zoneminder/README.html

2982 lines
177 KiB
HTML
Raw Normal View History

<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=windows-1252">
<meta name=Generator content="Microsoft Word 10 (filtered)">
<title>ZoneMinder v1.17.2</title>
<style>
<!--
/* Font Definitions */
@font-face
{font-family:Wingdings;
panose-1:5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0;}
@font-face
{font-family:Tahoma;
panose-1:2 11 6 4 3 5 4 4 2 4;}
/* Style Definitions */
p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal
{margin:0cm;
margin-bottom:.0001pt;
punctuation-wrap:simple;
text-autospace:none;
font-size:12.0pt;
font-family:"Times New Roman";}
h1
{margin-top:12.0pt;
margin-right:0cm;
margin-bottom:12.0pt;
margin-left:22.7pt;
text-indent:-22.7pt;
page-break-before:always;
page-break-after:avoid;
punctuation-wrap:simple;
text-autospace:none;
font-size:14.0pt;
font-family:Arial;
text-decoration:underline;}
h2
{margin-top:12.0pt;
margin-right:0cm;
margin-bottom:6.0pt;
margin-left:21.75pt;
text-indent:-21.6pt;
page-break-after:avoid;
punctuation-wrap:simple;
text-autospace:none;
font-size:12.0pt;
font-family:Arial;
text-decoration:underline;}
p.MsoHeader, li.MsoHeader, div.MsoHeader
{margin:0cm;
margin-bottom:.0001pt;
punctuation-wrap:simple;
text-autospace:none;
font-size:12.0pt;
font-family:"Times New Roman";}
p.MsoFooter, li.MsoFooter, div.MsoFooter
{margin:0cm;
margin-bottom:.0001pt;
punctuation-wrap:simple;
text-autospace:none;
font-size:12.0pt;
font-family:"Times New Roman";}
p.MsoTitle, li.MsoTitle, div.MsoTitle
{margin-top:12.0pt;
margin-right:0cm;
margin-bottom:3.0pt;
margin-left:0cm;
text-align:center;
punctuation-wrap:simple;
text-autospace:none;
font-size:16.0pt;
font-family:Arial;
font-weight:bold;
text-decoration:underline;}
a:link, span.MsoHyperlink
{color:blue;
text-decoration:underline;}
a:visited, span.MsoHyperlinkFollowed
{color:purple;
text-decoration:underline;}
p.MsoPlainText, li.MsoPlainText, div.MsoPlainText
{margin-top:0cm;
margin-right:0cm;
margin-bottom:9.0pt;
margin-left:0cm;
text-align:justify;
punctuation-wrap:simple;
text-autospace:none;
font-size:10.0pt;
font-family:Arial;}
pre
{margin:0cm;
margin-bottom:.0001pt;
punctuation-wrap:simple;
text-autospace:none;
font-size:10.0pt;
font-family:"Courier New";
color:black;}
p.Command, li.Command, div.Command
{margin-top:0cm;
margin-right:0cm;
margin-bottom:9.0pt;
margin-left:0cm;
text-align:justify;
punctuation-wrap:simple;
text-autospace:none;
font-size:10.0pt;
font-family:Arial;
font-style:italic;}
span.CommandChar
{font-family:Arial;
font-style:italic;}
p.BullettedChar, li.BullettedChar, div.BullettedChar
{margin-top:0cm;
margin-right:0cm;
margin-bottom:9.0pt;
margin-left:35.7pt;
text-align:justify;
text-indent:-17.85pt;
punctuation-wrap:simple;
text-autospace:none;
font-size:10.0pt;
font-family:Arial;}
span.BullettedCharChar
{font-family:Arial;}
p.MonitorTab, li.MonitorTab, div.MonitorTab
{margin-top:0cm;
margin-right:0cm;
margin-bottom:9.0pt;
margin-left:0cm;
text-align:justify;
punctuation-wrap:simple;
text-autospace:none;
font-size:10.0pt;
font-family:Arial;
font-weight:bold;}
p.MonitorOption, li.MonitorOption, div.MonitorOption
{margin-top:0cm;
margin-right:0cm;
margin-bottom:9.0pt;
margin-left:27.0pt;
text-align:justify;
punctuation-wrap:simple;
text-autospace:none;
font-size:10.0pt;
font-family:Arial;}
span.MonitorOptionChar
{font-family:Arial;}
p.MonitorBullet, li.MonitorBullet, div.MonitorBullet
{margin-top:0cm;
margin-right:0cm;
margin-bottom:9.0pt;
margin-left:63.0pt;
text-align:justify;
text-indent:-18.0pt;
punctuation-wrap:simple;
text-autospace:none;
font-size:10.0pt;
font-family:Arial;}
span.MonitorTabChar
{font-family:Arial;
font-weight:bold;}
ins
{text-decoration:none;}
span.msoIns
{text-decoration:underline;}
span.msoDel
{text-decoration:line-through;
color:red;}
@page Section1
{size:595.3pt 841.9pt;
margin:72.0pt 57.6pt 72.0pt 57.6pt;}
div.Section1
{page:Section1;}
/* List Definitions */
ol
{margin-bottom:0cm;}
ul
{margin-bottom:0cm;}
-->
</style>
</head>
<body lang=EN-GB link=blue vlink=purple>
<div class=Section1>
<p class=MsoTitle><u>ZoneMinder v1.17.2</u></p>
<h1 style='text-indent:-22.7pt;page-break-before:auto'><span style='text-decoration:
none'>1.<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span><u>Introduction</u></h1>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Welcome to ZoneMinder, the all-in-one Linux GPL'd
security camera solution.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><EFBFBD>A few months back my garage was burgled and all my wine
and power tools were nicked! I realised shortly after that if I'd just had a
camera overlooking the door then at least I'd have know exactly when and who
did the dirty deed. And so ZoneMinder was born. It's still a baby but hopefully
it can grow up to be something that can be genuinely useful and maybe one day
either prevent similar incidents or perhaps bring some perpetrators to justice.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>ZoneMinder is designed around a series of independent
components that only function when necessary limiting any wasted resource and
maximising the efficiency of your machine. A fairly ancient Pentium II PC
should be able to track one camera per device at up to 25 frames per second
with this dropping by half approximately for each additional camera on the same
device, additional cameras on other devices do not interact so can maintain
this frame rate. Even monitoring several cameras still will not overload the
CPU as frame processing is designed to synchronise with capture and not stall
it.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>As well as being fast ZoneMinder is designed to be
friendly and even more than that, actually useful. As well as the fast video
interface core it also comes with a user friendly and comprehensive PHP based
web interface allowing you to control and monitor your cameras from home or
even at work or on the road. It supports variable web capabilities based on
available bandwidth. The web interface also allows you to view events that your
cameras have captured and archive them or review them time and again, or delete
the ones you no longer wish to keep. The web pages directly interact with the
core daemons ensuring full co-operation at all times. ZoneMinder can even be
installed as a system service ensuring it is right there if your computer has
to reboot for any reason.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The core of ZoneMinder is the capture and analysis of
images and there is a highly configurable set of parameters that allow you to
ensure that you can eliminate false positives whilst ensuring that anything you
don't want to miss will be captured and saved. ZoneMinder allows you to define
a set of 'zones' for each camera of varying sensitivity and functionality. This
allows you to eliminate regions that you don't wish to track or define areas
that will alarm if various thresholds are exceeded in conjunction with other
zones.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>ZoneMinder is fresh off the keyboard and so comes with no
warranty whatsoever, please try it, send your feedback and if you get anything
useful out of it please let me know.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>ZoneMinder is free but if you do get ZoneMinder up and
running and find it useful then please feel free to visit <a
href="http://www.zoneminder.com/donate.html">http://www.zoneminder.com/donate.html</a>
where any donations will be appreciated and will help to fund future
improvements of ZoneMinder. This would be especially appreciated if you use
ZoneMinder as part of your business or to protect your property.</p>
<h1 style='text-indent:-22.7pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>2.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span><u>Requirements</u></h1>
<p class=MsoPlainText>ZoneMinder needs a couple of things to work.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Firstly, it uses MySQL so you'll need that. In order to
compile you need to make sure you have a development installation and not just
a runtime, this is because it needs to use the MySQL header files. If you are
running an RPM based distribution then it<69>s probably worth installing all the
pure mysql rpm files to be sure you have the right ones.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Next it does things with JPEGs so you'll need at least
libjpeg.a which I think come as standard nowadays with most distributions. It
also uses the netpbm utilities in a very limited way to generate thumbnails
under certain circumstances though this can be modified.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>ZoneMinder can generate MPEG videos if necessary, for
this you'll need either ffmpeg (recommended) or the Berkeley MPEG encoder
(mpeg_encode). If you don't have either, don't worry, as the options will be
hidden and you'll not really miss much. The web interface uses PHP and so you
need that in your apache or other web server as well, make sure MySQL support
is available either statically or as a module. There are also various perl
modules that you may need that vary depending on which options you choose on
installation, for more details see later in this document.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Finally, there is quite a bit of image streaming in the
package. So if you don't have Netscape or another browser that supports image
streaming natively I recommend you get the excellent Cambozola java applet from
<span class=MsoHyperlink>http://www.charliemouse.com/code/cambozola/</span>
which will let you view the image stream in Internet Explorer and others.
Otherwise you're limited to just refreshing still images.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Hardware-wise, ZoneMinder has been used with various
video and USB cameras with the V4L interface. I don't have a lot of cameras
myself so I've not had change to test it with a huge range personally however
there is a list of devices that are definitely known to work on the web site.
