command 222
Setting a Property for a Keypad Command 222
Adding a Keypad Command to a Group 223
Configuring Readers for Keypad Commands 224
Configuring a Person to Use Keypad Commands 226
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Enabling/Disabling Keypad Commands at Readers 227
Index 231
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Preface
This C• CURE 9000 Areas and Zones Guide is for new and experienced security system users. The manual describes
the software features on the C•CURE 9000 Administration Client Areas and Zones menu and presents procedures
for configuring and using them.
You should have read the installation procedures described in the C•CURE 9000 Installation and Upgrade Guide and
familiarized yourself with the basic C•CURE 9000 information provided in the C• CURE 9000 Getting Started Guide.
In this preface
How to Use this Manual 10
Finding More Information 11
Conventions 12
Software House Customer Support Center 13
C•CURE 9000 Areas and Zones User Guide Preface 9
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How to Use this Manual
How to Use this Manual
This manual includes the following sections. Turn to the appropriate section for the information you need.
Chapter 1: iSTAR Areas
This chapter describes how to configure iSTAR Cluster Areas, physical regions regulated by C•CURE 9000, and how
to use them to control and monitor access in your facility. Areas are used to control Antipassback— Regular and
Timed—and with Occupancy Restrictions and also provide the capability to track Personnel.
Chapter 2: iSTAR Intrusion Zones
This chapter describes how to configure iSTAR Intrusion Zones, physical areas delineated by Doors and Inputs and
monitored for alarms, and how to use them in C•CURE 9000 to monitor security in your facility.
Chapter 3: Keypad Commands
This chapter describes how to configure and use Keypad Commands that can activate Panel Events.
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Finding More Information
Finding More Information
You can access C•CURE 900(1 manuals and online Help for more information about C•CURE 9000.
Manuals
C•CURE 9000 software manuals are available in Adobe PDF format on the C•CURE 9000 DVD.
You can access the manuals if you copy the appropriate PDF files from the C•CURE 9000 Installation DVD
English \ Manuals folder.
The available C•CURE 9000 and Software House manuals are listed in the C•CURE 9000 Installation and Upgrade
Guide, and appear as hyperlinks in the online.pdf file on the C•CURE 9000 DVD English \ Manuals folder.
These manuals are also available from the Software House Member Center website
Online Help
You can access C•CURE 9000 Help by pressing Fl or clicking Help from the menu bar in the
Administration/Monitoring Station applications.
C•CURE 9000 Areas and Zones User Guide Preface 11
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Conventions
Conventions
This manual uses the following text formats and symbols.
Convention Meaning
Bold T his font indicates screen elements, and also ind tales w hen you should take a direct action in a procedure.
Bold font describes one of the following items:
• A oommand or character to type, or
• A button or option on the screen to press, or
• A key on the keyboard to press
• A screen element or name
blue color text Indicates a hyperfink toa URL, or across-reference toa figure, table, or section in this guide.
Regular Rabb font Indicates a new term.
<text> Indicates a variable.
The following items are used to indicate important information.
Indicates a note. Notes call attention to any item of information that may be of special importance.
NOTE
Indicates an alternate method of performing a task.
TIP
Indicates a caution. A caution contains information essential to avoid damage to the system. A
caution can pertain to hardware or software.
Indicates a warning. A warning contains information that advises users that failure to avoid a
specific action could result in physical harm to the user or to the hardware.
Sir P Indicates a danger. A danger contains information that users must know to avoid death or serious
injury.
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Software House Customer Support Center
Software House Customer Support Center
Telephone Technical Support
During the period of the Agreement, the following guidelines apply:
• Software House accepts service calls only from employees of the Systems integrator of Record for the installation
associated with the support inquiry.
Before Calling
Ensure that you:
• Are the Dealer of record for this account.
• Are certified by Software House for this product.
• Have a valid license and current Software Support Agreement (SSA) for the system.
• Have your system serial number available.
• Have your certification number available.
Hours Normal Support Hours Monday through F riday. 8:00 to 8:00 , EST. Except holidays.
Emergency Support Hours 24 hours/day, seven days a week, 365 daystyear.
Requires Enhanced SSA"7 x2r Standby Telephone Support
(emergency) provided to Certified Technicians.
