See exactly what you need.
Track-TP dashboards and maps are fully customizable: for every operator and every control-room screen you can build a view with the right data, at the right level of detail. The platform offers multi-tab dashboards with 13 widget types, an interactive map with geofences and routes, and free-form network-topology diagrams.


One application for network, sensors, and alarms.
Every device and sensor appears on the map with its own icon and real-time status. Where markers are dense they cluster automatically, and on the map you can draw geofences and routes between sites.

Thirteen widgets to build any view.
Network, alarms, and sensors each have their own widgets: you combine them on the grid and configure their filters, metrics, and colors. They are the building blocks of every dashboard.
01Device table
A filterable list of equipment with status, group, and last check.
02Single-device panel
The status and key metrics of a single piece of equipment, front and center.
03Text and notes
Context notes, operating instructions, or headings for the tab.
04Map
The same interactive map, embedded as a widget in the dashboard.
05Alarms by priority
A count of active alarms split by informational, warning, and critical priority.
06Alarm table
An alarm queue with device, priority, and resolution status.
07Groups table
Device groups with location and a count of equipment and sensors.
08Devices by type
A breakdown of monitored equipment by category.
09Sensor table
LoRaWAN sensors with battery, signal, last reception, and last reading.
10Single-sensor panel
The current reading of a sensor against its configured thresholds.
11History chart
The trend over time of the readings from one or more sensors.
12Sensors by type
A breakdown of sensors by measured quantity.
13CellX scan options
Scan controls and status for TP-CELLX devices.
Every widget filters by device, group, or type, with configurable metrics, grouping, and colors: the same dashboard shows at a glance what each person using it needs.
The map as the main view of distributed sites.
When the network is spread across tunnels, masts, and remote sites, the map is the most immediate way to follow it: positions, status, and links read at a glance.
The map works both full-page and as a widget inside a dashboard, and it’s the same map in both cases. Positions are set automatically from device registration and from the GPS of LoRaWAN sensors, so there’s no map to keep up to date by hand.

- Geolocated markers
- Devices and sensors appear on the map with different icons by type and their real-time status.
- Marker clustering
- In areas with many devices, nearby markers cluster together and separate as you zoom in.
- Geofences and routes
- Circles to bound an area and lines to trace the links between the sites in a group.
- Map themes
- Several themes to choose from, light, dark, and more, to match the map to the control-room screen.
The layout of the links between sites and equipment.
Beyond dashboards and the map, Track-TP lets you build free-form network-topology diagrams: you can draw the links between sites and equipment and keep the layout next to the real-time data, in the same application.

Go deeper, page by page.
The views on this page draw on the data and rules described in the other pages of the section.
- 01
Track-TP overview
The platform in brief: architecture, protocols, and interface.
- 02
Features
SNMP monitoring, alarms, dashboards, and maps in detail.
- 03
Supported devices
Over 50 device models from various manufacturers, plus LoRaWAN sensors.
- 04
Alarms and notifications
The dashboard alarm widget starts here: rules, priorities, and notifications.
- 05
Data and security
Data history and export, plus user roles.
- 06
Use cases
Telecom, power, security, and IoT across distributed infrastructure.
Your whole network under control.
In a single platform.
Together we map the devices and sensors to supervise, size any LoRaWAN network, and choose between cloud and on-premises. Design, installation, and technical support handled directly by Teleproject.