Please let me know if your camera works and is not listed. You do need to have
Video 4 Linux installed. I've not got too many machines so I've only really
used it on various RedHat distributions, which seem to have everything there by
default I think. SlackWare does need a bit more tinkering than other
distributions; there is a document on the web site describing what users have
had to do to get it working. Please give me feedback on other distributions not
listed on the site.</p>
<h1 style='text-indent:-22.7pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>3.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span><u>Building</u></h1>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The first thing you need to do is run the included
configure script to define some initial configuration, just type</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><i>./configure --with-mysql=&lt;your MySQL root&gt;
--with-webdir=&lt;your web directory&gt; --with-cgidir=&lt;your cgi
directory&gt;</i></p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>where --with-mysql identifies the root directory where
you have installed MySQL (usually /usr), --with-webdir is the directory to
which you want to install the PHP files, and --with-cgidir is the directory to
which you want to install CGI files. These directories could be
/var/www/html/zm and /var/www/cgi-bin for example. There are also two further
arguments you can add if your web user and group are not both 'apache'. These
are --with-webuser and --with-webgroup. Type</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><i>./configure <20>help</i></p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>for details.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>That's the build configuration sorted out. The next thing
you have to do is do a little more runtime specific configuration. ZoneMinder
config is scattered around various files in the distribution so to make things
easier for you there is a ZoneMinder configuration utility included. Type</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><i>perl ./zmconfig.pl</i></p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>to get it started. It is an interactive utility and will
prompt you by asking you various questions. For most questions typing '?' will
give you additional help if you need it. Once you've answered all the questions
it will write out a configuration file called 'zmconfig.txt' and then process
various files to substitute the information in them. If you run it again it
will remember your answers from. If you just want to rerun the substitutions
you can run zmconfig.pl in non-interactive mode by typing</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><i>perl ./zmconfig.pl -noi</i></p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>which will just read your file and do the substitutions
with no questions asked. There are two classes of options, <20>core<72> options which
much be specified with zmconfig which detail things such as database passwords
which are compiled into ZoneMinder and other options with are stored in the
database and which can be modified dynamically via the <20>options<6E> section of the
web interface. Only the first set need to be completed with zmconfig at this
stage. If you want to change just a few options and can<61>t access the options
dialog via the web you can append them as parameters to zmconfig and it will
just ask you about those. So for example,</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><i>perl ./zmconfig.pl ZM_STRICT_VIDEO_CONFIG</i></p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>however it is fairly dumb will not tell you if you make a
typo and misspell an option.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Among the first questions zmconfig.pl asks you are to do
with the database and the next thing you should do is create it and the
associated database users. You may notice that there are two sets of users and
passwords. This is because the streaming server and utility binaries require
only read access to the database so you may wish to create both a full access
user and a limited access user. You can of course set both to the full access
user. The included schema (zmschema.sql) can be used to actually create the
tables required. The database is usually called just 'zm'.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>If you are a first time user the first run of zmconfig.pl
will warn you about the missing database, you can ignore those errors this
time. Once you<6F>ve run it for the first time the schema file should have your
desired database name in it so use it to create the database (see below). Once
the database and permissions are set up rerun zmconfig.pl with the <20>noi option
to get it to load the configuration into your new database.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>If you are upgrading from a previous version you can use
zmalter-x.y.z.sql to upgrade your database and make the necessary changes where
x.y.z identifies the version of ZoneMinder you had installed previously. So if
you are going from version 0.9.7 to version 0.9.11 you would run the scripts
for all intervening versions to get to the current one, i.e. zmalter-0.9.7.sql,
zmalter-0.9.8.sql, zmalter-0.9.9.sql and zmalter0.9.10.sql.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>For a new installation the simplest way to create your
database and users is as follows,</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><i>mysql mysql &lt; zmschema.sql</i></p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><i>mysql mysql</i></p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><i>grant select,insert,update,delete on &lt;your database
name&gt;.* to '&lt;your first username&gt;'@localhost identified by '&lt;your
first password&gt;';</i></p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><i>grant select on &lt;your database name&gt;.* to
'&lt;your second username&gt;'@localhost identified by '&lt;your second
password&gt;'</i></p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><i>quit</i></p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><i>mysqladmin reload</i></p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>You may need to supply a username and password to the
mysql commands in the first place to give yourself sufficient privileges to
perform the required commands. If you want to host your database on a different
machine than that which ZoneMinder is running on then use the hostname of the
remote machine instead of localhost.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Then just type <i>'make'</i> and off you go.</p>
<h1 style='text-indent:-22.7pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>4.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span><u>Installation</u></h1>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Once the build has completed you should have several
shiny new binaries. I will now briefly describe what each of them does.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:18.0pt'><b>zmc</b> - This is the
ZoneMinder Capture daemon. This binary's job is to sit on a video device and
suck frames off it as fast as possible, this should run<75> at more or less
constant speed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:18.0pt'><b>zma</b> - This is the ZoneMinder
Analysis daemon. This is the component that goes through the captured frames
and checks them for motion which might generate an alarm or event. It generally
keeps up with the Capture daemon but if very busy may skip some frames to
prevent it falling behind.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:18.0pt'><b>zmf</b> - This is the
ZoneMinder Frame daemon. This is an optional daemon that can run in concert
with the Analysis daemon and whose function it is to actually write captured
frames to disk. This frees up the Analysis daemon to do more analysis (!) and
so keep up with the Capture daemon better. If it isn<73>t running or dies then the
Analysis daemon just writes them itself.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:18.0pt'><b>zms</b> - This is the
ZoneMinder Streaming server. The web interface connects with this to get
real-time or historical streamed images. It runs only when a live monitor
stream or event stream is actually being viewed and dies when the event
finishes or the associate web page is closed. If you find you have several zms
processes running when nothing is being viewed then it is likely you need a
patch for apache (see the Troubleshooting section).</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:18.0pt'><b>zmu</b> - This is the
ZoneMinder Utility. It's basically a handy command line interface to several
useful functions. It<49>s not really meant to be used by anyone except the web
page (there's only limited 'help' in it so far) but can be if necessary,
especially for debugging video problems.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:18.0pt'><b>zmfix</b> - This is a small
binary that exists only to ensure that the video device files can be read by
the main capture daemons. It is often the case that these device files are set
to be accessible by root only on boot. This binary runs setuid and ensures that
they have appropriate permissions. This is not a daemon and runs only on system
start and then exits.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>As well as this there are the web PHP files in the web
directory and some perl scripts in the scripts directory. These scripts all
have some configuration at the top of the files which should be viewed and
amended if necessary and are as follows.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:18.0pt'><b>zmpkg.pl</b> - This is the
ZoneMinder Package Control script. This is used by the web interface and
service scripts to control the execution of the system as a whole.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:18.0pt'><b>zmdc.pl</b> - This is the
ZoneMinder Daemon Control script. This is used by the web interface and the
zmpkg.pl script to control and maintain the execution of the capture and
analysis daemons, amongst others. You should not need to run this script
yourself.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:18.0pt'><b>zmfilter.pl</b> - This
script controls the execution of saved filters and will be started and stopped
by the web interface based on whether there are filters that have been defined
to be autonomous. This script is also responsible for the automatic uploading
of events to a 3rd party server.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:18.0pt'><b>zmaudit.pl</b> - This
script is used to check the consistency of the event file system and database.
It can delete orphaned events, i.e. ones that appear in one location and not
the other as well as checking that all the various event related tables are in
line. It can be run interactively or in batch mode either from the command line
or a cron job or similar. In the zmconfig.pl there is an option to specify fast
event deletes where the web interface only deletes the event entry from the
database itself. If this is set then it is this script that tidies up the rest.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:18.0pt'><b>zmx10.pl</b> - This is an
optional script that can be used to initiate and monitor X10 Home Automation
style events and interface with an alarm system either by the generation of X10
signals on ZoneMinder events or by initiating ZoneMinder monitoring and capture
on receipt of X10 signals from elsewhere, for instance the triggering of an X10
PIR. For example I have several cameras that don<6F>t do motion detection until I
arm my alarm system whereupon they switch to active mode when an X10 signal is
generated by the alarm system and received by ZoneMinder.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:18.0pt'><b>zmwatch.pl</b> - This is a
simple script purely designed to keep an eye on the capture daemons and restart
them if they lockup. It has been known for sync problems in the video drivers
to cause this so this script makes sure that nothing important gets missed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:18.0pt'><b>zm</b> - This is the
(optional) ZoneMinder init script, see below for details.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Finally, check zm_config.php in the web directory and
amend any configuration necessary in there. Most will have already been done by
the configuration utilities but some scripts have a <20>VERBOSE<53> flag you can set
to get more debug out.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>At this stage typing 'make install' will install
everything to the desired locations, you may wish to su to root first though.
The installation routine will copy the binaries and scripts to your chosen
install location, usually /usr/local/bin and then move zms to your cgi-bin
area. It will then copy the web files to your chosen directory and ensure they
have the right permissions. Finally it tries to link zm.php to index.php but
will not overwrite an existing file if it already exists.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The 'zm' script does not get installed automatically as
it is not necessary for the operation of the ZoneMinder setup per se and is not
necessarily supported for distributions other than RedHat However if you want
to ensure that the ZoneMinder daemons are started on reboot etc copy it to your
init.d directory, usually something like /etc/rc.d/init.d and then add it by
doing</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><i>chkconfig --add zm</i></p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>or similar command for your distribution. ZoneMinder will
then start up when your machine reboots and can be controlled (by the root
user) by doing <i>'service zm start'</i> or <i>'service zm stop'</i> etc. You
may need to use the <20><span class=CommandChar><EFBFBD>levels</span><EFBFBD> parameter to
chkconfig to ensure that ZoneMinder is started when you need it to.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Now start your web browser and point it at your zm.php
and off you go.</p>
<h1 style='text-indent:-22.7pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>5.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span><u>Tutorial</u></h1>
<p class=MsoPlainText>What you see now (and subsequently) depends on whether
you chose to run ZoneMinder in authenticated mode or not. This is an option
that lets you specify whether anyone that goes to the ZoneMinder web pages must
authenticate themself in order to be given permissions to perform certain
tasks. If you chose this mode then you will need to log in here. By default a
fully privileged user <20>admin<69> has been created with a password also of <20>admin<69>.
You should change this password as soon as possible.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Once you<6F>ve logged in, or if you are running in
un-authenticated mode, you will now see the ZoneMinder Console window. This
will resize itself to avoid being too intrusive on your desktop. Along the top
there are several informational entries like the time of the last update and
the current server load. There will also be an indication of the system state
which will probably say <20>stopped<65> to start with. This is a link that you can
click on to control the ZoneMinder system as a whole. Below that are various
other links including one detailing the current user (in authenticated mode
only) and one allowing you to configure your bandwidth. This last one enables
you to optimise your settings depending on where you are, the actual values
relating to this are defined in the options. If you are using a browser on the
same machine or network then choose high, over a cable or DSL link maybe choose
medium and over a dialup choose low. You can experiment to see which is best.
This setting is retained on a per machine basis with a persistent cookie. Also
on this line are a number of other links that will be covered below.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Please bear in mind that from here on the descriptions of
the web pages are based on what you will see if you are running as a fully
authenticated user. If you are running in un-authenticated mode or as a less
privileged user then some elements may not be shown or will be disabled.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>5.1.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Defining
Monitors</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>To use ZoneMinder properly you need to define at least
one Monitor. Essentially, a monitor is associated with a camera and can continually
check it for motion detection and such like. So, next click 'Add New Monitor'
to bring up the dialog. You will see a bunch of things you have to fill in.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>To help you get started on the video configuration the
best thing is to us a tool like 'xawtv' (<a href="http://bytesex.org/xawtv/">http://bytesex.org/xawtv/</a>)
to get a picture you're happy with, and to check your camera works. Then run
'zmu -d &lt;device_no&gt; -q -v' to get a dump of the settings (note, you will
have to additionally supply a username and password to zmu if you are running
in authenticated mode). You can then enter these values into the video related
options of the monitor configuration panel. The 'device_no' referred to here is
a number corresponding to the digit at the end of your device file, so
/dev/video0 has a 'device_no' of 0 etc. If 'zmu' gives you an error related to
permissions run 'zmfix -a' to make sure you can access all the video devices.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The options are divided into a set of tabs to make it
easier to edit. You do not have to <20>save<76> to change to different tab so you can
make all the changes you require and then click <20>Save<76> at the end. The
individual option are explained in a little more detail below,</p>
<p class=MonitorTab><EFBFBD>Monitor<EFBFBD> Tab</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Name</b> <20> The name for your monitor. In theory this
can eb anything you like but some users have reported problems with some
characters. So to be on the safe side choose something fairly brief and with
just letters and numbers and no punctuation or spaces.. </p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Function</b> - This essentially defines what the
monitor is doing. This can be one of the following; </p>
<p class=MonitorBullet style='text-indent:-63.0pt'><span style='font-family:
Symbol'><3E><span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>'None' - The monitor is currently disabled and no streams can be
viewed or events generated.</p>
<p class=MonitorBullet style='text-indent:-63.0pt'><span style='font-family:
Symbol'><3E><span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>'Monitor' - The monitor will only stream feeds but no image
analysis is done and so no alarms or events will be generated, </p>
<p class=MonitorBullet style='text-indent:-63.0pt'><span style='font-family:
Symbol'><3E><span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>'Modect' <20> or MOtion DEteCTtion. All captured images will be
analysed and events generated where motion is detected,</p>
<p class=MonitorBullet style='text-indent:-63.0pt'><span style='font-family:
Symbol'><3E><span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span><EFBFBD>Record<EFBFBD> <20> In this case continuous events of a fixed length are
generated regardless of motion which is analogous to a convention time-lapse
video recorder. No motion detection takes place in this mode.</p>
<p class=MonitorBullet style='text-indent:-63.0pt'><span style='font-family:
Symbol'><3E><span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span><EFBFBD>Mocord<EFBFBD> <20> This is a hybrid of Modect and Record and results in
both fixed length events being recorded and also any motion being highlighted
within those events.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption>Generally speaking it is best to choose <20>Monitor<6F> as an
initial setting here..</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Section Length</b> <20> This specifies the length (in
seconds) of any fixed length events produced when the monitor function is
<EFBFBD>Record<EFBFBD> or <20>Mocord<72>. Otherwise it is ignored. This should not.be so long that
events are difficult to navigate nor so short that too many events are
generated. A length of between 300 and 900 seconds I recommended.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Frame Skip </b><EFBFBD> This setting also applies only to the
<EFBFBD>Record<EFBFBD> or <20>Mocord<72> functions and specifies how many frames should be skipped
in the recorded events. The default setting of zero results in every captured
frame being saved, whereas one would mean that one frame is skipped between
each saved one, two means that two frames are skipped between each saved one
etc. An alternate way of thinking is that one in every <20>Frame Skip + 1<> frames
is saved. The point of this is to ensure that saved events do not take up too
much space unnecessarily whilst still allowing the camera to capture at a
fairly high frame rate. The alternate approach is to limit the capture frame
rate which will obviously affect the rate at which frames are saved.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Run Mode </b><EFBFBD> Two choices are available here.
<EFBFBD>Continuous<EFBFBD> is the usual setting and means that the monitor is expected to be
performing the function selected above at all times and should one or more of
the daemons fail or not be running it will be automatically restarted. By
contrast <20>Triggered<65> means that the decision about whether the daemons should
actually be active is devolved to an external triggering mechanism.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Triggers </b><EFBFBD> This small section lets you select
which triggers will apply if the run mode has been set to <20>triggered<65> above.
The most common trigger is X10 and this will appear here if you indicated that
your system supported it during installation. Only X10 is supported as a
shipped trigger with ZoneMinder at present but it is expected that other
triggers will become available as necessary. You can also just use <20>cron<6F> jobs
or other mechanisms to actually control the camera and keep them completely
outside of the ZoneMinder settings.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Source Type</b> <20> This determines whether the camera
is a local one attached to a physical video or USB port on your machine or a
remote network camera or similar. Choosing one or the other affects which set
of options are shown in the next tab.</p>
<p class=MonitorTab><EFBFBD>Source<EFBFBD> Tab (local device)</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Device Number/Channel</b> <20> For a local camera enter
the device number that your camera is attached to. If it is /dev/video0 enter
'0' etc. Some video devices, e.g. BTTV cards support multiple cameras on one
device so in this case enter the channel number in the Channel box or leave it
at zero if you're using a USB camera or one with just one channel. </p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Device Format</b> <20> For a local camera enter the
video format of the video stream. This is defined in various system files (e.g.