For allother customers. billable on time and materials basis.
Minimum charges appty- See MSRP.
Phone For telephone support contact numbers for all regions. see
C•CURE 9000 Areas and Zones User Guide Preface 13
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Software House Customer Support Center
14 C•CURE 9000 Areas and Zones User Guide
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1
iSTAR Areas
This chapter explains how Areas can be used to control and monitor access to physical regions regulated by
C•CURE 9000. Areas are used with Global/Cluster Antipassback— Regular and Timed —and with Area Lockout,
Muster/De-muster, Occupancy Restrictions, and Escorted Visitor Access. They also provide the capability to track
Personnel.
In this chapter
iSTAR Areas Overview 16
Setting Up Areas 18
Antipassback 21
Carpool Antipassback 26
Using Personnel Antipassback and Carpool Antipassback 29
Antipassback Grace 30
Antipassback Decision Making 32
Occupancy Restrictions 37
Carpool Antipassback and Occupancy 38
Pass-through Areas 39
Escorted Access 40
Dynamic Area Manager 42
Tracking the Location of Personnel 43
iSTAR Area Configuration Steps 45
Basic iSTAR Area Tasks 51
iSTAR Area Editor 67
Configuring a Carpool Group for Carpool Antipassback 102
Configuring iSTAR Clusters for APB Comm Fail Modes and Global Antipassback 105
Configuring Escorted Access Mode 109
Configuring Personnel Antipassback Options 111
Configuring Personnel Escorted Access Options 112
Configuring Event Actions to Affect Areas 114
Setting System Variables That Affect Areas 116
Viewing Area Location of Personnel 119
Viewing Area Information on the Door Editor 121
Running Area Pre-defined Reports 123
Gracing Personnel 127
Viewing Area Status with Map Icons 132
C•CURE 9000 Areas and Zones User Guide Chapter1 15
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STAR Areas Overview
iSTAR Areas Overview
An Area represents a physical region —such as a room, a specific section of a building, or an entire building. Areas
are used to control and monitor access to the regions they represent. Maximum control of Areas imposes restrictions
on customers that may be impractical, so C•CURE 9000 provides features that allow trade-offs between 'correctness'
and 'convenience'.
C•CURE 9000 currently supports iSTAR Areas only.
NOTE
■ Control is defined as actually preventing access based on location information.
Examples:
A customer might wish to prevent card holders from using their badges and then passing them to friends so
that they can gain entry. To prevent this, the customer can configure Areas with antipassback (APB). In such a
configuration, the card holders are admitted, but when the friends present the cards, they are rejected.
Another customer might want to make sure that a particular Area in the building was accessible to only a
certain number of people at one time. To that end, the customer could configure Areas with a Maximum
Occupancy Restriction. In this type of configuration, when the maximum number of personnel defined for the
Area is reached, no one else can enter—until some personnel leave.
Still another customer with sensitive laboratories might want personnel who entered/exited one particular
Area to be unable to enter another laboratory area for a specified amount of time. The customer can use the
Area lockout feature for this purpose.
■ Monitoring is defined as knowing how many people are in a given area as well as who they are, or which area a
given person is in, without actually controlling access to that area.
While Control and Monitoring represent different functionality, they can also be used together.
Reasons for Using Areas
There are various reasons for using Areas, including security, safety, and resource management.
■ Security - The customer's primary concern is to prevent legitimate card holders from entering Areas in an
incorrect sequence, to prevent non-cardholders from using someone else's card, to prevent more than a specified
number of cardholders from congregating in an area at the same time, or to prevent cardholders from entering a
certain Area after being in another Area.
■ Safety - The customer's primary concern is the safety of employees. Consequently, they want to know where
employees are at all times.
Example:
The customer might create an evacuation location at the facility where, in an emergency, employees have to
present their cards. This location would be monitored, but not controlled.
On the other hand, access within the facility would be controlled with antipassback—not to prevent
cardholders from going wherever they needed, but so the system knows when employees are inside the facility
and therefore in possible danger during an emergency.
■ Resource management - The customer's primary concern is to limit use of a specific facility so that it is
appropriately available.
