This section describes how to attach a key PIN-code calendar to locks on iLOQ Manager.
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Give feedback & see related articlesThis section describes how to attach a key PIN-code calendar to locks on iLOQ Manager.
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Give feedback & see related articlesThis section describes how to define an input, to which the door contact is connected, as a monitored door.
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Give feedback & see related articlesThis section describes how to browse monitored doors on iLOQ Manager.
You can monitor the physical status of a monitored door.
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The monitored door statuses are fetched from the doors, and shown in the Monitored Doors view. The door statuses are automatically updated on the screen. However, in the case of a failure, the door status is not immediately and automatically updated on the screen. To ensure that you have the most current data, press the Refresh button, whereupon the statuses are fetched again. If a door has failed, its status cannot be fetched, and it does not appear on the updated list.
The columns are:
Door name — The monitored door name.
Latest state — The latest state of the monitored door.
State updated — The time when the latest state was obtained from the monitored door.
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Give feedback & see related articlesThis section describes how to view the properties of a monitored door on iLOQ Manager.
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Give feedback & see related articlesThe iLOQ Manager user interface is depicted in the figure below.
The user interface areas are:
Main tabs — The user interface is divided into four main tabs:
You cannot close main tabs.
Ribbon — The Ribbon contains various tools for managing the system. Each Main tab has a different set of tools.
The button labels disappear if you resize the window and make it smaller. To see the label tool tips, place the cursor over the button.
Tabs — The Tabs show the pages you have recently opened, as tabs.
You can close tabs by selecting the tab and clicking the Close icon at the right-hand side of the tab bar.
Grid — The Grid shows a list of objects for the selected browsing view. If you have, for example, chosen
, the Grid shows the list of tokens in the system.Views — The Views area has three options:
Status bar — The Status bar shows information on the system status as follows.
— For more information on the bus status, click the bus icon. The color codes are:
— The connection status icon indicates if the connection between the computer and the Programmer is functioning or not. The color codes are:
— The first icon indicates the status of the token on the Programmer. The color codes are:
The second icon indicates the status of the key on the Programmer. The color codes are:
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Give feedback & see related articlesKeys refer to the keys in the locking system.
You can distribute system administration by allowing one user to order, that is, approve, programming changes to keys. Another user, for example, with limited usage rights, can carry out ordered programming tasks, but cannot modify the content of these programming tasks.
From the perspective of iLOQ Locking System, keys can be divided into two categories:
Logical keys — Logical keys are key definitions that exist on iLOQ Manager only.
The logical key programming states are presented in the figure below:
Physical keys — Physical keys refer to the actual keys that open locks.
The physical key programming states are presented in the figure below:
Due to the nature of the offline system, it is important to understand that the state of the physical keys at the site and the state of the logical keys may differ in the state transition phase. Only when the key programming state is Programmed, the physical key and the logical key have the desired, matching configuration. In all other states, there may be tasks pending for the key. Thus, the Programmed state is always the desired state for the keys in the system.
On the software, it is important to understand whether the logical key has a physical counterpart or not. If the logical key has a ROM_ID in the software, it also has a physical counterpart. If the logical key does not have a ROM_ID in the software, it is only a definition of a new key. Thus, the logical key programming state does not indicate whether the logical key has a physical counterpart or not.
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Give feedback & see related articlesThis section provides an introduction to the blocklist.
The blocklist is a list of keys or access rights that are, for one reason or another, being denied from accessing the locks. The lock does not allow keys on the blocklist to open itself.
Usually, you add a key to the blocklist if it has been lost. When a lost or unreturned key is added on the blocklist, its access rights are denied for the locks.
Blocklisting an access right is an advanced feature that can have extensive effects on the system. Ask for more information from iLOQ before you blocklist an access right.
You can upload the blocklist information to the locks through iLOQ Programmer. Network modules receive the blocklist information automatically.
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Give feedback & see related articlesThis section describes how to browse the blocklist on iLOQ Manager.
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Give feedback & see related articlesThis section describes how to view the properties of records on the iLOQ Manager blocklist.
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Give feedback & see related articlesYou can add two types of objects to the blocklist:
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