/usr/include/linux/videodev.h) but the two most common are 0 for PAL and 1 for
NTSC.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Capture Palette</b> - Finally for the video part of
the configuration enter the colour depth. ZoneMinder supports a handful of the
most common palettes, so choose one here. If in doubt try grey first, and then
24 bit colour. If neither of these work very well then YUV420P or one of the
others probably will. There is a slight performance penalty when using palettes
other than grey or 24 bit colour as a an internal conversion is involved. These
other formats are intended to be supported natively in a future version but for
now if you have the choice choose one of grey or 24 bit colour.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Capture Width/Height</b> - The dimensions of the
video stream your camera will supply. If your camera supports several just
enter the one you'll want to use for this application, you can always change it
later. However I would recommend starting with no larger than 320x240 or 352x288
and then perhaps increasing and seeing how performance is affected. This size
should be adequate in most cases. Some cameras are quite choosy about the sizes
you can use here so unusual sizes such as 197x333 should be avoided initially.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Orientation</b> <20> If your camera is mounted upside
down or at right angles you can use this field to specify a rotation that is
applied to the image as it is captured. This incurs an additional processing
overhead so if possible it is better to mount your camera the right way round
if you can. If not set the orientation here. If you choose one of the rotation
options remember to switch the height and width fields so that they apply, e.g.
if your camera captures at 352x288 and you choose <20>Rotate Right<68> here then set
the height to be 352 and width to be 288.</p>
<p class=MonitorTab><EFBFBD>Source<EFBFBD> Tab (remote device)</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Remote Host/Port/Path</b> <20> For remote cameras use
these fields to enter the full URL of the camera. Basically if your camera is
at <span class=MsoHyperlink>http://camserver.home.net:8192/cameras/camera1.jpg</span>
then these fields will be camserver.home.net, 8192 and /cameras/camera1.jopg
respectively. Leave the port at 80 if there is no special port required. If you
require authentication to access your camera then add this onto the host name
in the form &lt;username&gt;:&lt;password&gt;@&lt;hostname&gt;.com.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Remote Image Colours </b><EFBFBD> Specify the amount of
colours in the captured image. Unlike with local cameras changing this has no
controlling effect on the remote camera itself so ensure that your camera is
actually capturing to this palette beforehand.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Capture Width/Height</b> <20> As per local devices.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Orientation</b> <20> As per local devices.</p>
<p class=MonitorTab><EFBFBD>Timestamp<EFBFBD> Tab</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Timestamp Label Format</b> - This relates to the
timestamp that is applied to each frame. It is a <20>sprintf<74> style string. It is
actually passed through sprintf and then through printf to add the monitor name
so a format of '%%s - %y/%m/%d %H:%M:%S' (note the double % at the beginning) would
be recommended though you can modify it if necessary. If you don<6F>t want a
timestamp or have a camera that puts one on itself then leave this field blank.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Timestamp Label X/Y</b> - The X and Y values
determine where to put the timestamp. A value of 0 for the X value will put it
on the left side of the image and a Y value of 0 will place it at the top of
the image. To place the timestamp at the bottom of the image use a value eight
less than the image height.</p>
<p class=MonitorTab><EFBFBD>Buffers<EFBFBD> Tab</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Image Buffer Size</b> - This option determines how
many frames are held in the ring buffer at any one time. The ring buffer is the
storage space where the last <20>n<EFBFBD> images are kept, ready to be resurrected on an
alarm or just kept waiting to be analysed. It can be any value you like with a
couple of provisos, (see next options). However it is stored in shared memory
and making it too large especially for large images with a high colour depth
can use a lot of memory. A value of no more than 100 is usually ok. If you find
that your system will not let you use the value you want it is probably because
your system has an arbitrary limit on the size of shared memory that may be
used even though you may have plenty of free memory available. This limit is
usually fairly easy to change, see the Troubleshooting section for details.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Warm-up Frames </b>- This specifies how many frames
the analysis daemon should process but not examine when it starts. This allows
it to generate an accurate reference image from a series of images before
looking too carefully for any changes. I use a value of 25 here, too high and it
will take a long time to start, too low and you will get false alarms when the
analysis daemon starts up.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Pre/Post Event Image Buffer</b> - These options
determine how many frames from before and after an event should be preserved
with it. This allows you to view what happened immediately prior and subsequent
to the event. A value of 10 for both of these will get you started but if you
get a lot of short events and would prefer them to run together to form fewer
longer ones then increase the Post Event buffer size. The pre-event buffer is a
true buffer and should not really exceed half the ring buffer size. However the
post-event buffer is just a count that is applied to captured frames and so can
be managed more flexibly. You should also bear in mind the frame rate of the
camera when choosing these values. For instance a network camera capturing at
1FPS will give you 10 seconds before and after each event if you chose 10 here.
This may well be too much and pad out events more than necessary. However a
fast video card may capture at 25FPS and you will want to ensure that this
setting enables you to view a reasonable time frame pre and post event.</p>
<p class=MonitorTab><EFBFBD>Misc<EFBFBD> Tab</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Maximum FPS</b> <20> On some occasions you may have one
or more cameras capable of high capture rates but find that you generally do
not require this performance at all times and would prefer to lighten the load
on your server. This option permits you to limit the maximum capture rate to a
specified value. This may allow you to have more cameras supported on your
system by reducing the CPU load or to allocate video bandwidth unevenly between
cameras sharing the same video device. This value is only a rough guide and the
lower the value you set the less close the actual FPS may approach it
especially on shared devices where it can be difficult to synchronise two or
more different capture rates precisely. There is a global configuration option
that allows you to turn this limiting off in the event of an alarm.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>FPS Report Interval</b> - How often the current
performance in terms of Frames Per Second is output to the system log. Not used
in any functional way so set it to maybe 1000 for now. If you watch
/var/log/messages (normally) you will see this value being emitted at the
frequency you specify both for video capture and processing.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Reference Image Blend %ge</b> - Each analysed image
in ZoneMinder is a composite of previous images and is formed by applying the
current image as a certain percentage of the previous reference image. Thus, if
we entered the value of 10 here, each image<67>s part in the reference image will
diminish by a factor of 0.9 each time round. So a typical reference image will
be 10% the previous image, 9% the one before that and then 8.1%, 7.2%, 6.5% and
so on of the rest of the way. An image will effectively vanish around 25 images
later than when it was added. This blend value is what is specified here and if
higher will make slower progressing events less detectable as the reference
image would change more quickly. Similarly events will be deemed to be over
much sooner as the reference image adapts to the new images more quickly. In
signal processing terms the higher this value the steeper the event attack and
decay of the signal. It depends on your particular requirements what the
appropriate value would be for you but start with 10 here and adjust it (usually
down) later if necessary.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText><b><EFBFBD>X10<EFBFBD> <span class=MonitorTabChar>T</span>ab</b></p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>Note: This tab and it<69>s options will only appear if
you have indicated that your system supports the X10 home automation protocol
during initial system configuration.</b></p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>X10 Activation String</b> - The contents of this
field determine when a monitor starts and/or stops being active when running in
<EFBFBD>Triggered; mode and with X10 triggers. The format of this string is as
follows,</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'><u>n</u> : If you simply enter
a number then the monitor will be activated when an X10 ON signal for that unit
code is detected and will be deactivated when an OFF signal is detected.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'><u>!n</u> : This inverts the
previous mode, e.g. !5 means that the monitor is activated when an OFF signal
for unit code 5 is detected and deactivated by an ON.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'><u>n+</u> : Entering a unit
code followed by + means that the monitor is activated on receipt of a ON
signal for that unit code but will ignore the OFF signal and as such will not
be deactivated by this instruction. If you prepend a '!' as per the previous
definition it similarly inverts the mode, i.e. the ON signal deactivates the
monitor.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'><u>n+&lt;seconds&gt;</u> : As
per the previous mode except that the monitor will deactivate itself after the
given number of seconds.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'><u>n-</u> : Entering a unit
code followed by - means that the monitor is deactivated on receipt of a OFF
signal for that unit code but will ignore the ON signal and as such will not be
activated by this instruction. If you prepend a '!' as per the previous
definition it similarly inverts the mode, i.e. the OFF signal activates the
monitor.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'><u>n-&lt;seconds&gt;</u> : As
per the previous mode except that the monitor will activate itself after the
given number of seconds.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption>You can also combine several of these expressions to by
separating them with a comma to create multiple circumstances of activation.
However for now leave this blank.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>X10 Input Alarm String</b> - This has the same format
as the previous field but instead of activating the monitor with will cause a
forced alarm to be generated and an event recorded if the monitor is Active.
The same definition as above apply except that for activated read alarmed and
for deactivated read unalarmed(!). Again leave this blank for now.</p>
<p class=MonitorOption><b>X10 Output Alarm String</b> - This X10 string also
has the same format as the two above options. However it works in a slightly
different way. Instead of ZoneMinder reacting to X10 events this option
controls how ZoneMinder emits X10 signals when the current monitor goes into or
comes out of the alarm state. Thus just entering a number will cause the ON
signal for that unit code to be sent when going into alarm state and the OFF
signal when coming out of alarm state. Similarly 7+30 will send the unit code 7
ON signal when going into alarm state and the OFF signal 30 seconds later
regardless of state. The combination of the X10 instruction allows ZoneMinder
to react intelligently to, and also assume control of, other devices when
necessary. However the indiscriminate use of the Input Alarm and Output Alarm
signals can cause some horrendous race conditions such as a light going on in
response to an alarm which then causes an alarm itself and so on. Thus some
circumspection is required here. Leave this blank for now anyway.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Finally, click 'Save' to add your monitor.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>On the main console listing you will now see your monitor
and some of its vital statistics. Most columns are also links and you get to
other functions of ZoneMinder by choosing the appropriate one. Describing them
left to right, they are as follows.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The first column is the Id, clicking on this gives you
the opportunity to edit any of the settings you have just defined your monitor
to have.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The next column is the Name column, clicking on this will
give you the watch window where you can view a live feed from your camera along
with recent events. This is described more fully below.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Following that are the Function and Source columns, which
may be represented in various colours. Initially both will be showing red. This
means that that monitor is not configured for any function and as a consequence
has no zmc (capture) daemon running on it. If it were orange it would mean that
a zmc daemon was running but no zma (analysis) daemon and green means both are
running. In our case it is red because we defined the Monitor to have a
Function of None so no daemons are required. To get the daemons up and running
you can either click on the source listed in the Source column and edit the
monitor properties or click on the Function listed and change it to <20>Monitor<6F>,
which will ensure that one or more appropriate daemons are started
automatically.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Having a device status of red or orange does not
necessarily constitute an error if you have deliberately disabled a monitor or
have just put it into Passive mode.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>If you have several cameras (and thus monitors) on a
device the device status colour reflects all of them for the capture daemon. So
if just one monitor is active then the daemon is active for both even if all
the other monitors are switched off.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Once you have changed the function of your monitor, the
main console window will be updated to reflect this change. If your device
status does not go green then check your system and web server logs to see if
it's something obvious.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>You can now add further monitors if you have cameras set
up to support them. Once you have one or more monitors you may notice the
'&lt;n&gt; Monitors' title becomes a link which allows you to cycle through a
shot from each of your monitors (unless they are switched off) and get a
streamed or still image from each in turn. There may also be a link titled
<EFBFBD>Montage<EFBFBD> which allows you view all your enabled cameras simultaneously. Be aware
however that this can consume large amounts of bandwidth and CPU so should not
be used continuously unless you have resource to burn. </p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>5.2.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Defining
Zones</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The next important thing to do with a new monitor is set
up Zones for it to use. By default you'll already have one created for you when
you created your monitor but you might want to modify it or add others. Click
on the Zones column for your monitor and you should see a small popup window
appear which contains an image from your camera overlain with a stippled
pattern representing your zone. In the default case this will cover the whole
image and will be red. Beneath that will be a table containing a listing of
your zones. Clicking on either the relevant bit of the image or on the Id or
Name in the table will bring up another window where you can edit the
particulars for your Zones. As you can see there are quite a few, so now is a
good time to go through them. The options are as follows.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:27.0pt'><b>Name</b> <20> This is just a
label to identify the zone by. You can change this to be more representative if
you like, though it isn't used much except for logging and debugging.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:27.0pt'><b>Type</b> - This is one of
the more important concepts in ZoneMinder and there are five to choose from.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'><u>Active</u> : This is the
zone type you'll use most often, and which will be set for your default zone.