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ISTARAreasOvervlow
Example:
The customer might have a parking lot which they do not want employees to let their Mends use—by parking
their own cars and then handing their cards to friends. In this case, the customer just wants to make sure that
there is enough room for the vehicles of the other employees.
The customer might have a high-security laboratory which operates optimally with four personnel present. In
this case, the customer could configure that Area with Minimum Occupancy (also known as N-man Rule)
specifying the number of personnel who must enter the lab at the same time to gain access, and who also
must remain in the Area.
Strict area control and monitoring impose certain restrictions on the customer.
In general, most doors in a facility have a reader on one side and a request-to-exit (RTE), using a motion detector, on
the other side. Card holders must present their card to enter, but to exit they just walk up to the door and open it.
Antipassback, however, requires both entry and exit readers because the system must see that a cardholder has left
an area before it can let them back in again.
■ Having exit readers means that going out through the door is now slower.
• Personnel might be lining up to go to lunch, where previously they just walked right out.
• Personnel also have to learn to interact with the system in a new way: to pay attention and present their
cards when exiting, even if their Mends hold the door open for them. Otherwise, their next access attempts
are denied, requiring them to find a system administrator to 'grace' them.
■ Installing Exit readers also doubles the cost of readers in a new facility and could incur building costs in a retro-
fit situation.
■ Finally, in systems large enough to spread areas across more than one controller, access decisions may require
these controllers to exchange messages over the network. Then if the network is slow or unavailable, 'correct'
decisions may be impossible to make in a timely fashion. (The controller can guess, but sometimes it will be
wrong.)
The preceding issues mean that customers may wish to make trade-offs between correctness and convenience. The
following features allow them to do so:
■ Timed antipassback
■ Non-antipassback areas
■ "Local access" failure mode
■ Monitoring of card holder location
■ Occupancy that counts Personnel numbers without restricting access
C•CURE 9000 Areas and Zones User Guide Chapter! 17
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Setting Up Areas
Setting Up Areas
Areas are defined by a set of Doors, Readers, and the Adjacent Areas to which these lead. Doors between Areas
require at least one Reader. In some configurations, such as for Antipassback control of the location of Personnel, an
entrance Reader and an exit Reader are required. C•CURE 9000 uses Areas to regulate Antipassback control and
Occupancy Restrictions.
When high security and reliable tracking of Personnel is required, Areas can be configured to require people to use
their badges to both enter and exit an Area. This provides a record of when a person leaves an Area, allowing the
system to track the location of a person at any time. C•CURE 9000 uses this information to produce Roll Call
Reports, Mustering/De-mustering control and reports, and Antipassback notifications.
Figure 1 on Page 18 presents a simple example of two Areas with Doors and Readers controlling entry and exit.
Figure 1: Areasand Doorswith Entry and Exit Readers
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Area B
Anti-Passback
Area A
•••
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You can select from two types of implementation of antipassback on the C•CURE 9000:
• iSTAR Cluster Antipassback - Allows each iSTAR Cluster to have its own set of Areas and antipassback does
not function across Clusters. Antipassback for iSTAR Ouster Areas means that all Doors, Readers, and adjacent
Areas are within the same iSTAR Ouster. The host does not participate in Area access decisions so these
continue to function even if host communication is lost.
When there is a communications failure within the Ouster-between the master Controller and one or more
member Controllers, decisions are made according to the failure mode you configure for the Ouster. For more
detailed information, see:
• How the Ouster Antipassback Decision is Made on Page 32
• How Ouster Antipassback Works During Communications Failure on Page 32.
• iSTAR Global Antipassback (Cross-Cluster) - Allows an Area to cross multiple iSTAR clusters to share
antipassback information. The Ouster master Controller makes the Antipassback decision when it owns the card
being swiped. Otherwise, that master Controller asks the C•CURE 9000 Server to ask the Ouster master
Controller that is the card's owner for an antipassback decision. For more detailed information, see:
• How Global Antipassback Decisions are Made on Page 32
• How Global Antipassback Works During Communications Failure on Page 33.
You can configure Areas to control and/or monitor access in the following ways or in combinations thereof:
• With no limitation - a person with appropriate clearances can freely enter and exit from an Area.
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Setting Up Areas
■ Using Antipassback where access is restricted as follows:
• Regular antipassback - Personnel cannot exit an Area they are not in, nor reenter an Area without exiting it
first.
• Timed antipassback - Personnel cannot reenter an Area until a specified amount of time has passed.
• Area Lockout - Personnel can only access a current target location based on their last entrance/exit time from
a Lockout Area.
• Carpool antipassback
- Carpool regular antipassback - Personnel in a carpool group cannot exit an Area they are not in, nor re-
enter an Area without exiting it first.
- Carpool timed antipassback - Personnel in a carpool group cannot re-enter an Area until a specified
amount of time has passed.
Carpool Areas and Carpool Antipassback can only be configured for iSTAR Cluster Areas.
NOTE They are not configurable for Cross-Cluster Areas and Global Antipassback.
■ Using Maximum or Minimum Occupancy where access is restricted as follows:
• Personnel cannot access an Area:
- If the number of personnel already in the Area exceeds the maximum number defined.
- If they are not accompanied by the minimum number of personnel required to be in the Area at the same
time.
• Personnel can access an Area regardless of the Maximum and Minimum Occupancy configured, but their
number is counted.
■ Using Passthrough, where Personnel must exit an area within a specified amount of time, failing which an
Event can activate—if configured to do so. You can configure Passthrough violations independent of
antipassback.
■ Using Escorted Access, where cardholders designated as Escorted Visitors must be accompanied by cardholders
designated as Escorts.
■ Using Muster/De-muster, where Personnel gather in a designated Mustering Area in case of emergency. Once
the emergency has passed, you can manually de-muster these personnel to a configured de-muster Area. (If a de-
muster Area has not been designated, at de-muster time any Personnel in the Mustering Area will be graced and
can go to any Area in the facility.
You can monitor access and track a person's location in the following ways:
■ By running
• Roll call reports, which indicate the current location, by Area, for all Personnel at the time the report is
generated.
• Carpool Area Roll call reports, which indicate the current location, by Carpool Area, for all Personnel at the
time the report is generated. The report indicates each person's Carpool Group and whether he/she is the
driver.
For information, see Running Area Pre-defined Reports on Page 123.
■ By displaying their current Area on the Administration application Personnel Dynamic View (based on the last
Area the person entered on a valid admit). For information, see Viewing Area Location of Personnel on Page 119.
C•CURE 9000 Areas and Zones User Guide Chapter! 19
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Setting Up Areas
■ By displaying for any selected Area the Personnel in that Area from both the Administration application Area
Dynamic View and the Monitoring Station Area Status List. For information, see Viewing Personnel in an Area
on Page 60 and the C•CURE 9000 Monitoring Station Guide.
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Antipassback
Antipassback
Antipassback (sometimes known as APB) prevents a person from passing back a card to another person to use, and
detects when someone tailgates (follows another person with a valid card admit through a door without using their
own card).
Cluster Antipassback/Global Antipassback
■ In Cluster Antipassback, the antipassback decisions are enforced within one cluster. The cluster members always
ask the master for passback information. If the members of this cluster lose communications with the master,
they enforce antipassback according to the Communication Failure Mode configured for the cluster —whether No
Access or Local.
■ Global (Cross-Cluster) Antipassback—sometimes referred to as "Host-assisted Antipassback'—works on top of
Cluster Antipassback. It allows antipassback information to be shared between multiple iSTAR clusters to
enforce the antipassback decisions.
Appropriate passback requests are forwarded to the Host. The Host retrieves the information from the
appropriate owner and then passes it back to the Master to pass back to the member who made the original
request. The Master of the cluster to which this member belongs now takes up the ownership of the Personnel
card. If the members of this cluster are not in communication, the System Variable user-defined failure mode
(iSTAR Driver/iSTAR Global Antipassback Communication Failure Mode) will be enforced. For detailed
information, see Table 25 on Page 116 in Setting System Variables That Affect Areas.
Antipassback Types
Antipassback can be either for Personnel or Carpools, and you can configure the following types:
■ No Antipassback on Page 21
■ Regular Antipassback on Page 22
■ Timed Antipassback on Page 22
■ Area Lockout on Page 22
No Antipassback
You can configure an Area without antipassback and use it to:
■ Designate boundaries.
■ Interface with Areas of the antipassback system.
■ Monitor
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