This means that this zone will trigger an alarm on any events that occur within
it that meet the selection criteria. </p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'><u>Inclusive</u> : This zone
type can be used for any zones that you want to trigger an alarm only if at
least one other Active zone has already triggered one. This might be for
example to cover an area of the image like a plant or tree which moves a lot
and which would trigger lots of alarms. Perhaps this is behind an area you'd
like to monitor though, in this case you'd create an active zone covering the
non-moving parts and an inclusive zone covering the tree perhaps with less
sensitive detection settings also. If something triggered an alarm in the
Active zone and also in the Inclusive zone they would both be registered and
the resulting alarm would be that much bigger than if you had blanked it out
altogether.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'><u>Exclusive</u> : The next
zone Type is Exclusive. This means that alarms will only be triggered in this
zone if no alarms have already been triggered in Active zones. This is the most
specialised of the zone types and you may never use it but in its place it is
very useful. For instance in the camera covering my garden I keep watch for a
hedgehog that visits most nights and scoffs the food out of my cats bowls. By
creating a sensitive Exclusive zone in that area I can ensure that a hedgehog
alarm will only trigger if there is activity in that small area. If something
much bigger occurs, like someone walking by it will trigger a regular alarm and
not one from the Exclusive zone. Thus I can ensure I get alarms for big events
and also special small events but not the noise in between.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'><u>Preclusive</u> : This zone
type is relatively recent. It is called a Preclusive zone because if it is
triggered it actually precludes an alarm being generated for that image frame.
So motion or other changes that occur in a Preclusive zone will have the effect
of ensuring that no alarm occurs at all. The application for this zone type is
primarily as a shortcut for detecting general large-scale lighting or other
changes. Generally this may be achieved by limiting the maximum number of alarm
pixels or other measure in an Active zone. However in some cases that zone may
cover an area where the area of variable illumination occurs in different
places as the sun and/or shadows move and it thus may be difficult to come up
with general values. Additionally, if the sun comes out rapidly then although
the initial change may be ignored in this way as the reference image catches up
an alarm may ultimately be triggered as the image becomes less different. Using
one or more Preclusive zones offers a different approach. Preclusive zones are
designed to be fairly small, even just a few pixels across, with quite low
alarm thresholds. They should be situated in areas of the image that are less
likely to have motion occur such as high on a wall or in a corner. Should a
general illumination change occur they would be triggered at least as early as
any Active zones and prevent any other zones from generating an alarm.
Obviously careful placement is required to ensure that they do not cancel any
genuine alarms or that they are not so close together that any motion just hops
from one Preclusive zone to another. As always, the best way is to experiment a
little and see what works for you.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'><u>Inactive </u>: This final
zone type is the opposite of Active. In this zone type no alarms will ever be
reported. You can create an Inactive zone to cover any areas in which nothing
notable will ever happen or where you get constant false alarms that don't
relate to what you are trying to monitor. An Inactive zone can overlay other
zone types and will be processed first.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:27.0pt'>I mentioned above that
Inactive zones may be overlaid on other zones to blank out areas however as a
general principle you should try and make zones abut each other as much as
possible and do not overlap. This helps avoid repeated duplicate processing of
the same area. For instance an Inclusive zone overlaying an Active zone when
all other settings are the same will always trigger when the Active zone does
which somewhat defeats the object of the exercise. One exception to this is
Preclusive zones. These may be situated within Active areas are they are
processed first and if small may actually save processing time by preventing
full analysis of the image.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:27.0pt'><b>Units</b> - This setting
which details whether certain of the following settings are in Pixels or
Percent of the frame. In general pixels is more precise whereas percentages are
easier to use to start with or if you change image sizes frequently. If you
change this setting all appropriate values below are redisplayed in the correct
context. A good tip would be to initially enter the settings in Percent and
then change to Pixels and refine any gaps. Repeated flipping between the
settings will cause rounding errors, as ZoneMinder in general is not at home to
Mr Floating Point for reasons of performance. </p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:27.0pt'><b>Min/Maximum X/Y</b> -
Following the units the next four settings define the bounds of the Zone in the
monitor frame and are self-explanatory with the exception of the fact that the
minima are at the top left of the frame and the maxima are at the bottom right
rather than in a Cartesian style.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:27.0pt'><b>Alarm Colour </b>- The
option after that allows you to specify what colour you'd like any alarms this
zone generates to be highlighted on images, pick anything you like that will
show up against your normal image background. This option is irrelevant for
Preclusive and Inactive zones and will be disabled For Inactive zones all subsequent
options are likewise disabled.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:27.0pt'><b>Min/Maximum Alarm Threshold</b>
<EFBFBD> These setting are used to define limits for <20>the difference in value between
a pixel and its predecessor in the reference image. For greyscale images this
is simple but for colour images the colours are averaged first, originally this
used an RMS (root mean squared) algorithm but calculating square roots mugs
performance and does not seem to improve detection. Using an average does means
that subtle colour changes without any brightness change may go undetected but
this is not the normal circumstance. There is also the option to use a more
sophisticated integer algorithm to calculate a Y (or brightness) value from the
colours themselves.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:27.0pt'><b>Min/Maximum Alarmed Area</b>
- The following two settings define the minimum and maximum number of pixels
that exceed this threshold that would cause an alarm. If the units are Percent
this (and following options) refers to the percentage of the frame and not the
zone, this is so these values can be related between zones. The minimum value
must be matched or exceeded for an alarm to be generated whereas the maximum
must not be exceeded or the alarm will be cancelled. This is to allow for
sudden changes such as lights coming on etc, which you may wish to disregard.
In general a value of zero for any of these settings causes that value to be
ignored, so you can safely set a maximum to zero and it will not be used. The
use of just a number of pixels is however a very brute force method of
detection as many small events dispersed widely are not distinguished from a
compact one.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:27.0pt'><b>Filter Width/Height</b> <20>
To improve detection of valid event ZoneMinder applies several other functions
to the data to improve its ability to distinguish interesting signals from
uninteresting noise. The first of these is a filter that removes any pixels
that do not participate in a contiguous block of pixels above a certain size.
These options are always expressed in pixels and should be fairly small, and an
odd number, three or five is a good value to choose initially. Application of
this filter removes any tiny or discontinuous pixels that don't form part of a
discrete block. </p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:27.0pt'><b>Min/Maximum Filtered Area</b>
<EFBFBD> These are two additional bounds that specify the limits of pixels that would
cause an alarm after this filtering process. As the filtering process can only
remove alarmed pixels it makes no sense for the Minimum and Maximum Filtered
Area to be larger than the equivalent Alarmed Area and in general they should
be smaller or the same.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:27.0pt'><b>Min/Maximum Blob Area</b> -
The next step in the analysis phase is the collation of any remaining alarmed
areas into contiguous blobs. This process parses the image and forms any pixels
that adjoin other alarmed pixels into one or more larger blobs. These blobs may
be any shape and can be as large as the zone itself or as small as the filtered
size. The Minimum and Maximum Blob Size settings allow you to define limits
within which an alarm will be generated. Of these only the Minimum is likely to
be very useful.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:27.0pt'><b>Min/Maximum Blobs </b>-
Finally the Minimum and Maximum Blobs settings specify the limits of the actual
number of blobs detected. If an image change satisfies all these requirements
it starts or continues an alarm event.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>5.3.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Viewing
Monitors</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>As this point you should have one or more Monitors
running with one or more Zones each. Returning to the main Console window you
will see your monitors listed once more. The columns not explored so far are
the Monitor name, and various event totals for certain periods of time.
Clicking on any of the event totals will bring up a variation on the same
window but click on the Monitor name for now. On doing so up will pop another
window which should be scaled to contain a heading, an image from your monitor,
a status and a list of recent events if any have been generated. Depending on
whether you are able to view a streamed image or not the image frame will
either be this stream or a series of stills. You have the option to change from
one to the other (if available) at the centre of the top heading. Also along
the top are a handful of other links. These let you change the scale of the
image stream, modify image settings (for local devices) or close the window.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The image should be self-explanatory but if it looks like
garbage it is possible that the video configuration is wrong so look in your
system error log and check for or report anything unusual. The centre of the
window will have a tiny frame that just contains a status; this will be 'Idle',
'Alarm' or 'Alert' depending on the function of the Monitor and what's going on
in the field of view. Idle means nothing is happening, Alarm means there is an
alarm in progress and Alert means that an alarm has happened and the monitor is
<EFBFBD>cooling down<77>, if another alarm is generated in this time it will just become
part of the same event. These indicators are colour coded in green, red and
amber.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>By default if you have minimised this window or opened
other windows in front it will pop up to the front if it goes to Alarm state.
This behaviour can be turned off in <20>options<6E> if required. You can also specify
a sound file in the configuration, which will be played when an alarm occurs to
alert you to the fact if you are not in front of your computer. This should be
a short sound of only a couple of seconds ideally. Note that as the status is
refreshed every few seconds it is possible for this not to alert you to every
event that takes place, so you shouldn't rely on it for this purpose if you
expect very brief events. Alternatively you can decrease the refresh interval
for this window in the configuration though having too frequently refreshing
may impact on performance.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Below the status is a list of recent events that have
occurred, by default this<69> is a listing of just the last 10 but clicking on
'All' will give you a full list<73> and 'Archive' will take you to the event
archive for this monitor, more on this<69> later. Clicking on any of the column
headings will sort the events appropriately.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>From here you can also delete events if you wish. The
events themselves are listed with the event id, and event name (which you can
change), the time that the event occurred, the length of the event including
any preamble and postamble frames, the number of frames comprising the event
with the number that actually contain an alarm in brackets and finally a score.
This column lists the average score per alarm frame as well as the maximum
score that any alarm frame had.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The score is an arbitrary value that essentially
represents the percentage of pixels in the zone that are in blobs divided by
the square root of the number of blobs and then divided by the size of the
zone. This gives a nominal maximum of 100 for a zone and the totals for each
zone are added together, Active zones scores are added unchanged, Inclusive
zones are halved first and Exclusive zones are doubled. In reality values are
likely to be much less than 100 but it does give a simple indication of how
major the event was.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>5.4.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Filtering
Events</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The other columns on the main console window contain
various event totals for your monitor over the last hour, day, week and month
as well as a grand total and a total for events that you may have archived for
safekeeping. Clicking on one of these totals or on the 'All' or 'Archive' links
from the monitor window described above will present you with a new display.
This is the full event window and contains a list of events selected according
to a filter which will also pop up in its own window. Thus if you clicked on a
'day' total the filter will indicate that this is the period for which events
are being filtered. The event listing window contains a similar listing to the
recent events in the monitor window. The primary differences are that the
frames and alarm frames and the score and maximum score are now broken out into
their own columns, all of which can be sorted by clicking on the heading. Also
this window will not refresh automatically, rather only on request. Other than
that, you can choose to view events here or delete them as before.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The other window that appeared is a filter window. You
can use this window to create your own filters or to modify existing ones. You
can even save your favourite filters to re-use at a future date. Filtering
itself is fairly simple; you first choose how many expressions you'd like your
filter to contain. Changing this value will cause the window to redraw with a
corresponding row for each expression. You then select what you want to filter
on and how the expressions relate by choosing whether they are 'and' or 'or'
relationships. For filters comprised of many expressions you will also get the
option to bracket parts of the filter to ensure you can express it as desired.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>There are several different elements to an event that you
can filter on, some of which require further explanation. These are as follows,
'Date/Time' which must evaluate to a date and a time together, 'Date' and
'Time' which are variants which may only contain the relevant subsets of this,
'Weekday' which as expected is a day of the week. All of the preceding elements
take a very flexible free format of dates and time based on the PHP strtotime
function (http://www.zend.com/manual/function.strtotime.php). This allows
values such as 'last Wednesday' etc to be entered. I recommend acquainting
yourself with this function to see what the allowed formats are.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The other elements you can filter on are all fairly self
explanatory except perhaps for 'Archived' which you can use to include or
exclude Archived events. In general you'll probably do most filtering on
un-archived events. Once your filter is specified, clicking 'submit' will
filter the events according to your specification. If you have created a filter
you want to keep, you can name it and save it by clicking 'Save'.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>If you do this then the subsequent dialog will also allow
you specify whether you want this filter automatically applied in order to
delete events or upload events via ftp to another server and mail notifications
of events to one or more email accounts. In most cases you can specify your
preferences for upload formats and email content during configuration time
(make sure you type '?' to get help on options). Emails and messages
(essentially small emails intended for mobile phones or pagers) have a variety
of tokens that can be substituted for various details of the event that caused
them. This includes links to the event view or the filter as well as the option
of attaching images or videos to the email itself. See the included templates
zmconfig_eml.txt and zmconfig_msg.txt for a fuller explanation of the
availability and meaning of these tokens.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Filtering is a powerful mechanism you can use to
eliminate events that fit a certain pattern however in many cases modifying the
zone settings will better address this. Where it really comes into its own is
generally in applying time filters, so for instance events that happen during
weekdays or at certain times of the day are highlighted, uploaded or deleted.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>5.5.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Viewing
Events</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>From the monitor or filtered events listing you can now
click on an event to view it in more detail. If you have streaming capability
you will see a series of images that make up the event. You will also see a
link to allow you to view the still images themselves. If you don't have
streaming then you will be taken directly to this page. The images themselves
are thumbnail size and depending on the configuration and bandwidth you have
chosen will either be the full images scaled in your browser of actual scaled
images. If it is the latter, if you have low bandwidth for example, it may take
a few seconds to generate the images. If thumbnail images are required to be
generated, they will be kept and not re-generated in future. Once the images
appear you can mouse over them to get the image sequence number and the image
score.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>You will notice for the first time that alarm images now
contain an overlay outlining the blobs that represent the alarmed area. This
outline is in the colour defined for that zone and lets you see what it was
that caused the alarm. Clicking on one of the thumbnails will take you to a
full size window where you can see the image in all its detail and scroll
through the various images that make up the event. If you have the
ZM_RECORD_EVENT_STATS option on, you will be able to click the 'Stats' link
here and get some analysis of the cause of the event. Should you determine that
you don't wish to keep the event, clicking on Delete will erase it from the
database and file system. Returning to the event window, other options here are
renaming the event to something more meaningful, refreshing the window to
replay the event stream, deleting the event, switching between streamed and
still versions of the event (if supported) and generating an MPEG video of the
event (if supported).</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>These last two options require further explanation.
Archiving an event means that it is kept to one side and not displayed in the
normal event listings unless you specifically ask to view the archived events.
This is useful for keeping events that you think may be important or just wish
to protect. Once an event is archived it can be deleted or unarchived but you
cannot accidentally delete it when viewing normal unarchived events.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The final option of generating an MPEG video is still
somewhat experimental and it's usefulness may vary. It can use either the
Berkeley MPEG encoder or the faster and new ffmpeg encoder. Either of these
will generate a short video, which will be downloaded to your browsing machine
to view. Due to the relatively slow frame rate that ZoneMinder will capture at
and the high minimum frame rate that the Berkeley encoder uses videos created
by this method will be very quick. However when using the ffmpeg encoder,
ZoneMinder will attempt to match the duration of the video with the duration of
the event. This has the useful effect of making the video watchable and not too
quick while having the unfortunate side effect of increasing file size and
generation time. Ffmpeg in particular has a particularly rich set of options
and you can specify during configuration which additional options you may wish
to include to suit your preferences.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Building an MPEG video, especially for a large event, can
take some time and should not be undertaken lightly as the effect on your host
box of many CPU intensive encoders will not be good. However once a video has
been created for an event it will be kept so subsequent viewing will not incur
the generation overhead. I will be the first to admit that this area of the
package is not particularly well implemented and needs work, and probably a
better encoder. Videos can also be included in notification emails however care
should be taken when using this option as for many frequent events the penalty
in CPU and disk space can quickly mount up.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>5.6.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Options
and Users</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The final area covered by the tutorial is the options and
user section. If you are running in authenticated mode and don<6F>t have system
privileges then you will not see this section at all and if you are running in
un-authenticated mode then no user section will be displayed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>The various options you can specify are displayed in a
tabbed dialog with each group of options displayed under a different heading.
Each option is displayed with its name, a short description and the current
value. You can also click on the <20>?<3F> link following each description to get a
fuller explanation about each option. This is the same as you would get from
zmconfig.pl. A number of option groups have a master option near the top which
enables or disables the whole group so you should be aware of the state of this
before modifying options and expecting them to make any difference.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>If you have changed the value of an option you should
then <20>save<76> it. A number of the option groups will then prompt you to let you
know that the option(s) you have changed will require a system restart. This is
not done automatically in case you will be changing many values in the same
session, however once you have made all of your changes you should restart
ZoneMinder as soon as possible. The reason for this is that web and some
scripts will pick up the new changes immediately but some of the daemons will
still be using the old values and this can lead to data inconsistency or loss.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>One of the options you may notice in the <20>System<65> tab
allows you to specify the default language for your installation of ZoneMinder.
Versions 1.17.0 and later support multiple languages but rely on users to
assist in creating language files for specific languages. To specify a language
you will have to give the applicable code, thus for UK English this is en_gb,
and for US English it would be en_us, if no language is given then UK English
is assumed. Most languages will be specified in this nn_mm format and to check
which languages are available look for files named zm_lang_*.php in the
ZoneMinder build directory where the parts represented by the <20>*<2A> would be what
you would enter as a language. This is slightly unwieldy and will probably be
improved in future to make it easier to determine language availability. On
checking which languages are available it may be that your preferred language
is not currently included and if this is the case please consider doing a
translation and sending it back to it may be included in future releases. All
the language elements are given in the zm_lang_en_gb.php file along with a few
notes to help you understand the format.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>As mentioned above, you may also see a <20>users<72> tab in the
Options area. In this section you will see a list of the current users defined
on the system. You can also add or delete users from here. It is recommended
you do not delete the admin user unless you have created another fully
privileged user to take over the same role. Each user is defined with a name
and password (which is hidden) as well as an enabled setting which you can use
to temporarily enable or disable users, for example a guest user for limited
time access. As well as that there is a language setting that allows you to
define user specific languages. Setting a language here that is different than
the system language will mean that when that user logs in they will have the
web interface presented in their own language rather than the system default,
if it is available. Specifying a language here is done in the same way as for
the system default language described above.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>There are also four values that define the user
permissions, these are <20>stream<61>, <20>events<74>, <20>monitors<72> and <20>system<65> Each can
have values of <20>none<6E>, <20>view<65> or <20>edit<69> apart from <20>stream<61> which has no <20>edit<69>
setting. These values cover access to the following areas; <20>stream<61> defines
whether a user is allowed to view the <20>live<76> video feeds coming from the
cameras. You may wish to allow a user to view historical events only in which
case this setting should be <20>none<6E>. The <20>events<74> setting determines whether a
user can view and modify or delete any retained historical events. The
<EFBFBD>monitors<EFBFBD> setting specifies whether a user can see the current monitor
settings and change them. Finally the <20>system<65> setting determines whether a
user can view or modify the system settings as a whole, such as options and
users or controlling the running of the system as a whole. As well as these
settings there is also a monitor ids setting that can be used for non-<2D>system<65>
users to restrict them to only being able to access streams, events or monitors
for the given monitors ids as a comma separated list with no spaces. If a user
with <20>monitors<72> edit privileges is limited to specific monitors here they will
not be able to add or delete monitors but only change the details of those they
have access to. If a user has <20>system<65> privileges then the monitors ids setting
is ignored and has no effect.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>That<EFBFBD>s pretty much is it for the tour. You should
experiment with the various setting to get the results you think are right for
your. Naturally, letting thousands of events build up is not good for the
database or your file system so you should endeavour to either prevent spurious
events from being generated in the first place or ensure that you housekeep
them strictly.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Have fun, please report any bugs or features you'd like
to see and hopefully ZoneMinder can be your camera monitoring friend!</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Philip Coombes (philip.coombes@zoneminder.com) - February
2004</p>
<h1 style='text-indent:-22.7pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>6.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span><u>Troubleshooting</u></h1>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Life eh? Nothing ever works first time does it? In case
you are having problems here are some things to try. If these don't work then check
on http://<a href="http://www.zoneminder.com/forums">www.zoneminder.com/forums</a>.html
first and see if anyone has had the same problem in the past. If not then feel
free to get in touch and I'll see if I can suggest something else. The best
places to look for errors are in the system error log (normally
/var/log/messages on RedHat), the<68> ZoneMinder logs, and the web server log
(/var/log/httpd/error_log unless otherwise defined). There should be something
in one of those that gives you some kind of tip off.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Some things to check.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Device configuration. If you can't get your cameras to work in ZoneMinder,
firstly make sure that you have the correct settings. Use xawtv or something
like that to check for settings that work and then run zmu -d &lt;device_no&gt;
-q -v to get the settings. If you can't get them to work with that then the
likelihood is they won't work with ZoneMinder. Also check the system logs
(usually /var/log/messages) for any video configuration errors. If you get some
and you're sure they're not a problem then switch off ZM_STRICT_VIDEO_CONFIG in
zmconfig.pl or the <20>options<6E> tab.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Start simple. Begin with a single monitor and single zone. You
can run the zmc capture daemon from the command line as 'zmc --device 0' (or
whatever your video device is). If it returns immediately there's a problem so
check the logs, if it stays up then your video configuration is probably ok. To
get more information out of it use debug as specified below. Also check that
the shared memory segment has been created by doing 'ipcs -m'. Finally, beware
of doing tests as root and then trying to run as another user as some files may
not be accessible. If you're checking things as root make sure that you clean
up afterwards!</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Web server. Ensure that your web server can serve PHP files. It's
also possible that your php.ini file may have some settings which break ZoneMinder,
I'm not a PHP guru but setting safe mode may prevent your PHP files from
running certain programs. You may have to set configuration to allow this. Also
since the daemons are started by your web server, if it dies or is shut down
then the daemons may disappear. In this version the daemons are run under the
control of a script which should trap expected signals but it is possible this
doesn't cover all circumstances.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>One of the more common errors you can see in the log files is of
the form 'Can't shmget: Invalid argument'. Generally speaking this is caused by
an attempt to allocate an amount of shared memory greater than your system can
handle. The size it requests is base on the following formula, ring buffer size
x image width x image height x 3 (for 24 bits images) + a bit of overhead. So
if for instance you were using 24bit 640x480 then this would come to about 92Mb
if you are using the default buffer size of 100. If this is too large then you
can either reduce the image or buffer sizes or increase the maximum amount of
shared memory available. If you are using RedHat then you can get details on
how to change these settings at
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/database/RHDB-2.1-Manual/admin_user/kernel-resources.html</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>You should be able to use a similar procedure<72> with other
distributions to modify the shared memory pool without kernel recompilations
though in some cases this may be necessary. Note, this error also sometime
occurs if you have an old shared memory segment lying around from a previous
run that is too small. Use the ipcs and ipcrm system commands to check and
remove it if necessary.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>If you get odd javascript errors and your web console or other
screens come up with bits missing then it's possible that there is a problem with
the PHP configuration. Since version 0.9.8 ZoneMinder has used short PHP open
tags to output information, so instead of something like this '&lt;?php echo
$value ?&gt;', it will be something like this '&lt;?= $value ?&gt;' which is
easier and quicker to write as well as being neater. More information about
this directive can be seen at the following location, <span class=MsoHyperlink>http://www.php.<a
name="_Hlt42867874">n</a>et/manual/en/configuration.directives.php#ini.short-open-tag</span>.
However although by default most PHP installations support this form, some will
need to have it switched on explicitly. To do this you will first need to find
your php.ini file (do a 'locate php.ini' or 'find / -name php.ini'. Be aware
however that sometimes you might find more than one, so ensure you identify the
one that is actually being used. You will then need to find the line that
starts 'short_open_tag = ' and change the Off value to On. This wil correct the
problem. However in some cases you may have explicitly switched it off, so that
XML compliant documents can be more easily served, or you may even not have
permission to edit the file. In this case you can go into the web directory of
ZoneMinder and run 'sh retag.sh' which will replace all the short open tags in
the files themselves with the longer variant. You will obviously have to
remember to do this for each subsequent version of ZoneMinder that you install
as well.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Use debug. ZoneMinder has various debug in it that by default
will go into your system log (via syslog). These will be of the form of</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'>&quot;Sep 14 14:50:11
localhost zma-0[1975]: INF [Front: 221000 - Processing at 4.26 fps ]&quot;</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'>where the zma-0 part
identifies the daemon and the device it is running on. Entries with INF in are
informational and not an error, if you see ERR then it is one, though not all
are fatal. You can prevent this information from being emitted by setting the
ZM_DBG_LEVEL_zmc environment variable to -1 or less once things are working. If
you want to run any of the daemons from the command line to test, setting
ZM_DBG_PRINT to 1 will output the debug on the console. You can also use the
USR1 and USR2 signals to increase or decrease the amount of debug being
emitted.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Paths. I admit it, the various paths in ZoneMinder can be bit of
a nightmare. Make sure that they are all correct and that permissions are such
that the various parts of ZoneMinder can actually run.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><i><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span></i>Missing perl modules. There are various perl modules used by
the various scripts. If you get errors about missing ones, the easiest way to
install them is to type the following (you will probably need to be root),</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'><i>perl -MCPAN -eshell</i></p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt'>this will then (eventually,
after some configuration if it<69>s your first time) present you with a prompt.
From there you can type install module, e.g. Archive::Zip and the rest should
be more or less automatic as it will chase any dependencies for you. There may
be some initial configuration questions it might ask you on startup if you've
never run it before and to speed things up I would not install a new Bundle at
this point (it can end up building you a whole new perl if you<6F>re not careful)
if it asks you but everything else should be quite straightforward.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Unsupported palettes. ZoneMinder currently is designed to use the
simple palettes of greyscale and 24 bit as well as now the YUV420P and some
other palettes. This should cover most cameras but it's possible that there are
ones out there that might want to use more esoteric formats that ZoneMinder
doesn<EFBFBD>t support. This will often show up as the capture daemon being unable to
set picture attributes. If this occurs try using different palettes starting
with greyscale and if you can't get anything to work let me know and I'll try
and add it.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>USB bus problems. If you have multiple USB cameras on one bus
then it can appear as if ZoneMinder is causing your cameras to fail. This is
because the bandwidth available to cameras is limited by the fairly low USB
speed. In order to use more than one USB camera with ZoneMinder (or any
application) you will need to inform the driver that there are other cameras
requiring bandwidth. This is usually done with a simple module option. Examples
are usb_alt=&lt;n&gt; for the OV511 driver and cams=&lt;n&gt; for CPIA etc.
Check your driver documentation for more details. Be aware however that sharing
cameras in this way on one bus will also limit the capture rate due to the
reduced bandwidth.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Incorrect libjpeg.a detection. It seems to be the case that in
some cases the library file libjpeg.a is reported as missing even when
apparently present. This appears to actually be down to the g++ compiler not
being installed on the host system. Since ZoneMinder contains both C++ and C
files you need to be able to compile both of these file types and so usually
need to ensure you have gcc and g++ installed (though they are often the same
binary).</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Httpd and zms memory leaks. It has been reported by some users
with RedHat 9 that the zms process fails to terminate correctly when the controlled
window is killed and also that it, and it<69>s associated httpd process, continue
to grow in memory size until they kill the system. This appears to be a bug in early
versions of <20>apache 2. On other systems it may appear that zms is leaking and
growing. However what grows is the total and shared memory size while the
non-shared memory size stays constant. It's a little odd but I think what it
happening is that as zms picks images out of the shared memory ring buffer to
display, as each slot is read the size of that bit of memory is added to the
shared memory total for the process. As streamed images are not read
consecutively it's a semi-random process so initially most of the buffer slots
are new and the shared memory size grows then as time goes on the remaining
unaccessed slots reduce until once all have been read the shared memory use
caps out at the same size as the actual segment. This is what I would have
expected it to be in the first place, but it seems to do it incrementally. Then
once this total is hit it grows no further. As it's shared memory anyway and
already in use this apparent leak is not consuming any more memory than when it
started.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Cambozola. There appears to be an issue with recent versions of
Cambozola that causes image corruption in the stream. If you are getting this
then I suggest you stick with version 0.22 which is available from the
Downloads section of www.zoneminder.com.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Also, if you are using IE under Windows and get lots of
annoying clicks when various windows refresh then you'll need to edit your
registry and remove the value for
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\AppEvents\Schemes\Apps\Explorer\Navigating\.current or
download the registry script to do it for you from
http://www.zoneminder.com/downloads/noIEClick.reg</p>
<h1 style='text-indent:-22.7pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span><u>Change
Log </u></h1>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.1.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
1.17.2</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Minor features, bug fixes and additional languages.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Pending Process Bug. A bug was found whereby a process that was
scheduled to be started in the future (due to repeated failures) would drop out
of the pending queue if a further explicit restart was attempted. This is now
fixed.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Strsignal Function. The strsignal function was included from
version 1.17.1 however this is not ubiquitous on all distributions. The
existence of this function is now tested for by the configure script and it is
not used if not present.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Add Max Alarm Threshold. Previously the alarm threshold (which is
the amount a pixel has to differ from it<69>s counterpart in the reference image)
existed only in a <20>minimum<75> form meaning pixels that were more different
matched. A maximum has now been added to assist in screening out large changes
in brightness. In addition to this a number of new consistency checks have been
added to the zone definition form to try and prevent bogus or invalid settings.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Diagnostic Zone Images. A regularly requested feature is that of
adding extra information to allow diagnostics of the process of image
detection. This has previously been somewhat hit and miss but in this version a
new configuration option ZM_RECORD_DIAG_IMAGES has been included to allow this.
This option will generate several images for each captured frame in an alarm
including each reference image and a series of images containing the image
differences at various stages in the process. It is not possible to record
these for the image prior to an alarm but those following it are included and
should assist in tuning the zones to provide optimal motion detection.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Event Images Renamed. The capture and analysis images recorded
during an event have been renamed from capture-???.jpg to ???-capture, and from
analyse-???.jpg to ???-analyse.jpg. This is to allow all images (including
diagnostic ones) to be associated with the frame sequence number more easily.
This means that old events will no longer be able to be viewed as the wrong
image will be being searched for. To avoid this you can use the new
<EFBFBD>zmupdate.pl<70> utility to rename all your old images by doing <20>perl zmupdate.pl
<EFBFBD>r<EFBFBD> as a an appropriately privileged or root user.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Version checking. ZoneMinder will now optionally check for new
versions of itself at zoneminder.com. This is done with a simple http get and
no personal information otherwise than your current version of ZoneMinder is
transmitted or recorded. If new versions are found you may be alerted of them
via the web interface. This is an initial step towards enhancing and automating
the upgrade process.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Force Java. Previously ZoneMinder could be forced to override
it<EFBFBD>s detection of browser capabilities to prevent the Cambozola Java applet
being used. However sometimes the opposite effect was desired and using the
applet was preferred to native image handling. This has now been made possible
by making the ZM_CAN_STREAM option tri-state allowing <20>auto<74>, <20>yes<65> or <20>no<6E> to
be used to provide all alternatives.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Alarms Cleared on Exit. In previous versions if an alarm was
present when the analysis daemon (zma) exited the alarm would remain flagged.
This had little effect except if the monitor was being watched however it was a
bit annoying so any alarm flag is now cleared when this daemon exits.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>New Languages. Translations for Japanese (ja_jp), French (fr_fr)
and Russian (ru_ru) are now included.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.2.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
1.17.1</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Bugfixes and additional languages.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Login Bug. A bug was identified whereby an unauthorised user
could gain access to the console view of ZoneMinder. This was the only view
available and no access to any camera views or configuration was possible. This
bug is now fixed.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>New Languages. Two new language files were added. These allow
ZoneMinder to use the German (de_de) and Polish (pl_pl) languages.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Language File Format. The format of the language file was changed
to allow the specification of character set and locale as well as have more
flexibility in the calculation of plural forms.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Option Language. The prompts and help text for the options is now
also available for translation. A guide is included in the language file to
allow this if necessary. Currently language translations exclude the options
settings as this is a rarely accessed area and contains a great deal of text.
The new format allows individual options to be translated piecemeal as the
opportunity arises.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.3.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
1.17.0</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Language changes and other enhancements.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Version Numbering. ZoneMinder version numbers have now changed.
This is to allow more frequent <20>point<6E> releases which are expected to happen
for instance whenever new language files are included. Previously all releases
had the same version increment so it was difficult to tell the significance of
any particular release. Now the version number is in the <i>x.y.z</i> format
where a change in <i>x</i> signifies a major fundamental or architectural
rework, a change in <i>y</i> will indicate a new release containing incremental
feature changes or fixes recommend to all users and a change in <i>z </i>will
generally mean minor non-functional or critical modifications which would not
be recommended as important to all users. As ZoneMinder has been referred to by
the point release up until now, e.g. .15, .16 etc the next number in that
sequence has been retained for continuity and to avoid having any ambiguity in
version numbers.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Language Support. ZoneMinder now allows specification of system
and user specific languages other than UK English. These languages are given in
language files named zm_lang_<i>nn_mm</i>.php which can be created from the
default zm_lang_en_gb.php file. If your language is not included then please
consider doing a translation by checking this file and submitting your changes
back for inclusion in future releases.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Syntactic Improvements. Previously setting <20>NOTICE<43> errors on in
PHP would flag tens or hundreds of violations in the ZoneMinder web files.
Whilst not strictly errors this represented sloppy coding and sometimes covered
up genuine bugs. All the files have been revisited and revised to ensure that a
many of these problems as possible have been eliminated and only the very few
where the fix would be significantly less optimal than the problem remain.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Stream Scaling Resizing. Previously when watching a stream and
modifying the scale of the streamed feed only the actual feed would change size
and the containing frames and windows would remain the same. This was fine for
changes to smaller scales but problematic for larger scales. This has been
changed for that the window and frames will now resize appropriately.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Mmap Return Value. A problem identified by users in the forum
relating to checking of return values from the mmap function call has been
corrected.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Minor Bugs. A number of minor bugs and inconsistencies were
corrected.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.4.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
0.9.16</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Major useability enhancement and fixes.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Run States. Instead of the old <20>start/stop<6F> links the current
system state is now a link which takes you to a dialog which allows you to
start, restart or stop the system. You can also save the current run state
which basically takes a snapshot of the current monitor functions and saves
that. You can then reselect that state later which basically involves resetting
the monitors to have these saved function and then doing a system restart.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>New Monitor Functions. Instead of Passive, Active, and X10, the
modes are now Monitor (= old Passive) which just allows you to watch the feed,
Modect (= old Active) which is MOtion DetECT and which will capture events as
previously, Record which continuously records with no analysis and MoCord which
is a hybrid of Modect and Record and which will continuously record but also do
motion detection and highlight where this has occured. The Record and Mocord
functions both records events whose length in seconds is defined by the
'Section Length' monitor attribute. You can additionally specify a 'Frame Skip'
value to tell it to not record 'n' frames at a time, when not alarmed.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>X10 Function removed. The X10 mode has been removed and replaced
by an indication of whether the monitor is 'continuous' or 'triggered'. This
basically just indicates whether it may be controlled outside of zmdc and
zmpkg. Additionally the X10 triggers may now be specified in an X10 section.
This has changed to allow for other types of triggers to be added more easily.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Paginated Event listings. The event listings are paginated by
default. You can list all of the events if you like by choosing the appropriate
option. There are shortcuts to pages of events at the top of the listing. If
these produce strange looking sequences like 1,2, 3, 5, 9, 17, 37 etc this is
deliberate and uses an exponential algorithm intended to allow you to quickly
navigate through the list to a particular page in the minimum number of clicks.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Scaleable Streams. Event and monitor streams can now be scaled to
a certain extent allowing you to view at a different resolution than that
captured. This area may be somewhat incomplete especially in terms of
monitoring at a higher screen size where the frame is not adjusted properly.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Variable Frame Rates. Event streams can now be viewed at various
rates allowing faster review (if your bandwidth allows) to long events, or
slower for more precision.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Scaleable/Variable MPEG generation. Generation of MPEG videos now
also allows you to specify the scale relative to the original image and also
the frame rate. Again, for long events captured in the perpertual recording
modes this will allow a faster review of the period the event covers.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Tabbed Monitor options. Specification and modification of
monitors is now in a tabbed form for easier navigation.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Additional stream headers. The stream headers have been changed
to hopefully ensure that they are less likely to be cached.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Maximum process restart delay. zmdc.pl now has an upper limit (15
minutes) to the time it waits before restarting continuously crashing
processes.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Intelligent Module inclusion. zmfilter.pl now includes
Archive::Zip and other modules on an as needed basis so won't complain about
them being missing unless they have been explicitly configured to be used.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Adaptive Watchdog. zmwatch now more adaptive to actual frame
rates.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed zmfilter CPU sucking bug. zmfilter.pl will now restart on
failure to read shared memory. Previously this could go into a nasty CPU
sucking loop!</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>New zmconfig options. zmconfig.pl has a new option to run with no
database if necessary</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>File reorganisation. Various administrative file changes and
reorgs.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Compiler warnings. Various tweaks and mods to reduce compiler and
memory warnings.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>SQL Buffer size. Increased SQL buffer size to cope with large
pre-event buffers, plus a couple of other buffers have been enlarged.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Incorrect Frame time offsets. The time offsets in alarmed frames
were incorrect and based on the time of storage rather than capture. This gave
the impression that there was a delay after the first alarmed frame and messed
up some streaming timings. This has been fixed.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Event Frame listing. You can now view details of the frames
captured such as their time and score etc by clicking on the scores in the
events views.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Refined shared memory handling. Fixed zmfilter, zmwatch and zmx10
to allow zero as a valid shared memory id to allow them to keep on working if
the segment has been marked for deletion</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Frame daemon stability. Changed image buffer in zmf to be static
rather than dynamic. This has made zmf much more stable.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>MPEG overwrite option. Fixed the 'Overwrite' checkbox in video generation
to actually overwite the video. Modded the page slightly also.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Daemon control improved. Changing between monitor functions, e.g.
Modect, Mocord etc now restarts the correct daemons.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Improved time based filters. Filters that include time based
clauses now get executed regardless of whether new events are being generated.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Audit damon started unconditionally. zmaudit is now started
regardless of the setting of FAST_DELETES as zmfilter depends on it being
there.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Filtering more active. zmfilter is now started in 'Monitor' mode.
It does not run in when monitors are completely off however.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Stills paged. The stills view of events is now padinated for
easier navigation.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Archive images optional. Normally when an alarm is detected a set
of raw images is saved along with a mirror set of images containing motion
highlighting. This second set can now optionally be disabled.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Settings in auth mode. Control of camera brightness, contrast etc
did not previously work when running in authorised mode. This is now fixed.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>zms parameter bug fixed. The streaming server incorrectly parsed
and assigned one of it<69>s arguments. This is now fixed.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>zmu Brighness bug. Previously camera brightness was not correctly
parsed from command line options passed to zmu.</p>
<p class=BullettedChar style='text-indent:-35.7pt'><span style='font-family:
"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Event window width variable. Event windows now scale to fit the
event image size.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.5.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
0.9.15</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Various bug fixes from the last release and before.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Bandwidth. A bug was introduced in .14 which caused a corrupted
console display and manic refreshes on new installations. This was due to a
missing bandwidth setting when no existing cookie was detected. This is now
fixed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Again in .14 a problem occurred for a new release whereby
zmconfig wanted to know the database details and but also previously wanted to
access the database before it had asked the questions. This has now been
addressed though it does require that zmconfig is run twice initially, once to
created the scripts and once to import the configuration into the database.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>In association with the previous error, the zm_config_defines.h
file was not created in the absence of the database as this was what was used
to assign configuration ids. This now takes place regardless of the database.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>The SQL to create the Users table was mistakenly omitted from the
.12 database upgrade script this has now been corrected.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>A bug in zmfilter was pointed out whereby the dynamic loading of
the Zip or Tar archive modules depending on a preference actually wasn<73>t. It
was looking for both and loading both at compile time. This has now been
modified to be fully runtime.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>The database user definitions in the zmvideo script indicated one
database user while the database connection used a different one. This
prevented any videos being generated.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>A problem was found if using the zmf frame server and greyscale
images. The option to colourise JPEG images is intended to be used to ensure
that all JPEG files are written with a 24 bit colourspace as certain tools such
as ffmpeg require this. However in the circumstances described above images
written by zma directly were colourised whereas those written by<62> zmf weren<65>t.
A change has been made whereby if set all greyscale JPEG images are colourised
in all circumstances.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.6.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
0.9.14</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Major new feature and important bug-fixes.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Web configuration. Following many requests and to make ZoneMinder
easier to administer the configuration system has been changed slightly. You
should now still run zmconfig.pl to specify an initial configuration but you
now only need to answer the first few questions to give a core set of options
including the database options. The remainder of configuration options can then
be ignored to start with and all but the core options will be written to the
database. You can then view and modify these options from the web interface and
apply then without recompilation, which is now only necessary if you change the
core configuration.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Following a number of requests the .sock file directory is now
configurable in zmconfig.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Y channel bug. When using colour cameras a motion detection
problem was present if fast RGB images deltas (ZM_FAST_RGB_DIFFS) was off. This
was an overflow error in the calculation of the Y channel and caused excessive
image differences to be calculated. This has now been fixed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>The use of the Term::Readkey perl module in zmaudit.pl has been
removed. This module had been removed from zmconfig.pl previously but had lingered
in this script.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>A bug was found in zmx10.pl causing a crash if time delayed X10
events were used. This has now been fixed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Removed use of <20>zmu<6D> binary from zmwatch.pl and zmx10.pl.
Previously these scripts had used zmu to determine last image time and alarm
state information. The use of this script was a bit overkill and the
introduction of user permissions complicated matter slightly so these scripts
now access the shared memory directly.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Shared memory permissions. Following introduction of a user
permissions system the previous 777 mode for shared memory was deemed insecure.
Consequently from now on shared memory is only accessible from the owner. This
means that zmu will only work when run as root or the web user unless you set
it setuid where it should still be secure as it will require authentication.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>All SQL buffers in the C++ code have been enlarged. There was
previously an issue with a buffer overflow on certain occasions.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.7.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
0.9.13</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Beta version of several features and fixes, never
generally released.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Following a number of requests the .sock file directory is now
configurable in zmconfig.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Changed some of the core video calls to be V4L2 compatible. This
primarily involved opening the video devices and memory maps as read/write and
not just readonly.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Shared memory has now been rationalised to prevent some common
problems. Remember to shutdown the whole ZM package before installing, from
this version on it will remove all old shared memory segments.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed not numeric comparison in zmwatch which was causing, or
appeared to be causing, some errors.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed zone image map bug for percentage zones. When you had
defined a zone in percentage terms, the imagemap used to select it for editing
was broken. This is now fixed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>New contrast/brightness etc adjustments feature. This accessible
from the Settings link on the monitor window. It's fairly basic at present but
should work for most types of cameras. If you have any device or driver
specific auto-brightness, auto-contrast etc enabled the changes you make may
appear to work but may be overridden by the auto feature immediately so check
for that if your changes do not appear to be having an effect. Also if you have
a number of cameras being multiplexed onto one device then any changes here
will probably affect all your cameras.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Some redundant window scrollbars removed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added user and access control. If enabled in config
(ZM_OPT_USE_AUTH) then you will need to define and login as ZM users. There
will be one users already defined, with username 'admin' and password 'admin'.
This user is defined will full permissions and clicking on the 'Options' link
from the main console window will allow you to modify and create users with
various permission sets which hopefully will satisfy most requirements. These
users (except any defined with 'system' edit capability) can be restricted to
certain cameras by adding the monitor ids as a comma-separated list (no spaces)
to the appropriate field. Users limited to specific monitors may not create or
delete monitors even if defined with monitor edit permissions.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Some windows now (optionally) use a JavaScript timeout to refresh
themselves rather than a refresh header. Since refresh headers were interrupted
if a link of the page was linked there were previously various forced refreshes
from child windows to restart the refresh process. By using JS refresh timers
which are not interrupted these extraneous refreshes have been mostly
eliminated.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.8.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
0.9.12</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Mostly bug-fixes with a couple of minor features.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Double first images. Fixed a problem where the first image of an
event was being recorded twice. I don<6F>t think this was at the cost of any of
the other images but one copy was an extra.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Made zmdc connect more intelligent. On the suggestion of a couple
of people I have made the zmdc.pl server spawning and waiting a bit more
intelligent. Rather than waiting a fixed (short) amount of time, it now polls
every second for a while, stopping if the connection is made. Thanks to Todd
McAnally for the initial suggestion.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added image view to events lists. Again a partial implementation
of a suggested feature. If you click on the score column you will now get a
snapshot of the event frame with the highest score. This is to enable you to
quickly see what the event was about without having to watch the stream or view
all the static images.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Make delta times variable precision. A couple of problems had
been reported where long events got negative durations. This was due to an
overflow in a time difference routine. This had been operating on fixed
precision allowing high precision for short deltas. This routine has been
changed to allow variable precision and events will now have to be several days
long to wrap in this way.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed round detection problem. Although the existence or
otherwise of the <20>round<6E> function is correctly detected, the appropriate header
file with the results of this test was not included which was not helpful. This
has been corrected. </p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed monitor rename bug. Renaming a monitor did not correctly
modify the events directory to reflect this. This has now been fixed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>OPT_MPEG bug. A bug was reported (by Fernando Diaz) where the
results of the ZM_OPT_MPEG configuration variable was not correctly imported
into the scripts. This now happens as intended.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed zmvideo.pl event length bug. The zmvideo.pl script which is
used to generate video MPEG files tries to calculate the correct frame rate
based on the length of the event and the number of frames it contains.
Previously it did not take account of the pre and post event frames and so
passed a much shorter value to the mpeg encoder than it should. This will only
have affected short events encoded with ffmpeg but will have resulted in much
faster frame rates than necessary. This has now been corrected to take the
whole event length into account.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed remote camera memory leak. A memory leak was reported when
capturing with remote cameras, this is now fixed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Orientation. Added option to rotate or invert captured images for
cameras mounted at unusual angles.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed filter bug. A bug in the zmfilter.pl script was detected
and reported by Ernst Lehmann. This bug basically meant that events were not
checked as often as they should have been and many may have been left out for
filters that had no time component. The script has now been updated to reflect
Ernst<EFBFBD>s suggested changes.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Stylesheet change. Previously the stylesheet didn<64>t really work
very well on Mozilla, Netscape and browsers other than IE. This turned out to
be because I was using HTML style comments in there instead of C style ones.
This has now been corrected so you should see the correct styles. </p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Zmconfig.pl ReadKey. Thanks to a ridiculously sensible suggestion
from Carlton Thomas this module has been removed from zmconfig.pl. Originally
Term::ReadKey was in there for funky single character unbuffered input but that
has long since disappeared so just regular perl input methods are used now.
This removes one of the most irritating features about ZoneMinder installs.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Delete monitor confirm. Due to some unfortunate accidents by
users, attempts to delete monitors will now require confirmation.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Detect linmysqlclient.a. Added better detection script into
<EFBFBD>configure<EFBFBD> top spot when libmysqlclient.a is missing.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.9.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
0.9.11</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Various new features and fixes.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added stats view <20> If you have the RECORD_EVENT_STATS directive
set and are viewing a still image from an event you can now view the statistics
recorded for that frame. This tells you why that frame triggered or
participated in an alarm. This can be useful in tuning the various motion
detection parameters and seeing why events occurred.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Tabulated events <20> The main events view is now tabulated to look
a bit nicer.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>New video palette support <20> As well as the existing greyscale and
24 bit RGB palettes, you can now choose YUV420P and RGB565. Rewrote the
palette/colours area a bit to enable support for other palettes in the future
if requested. Bear in mind though that YUV palettes are converted into RGB
internally so if you have the choice RGB24 may be faster as it's the 'native'
format used within. </p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added preclusive zones <20> Added a new zone type, the preclusive
zone. For full details see the relevant section above but in brief this is a
zone type that if alarmed will actually prevent an alarm. This completes the
pantheon of zone types I think.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed Mozilla JavaScript <20> Various JavaScript functionality did
not function on Mozilla, Netscape and other browsers. This is now (hopefully)
fixed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Allow image and mpegs to be attached to emails <20> Added new tokens
(%EI1%, %EIM% and %EV%) to the filter emails. This allows the first alarm
image, most highly scored alarm image and an alarm MPEG to be attached to alarm
notification emails. Use %EV% especially with care!</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed possible motion detection bug <20> I found a few double
declared local variables left over from the rewrite. This may have affected the
motion detection algorithm. Fixed now anyway.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Modified scoring <20> Alarm scoring has been modified to give more
granularity for smaller events. This will have the effect of raising the scores
for small events while large ones will still be about the same.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed /cgi-bin path problem <20> Previously you could specify the
real path to you cgi-bin directory if you have one but not the web path. You
can now do both.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Improved video handling in browser <20> The MPEG/video area of the
web GUI had been a bit neglected and looked somewhat ugly. This has now been
improved to a degree and looks a bit nicer.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added ffmpeg support <20> Historically ZoneMinder has only supported
the Berkeley mpeg encoder which was slow and rather limited. ZoneMinder now
supports the ffmpeg encoder as well which is much much faster and makes
generation of MPEG videos at realistic frame rates more of a reality. As ffmpeg
has so many options and everyone will probably want a different emphasis you
can now also specify additional ffmpeg options via zmconfig.pl.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Colourise greyscale image files <20> In past versions, captured
greyscale images were stored as JPEG files with a corresponding greyscale
colourspace. This saved a small amount of space but meant that mpeg_encode had
to do a conversion to encode them, and ffmpeg just fell in a heap. Now you can
optionally opt to have greyscale images saved as full 24 bit colourspace images
(they still look the same) at the price of a small penalty in CPU and disk but
allowing you to easily and quickly create MPEG files. This option is one by
default but can be switched off if you do not require any MPEG encoding.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fast RGB diffs <20> Previously ZoneMinder used quite a loose method
for calculating the differences between two colour images. This was basically
averaging the differences between each of the RGB components to get an overall
difference. This is still the default but by setting ZM_FAST_RGB_DIFFS to 'no'
you can now make it calculate the Y (or brightness value) of the pixels and use
the difference between those instead. This will be more accurate and responsive
to changes but is may be slower especially on old machines. There is a slight
double whammy here if you have a YUV palette for capture and set this option
off as the image will be converted to RGB and then partially converted back to
get the Y value. This is currently very inefficient and needs to be optimised.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed STRICT_VIDEO_CONFIG <20> Previously this actually behaved the
opposite of what it was supposed to, ie. if you wanted it strict it wasn't and
vice versa. Thanks to Dan Merillat for pointing this one out.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Web colour change <20> I thought the old red, green and amber text
colours were just a bit too gaudy so I've toned them down a bit. Hope you like
them!</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.10.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
0.9.10</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Many bug-fixes and major feature enhancements.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Configure <20>round<6E> bug - Fixed a problem with the configure script
that didn't<> detect if the 'round' function was already declared before try to
do it itself.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Low event id bug - Fixed bug where events with an id of &lt; 1000
were being cleaned up by zmaudit.pl by mistake.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Source file restructuring - The source files have been broken up
and renamed extensively to support the first stage of the code being
straightened out. Likewise the class structure has been rationalised somewhat.
The php file names have also changed in some cases so it might be best to
delete all your php and css files from the zone minder install directory first
as the old ones won't be overwritten and will be left behind.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Streamed cycle view -<2D> The monitor cycle view (the one where each
monitor is displayed sequentially) now supports streams as well as stills.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>New <20>montage<67> view - Added a montage view showing all your
cameras simultaneously either streaming or stills. The width of this window (in
terms of number of monitors) is a configuration option.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Network camera support - A major change in this version is
support for remote or network cameras. This is currently implemented as series
of http grabs of stills rather than being able to break up motion jpeg streams.
However frame rates of from 2-10 should be achievable depending on your network
proximity to the cameras.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Option BGR-&gt;RGB swap - Added the option to switch on or off
the inversion of RGB to BGR for local cameras. It is on by default to maintain
compatibility with previous releases.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>zmu suspend alarm option - Added new -n option to zmu to
effectively suspend alarm detection for a monitor. This is intended for short
term use and to support PTZ cameras where alarm detection is desired to be
suspended while the camera changes orientation or zoom level.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>FPS limiting - Added a new option to monitors to add a maximum
capture rate. This allows you to limit the amount of hits a network camera gets
or to reduce the system load with many cameras. It also works with multi-port
cards and limiting the capture rate on one camera allows the spare FPS to be
allocated to other devices. For instance with two cameras and no throttle, I
get about 4FPS each. Throttling one to 2FPS allows the other to operate at 6FPS
so you can allocate your capture resources accordingly. This limiting can be
disabled while alarms are occurring as a global option in zmconfig.pl.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Alarm reference update - Added option to not blend alarmed images
into the reference image. See the help in zmconfig.pl for caveats.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Disappearing monitors - Fixed the disappearing monitor problem in
the console view where monitors with no events were randomly not being shown.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Clean and tidy - Cleaned up a load of compiler warnings and
miscellanea to ensure a cleaner happier build.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Streamed image headers - Made all headers in streamed images have
full CRLF termination which will hopefully now prevent the problems with broken
streams that had existed mostly with Mozilla (and hopefully won't break
anything else).</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Expire streams - Added expiry headers to streamed images so they
will always display fully.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Event navigation - Added next, prev, delete &amp; next, delete
&amp; prev navigation to events to allow you to quickly review events in
sequence as had been requested by a number of people.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>USR blocking <20> The debug USR signals were not being blocked
properly leading to nasty effects in zmc mostly.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>zmfilter execution <20> Previously zmfilter execution was not
synchronised with the monitor state or the analysis daemon leading to it
sometimes being run unnecessarily. From now on the zmfilter process will only
run when a monitor is active and so actually potentially generating alarms.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>zmdc short statuses <20> Removed the logging of the short status
values that zmdc.pl returns to it<69>s clients which had been clogging up the log
file.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Bugs and pieces - Fixed various bug(ettes) that I came across
that that I don't think had been reported or noticed so I don<6F>t think we need
to talk about them here do we.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.11.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
0.9.9</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Mainly bug-fixes and minor feature enhancements.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added zmu -q/--query option - There is now a new query option for
zmu. When combined with -d it gives the config of the device and when used with
-m it dumps the current settings for the monitor and zones. Mostly useful for
bug reporting. The previous version of zmu used with just -d gave this
information for a video device by default. This now requires the -q option also
to bring into line with it's -m equivalent.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added creation of events directory - Previously the 'events'
directory was not created on install, this has been fixed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Can now retag PHP files if necessary - Version 0.9.8 was the
first version to use short_open_tags in the PHP files. This caused grief to
some people so this script will put them back to the long verion.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Frame and event lengths fractional - A new field has been added
to the Frames table. This is 'Delta' and is a fractional number of seconds
relative to the event start time. This is intended to support the real-time
playback of events rather than just 'as fast as possible' or with a configured
delay as at present. The event length is now also fractional.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Corrected extraneous Width to be Height - The last version of zmu
included a Width comment which should have been height.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Changed colour depth to bits - Having colour depths expressed in
bytes has caused no end of problems. This is now changed to be bits and can be
changed via a dropdown to limit what can be entered. Don't forget to run the
zmalter script to update your DB.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Renamed terminate to zm_terminate - The use of 'terminate' in
zmc.cpp caused a conflict on some systems so renamed it to something more
specific.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Zone deletion problem - A problem was found such that when
deleting zones the appropriate daemons were not being asked to restart daemons
correctly.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Console changes - The current version number is now displayed in
the console. A refresh button has also been added along with a minor reorg.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added delete button enable to checkAll - Using the 'Check All'
button in the main monitor window previously did not enable the delete button.
This is now fixed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Reload on click - In previous versions the console window would
reload if a monitor window for example was clicked. Thsi was removed in the
last version which meant that sometimes the console never go refreshed as it's
timing loop was broken. This functionality has now been reinstated.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.12.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
0.9.8</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Several new features and bug-fixes</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Upgrade note - If you have installed 0.9.7 and wish to save your
configuration then copy your existing zmconfig.txt file over to your 0.9.8
directory and before running zmconfig.pl.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added multiple options to zmu - You can now give multiple options
to zmu and get all the responses at once. However this is currently in a
deterministic order and not related to the order you give them.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added -v/--verbose option to zmu - Zmu has been made more human
friendly though it still remains primarily for daemon use. Giving the -v or
--verbose option prints out a bit more as a response to each command.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Add -d/--device to zmu - This option is designed to allow you to
get your video device working with another application such as xawtv and then
use zmu -d to print out the settings it<69>s using</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>(especially with the -v option). These options can then be used
as a starting point for your ZoneMinder configuration.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added FPS in status field - The status field in the web monitor
views now contains an FPS setting as well as the status.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Zmconfig changes - zmconfig handles missing options better and
rewrites config file even in non-interactive mode.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed config problems in zmcfg.h - Some config was not being set
up correctly in zmcfg.h.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Zmwatch now works on image delay and not fps - Previously the
zmwatch daemon detected capture daemon failure by trying to use the FPS
setting. This was imprecise and prone to false readings. It now uses the time
delay since the last captured image.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added zmpkg.pl and zm scripts - There are now two new scripts.
zmpkg.pl is in charge of starting and stopping ZoneMinder as a whole package
and zm is designed to be (optionally) installed into your init.d directory to
use ZoneMinder as a service.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed bug in Scan mode - The monitor cycle or scan mode had
stopped working properly due to images not being generated. This is now fixed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Revamped the console window slightly - The console window has now
been reformatted slightly to give more and better information including server
load.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added email and messaging to filters - Filters now allow you to
send emails or messages (basically just short emails intended for mobile
devices) on alarms. The format and possible content for these emails is in
zmconfig_eml.txt and zmconfig_msg.txt.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Made zmdc more aggresive in killing old processes - The zmdc.pl
daeamon will now kill any ZoneMinder processes it finds on startup or shutdown
to prevent orphans from being left around.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Configuration changes - Previously there were a lot of files
generated by configure. Now only zmconfig.pl is generated this way and all the
other configuration files are created by zmconfig.pl (from .z files) to
centralise configuration more.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed cambolzola opt bug - There was a bug in the Cambozola
options, I can't remember what it was but it's fixed!</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Retaint arguments in zmdc.pl - In some installations zmdc was
complaining about tainted arguments from the socket. These are now detainted
prior to sending and after receiving.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Forced alarms - You can now force alarms when looking at the
monitor window should anything catch your attention. You have to remember to
switch them off as well though.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Looser video configuration - Some video configuration errors can
now be ignored via the STRICT_VIDEO_CONFIG option.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Monitor window refresh on alarm - When the monitor window is
active and an alarm has occurred the most recent alarms list is immediately
refreshed to show it.</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.13.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
0.9.7</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Yes, a big jump in release number but a lot of changes
too. Now somewhat more mature, not really an alpha any more, and a lot of bugs
fixed too. </p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added zmconfig.pl script to help with configuration.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Revamped to work better with configure scripts</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Monitors now have more configuration options, including some that
were statically defined before such as location and format of the image
timestamps.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Removed Alarms table from schema as not required, never was
actually...</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added a number of new scripts, see the scripts directory</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added Fast delete to PHP files. This allows the web interface to
only delete the event entries themselves for speed and then have the zmaudit
script periodically tidy up the rest.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added event filter to enable bulk viewing, upload or deletion of
events according to various attributes. Filter can be saved and edited.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added last event id to shared memory for auto-filtering etc.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Changed zmu -i option to write to monitor named image file.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Made shared memory management somewhat more sensible.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Now stores DB times as localtime rather than UTC avoiding
daylight saving related bugs.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed bug with inactive zones and added more debug.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Changed main functions to return int.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added help and usage to zmu.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed browser acceptance problem, more easily defaults to HTML.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Split out the PHP files into a bunch with specific functions
rather than one monolithic one.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed NetPBM paths and changed _SERVER to HTTP_SERVER_VARS.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added HUP signal on zone deletion.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added NETPBM_DIR and conditional netpbm stuff.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Removed hard coded window sizes, all popup window dimensions can
be specified in zmconfig.php</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Changed form methods to 'get' from 'post' to avoid resubmit
warnings all the time.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Added conditional sound to alarm on web interface.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Fixed syntax error when adding default monitor.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Some of the web views have changed slightly to accommodate the
separate events view.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>And much much more, probably...</p>
<h2 style='text-indent:-21.75pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>7.14.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span>Release
0.0.1</h2>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Initial release, therefore nothing new.</p>
<h1 style='text-indent:-22.7pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>8.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span><u>To
Do</u></h1>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Seeing as ZoneMinder is so young and has kind of evolved
rather than being planned there are a bunch of improvements and enhancements
still to do, here is just a sample.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Perhaps split out devices - I think devices should probably be a
separate table and class from monitors. Not critical but would represent a
better model.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Comments - Needs many more, but that's just me I'm hopeless at
commenting things out. I'll get round to it soon though honest! You're lucky to
even get this document.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Optimised zones - The zones could do with being sorted out a bit
to optimise the processing of overlapping ones, at the moment you can waste
resource unless your zones are kept very tidy.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Create zones using server side image maps - This would make it
easier to precisely define and see where your zone is going to go. Not critical
but handy but a bugger to do.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Zone Definitions - Allow zones to be defined according to a
colour coded bitmap or as polygons. Currently all zones are rectangular this
would add a bit of flexibility. Would need a bit of a rewrite though. This will
incur a slight penalty on startup and a very slight one on processing for all
reasonably shaped zones.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Mouseover help - A bit more help popping up when you mouseover
things would be handy. A bit more help full stop actually.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>WAP interface - A bit of a crusade of mine I'm afraid. I'd like
to put a WML interface on to allow you to view event listing and perhaps the
most significant image from each event on your phone. Also simple management.
From version 0.9.7 there is a very basic crude initial version that probably
won't work with your phone but its there as a testbed.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Automatic device configuration - Video 4 Linux supports various
device queries, it should be possible to get most of the device capability
information from the device itself. The zmu utility does this now but it's not
yet integrated into the web pages.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Extend the API. Well ok it's not really got an API yet but the
image data is held in shared memory in a very simple format. In theory you
could use the capture daemon to gab the images and other things could read them
from memory or the analysis daemon could read images from elsewhere. Either way
this should be done through an API, and would need a library I think. Also the
zmu utility could probably do a whole lot more to enable other things to manage
when the daemons become active etc.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Create .rpm packages (as there can be several dependencies) and maybe
other types of packages also, e.g. for Debian distributions.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Allow ZoneMinder to 'train' itself by allowing the user to select
events that are considered important and to discard those that should be
ignored. ZoneMinder will interpolate, add a bit of magic, and recommend
settings that will support this selection automatically thereafter. The hooks
for this are already in to some extent.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Add sound support to allow a captured audio channel to be
associated with a video device.</p>
<h1 style='text-indent:-22.7pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>9.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span><u>Bugs</u></h1>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>I'm not sure if this is a bug or by design but the timestamp is
added to the image by the capture daemon. I _think_ this isn't necessary as it
may contribute to alarms, plus the time is associated with the image anyway. So
I think this should be moved to the analysis daemon.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>I suspect there may be a bug in zmaudit.pl if your monitor names
have spaces in them. I've not been able to reproduce it but to be on the safe
side don't put spaces in your Monitor names.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>When opening a link to an event etc from a notification email the
window that is opened is just a regular browser window and not in the context
of a proper ZoneMinder web interface. Thus it comes up too big usually (not a
major issue) and also things like 'Delete' don't work as it wants to do things
to its parent (which is more of a major issue).</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>The .sock files used by the *nix sockets I suspect may have the
odd permission issue now and again. I think everything recovers from it but it
needs checking out.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Probably bucket loads more, just fire them at me.</p>
<h1 style='text-indent:-22.7pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>10.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span><u>Non-Bugs</u></h1>
<p class=MsoPlainText style='margin-left:36.0pt;text-indent:-36.0pt'><span
style='font-family:"Courier New"'>o<span style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
</span></span>Yes, those are tabs in the indents; I like tabs so don't go
changing them to spaces or else. Also yes I also like my opening braces on
their own line most of the time, what's the point of brackets that don't line
up?</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Everything else that isn't definitely broken is probably
deliberate, or was once anyway.</p>
<h1 style='text-indent:-22.7pt'><span style='text-decoration:none'>11.<span
style='font:7.0pt "Times New Roman"'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span><u>License</u></h1>
<p class=MsoPlainText>ZoneMinder is released under the GPL, see below.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>&nbsp;</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>ZoneMinder README, $Date$,
$Revision$</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>Copyright (C) 2003<30> Philip Coombes</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>This program is free software; you can redistribute it
and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published
by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your
option) any later version.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>This program is distributed in the hope that it will be
useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.<2E> See the GNU General
Public License for more details.</p>
<p class=MsoPlainText>You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA<4D> 02111-1307, USA.</p>
</div>
</body>
</html>