ZONE MINDER v1.0.0 ================== Introduction ============ Welcome to ZoneMinder, the new all-in-one Linux GPL'd security camera solution. A few months back my garage was burgled and they stole my wine and power tools! 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. ZoneMinder (hereafter referred to as ZM to save my fingers) is designed around a series of independent components that only function when necessary limiting any wasted resource and maximising the function of your machine. A fairly ancient Pentium 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. As well as being fast ZM 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 elsewhere. 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 now longer wish to keep. The web pages directly interact with the core daemons ensuring full co-operation at all times. The core of ZM 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. ZM 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. 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. Requirements ============ ZM needs a couple of things to work. 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. Next it does things with JPEGs so you'll need at least libjpeg.a which I think come as standard nowadays. It also uses the netpbm utilities in a very limited way to generate thumbnails under certain circumstances though this can be modified. ZM can generate MPEG videos if necessary, for this you'll need the Berkeley MPEG encoder, if you don't have it don't worry the options will be hidden and you'll not miss much really. The web interface uses PHP and so you need that in your apache or whatever as well. Finally, there is quite a bit of image streaming in the package so if you don't have Netscape I recommend you get the excellent Cambozola java applet from http://www.charliemouse.com/code/cambozola/ which will let you view the image stream in IE and others. Otherwise you're limited to just refreshing still images. Hardware wise, ZM has been used with BTTV cards and USB cameras with the V4L interface. I don't have a lot of cameras so I've not had change to test it much. Please let me know if your camera works or not. You do need to have Video 4 Linux installed. I've not got many machines so I've only really used it on Redhat 7.2, which does have everything there by default I think. Please give me feedback on other distributions. Building ======== Before you start building you have a couple of things to do. Firstly you'll have to create your ZoneMinder database and users. You'll need to identify these in zmcfg.h and in index.php. You'll notice that in zmcfg.h 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 'zm'. If you are upgrading from a previous version you can use zmalter.sql to upgrade your database and make the necessary changes. ZM also needs to know where it stores its events relative to the web root directory in zmcfg.h and where in full path terms in zmconfig.php. There are also several other paths in index.php but these can wait until later. The next step is tocheck and/or edit the src/Makefile.in and web/Makefile.in files and make sure that the WEBUSR and WEBGRP definitions near the top are appropriate for the user associated with your web server, ie. apache or web or whatever you've defined. In the web/makefile.in file there is also another definition which is webdir which should be the directory you want to install the PHP files to, and in src/Makefile.in there is a similar definition of cgidir which is where your CGI files should go. This is a bit of a pain I will admit so if anyone can tell me how to get this stuff put into the configure script I would be most grateful. So to continue, just type './configure --with-mysql=/usr' (or your MySQL install path). Then just type 'make' and off you go. I know what you are going to say next, it doesn't work. I hope it does but this is my first type with autoconf and quite honestly I haven't a clue what I'm doing so if you do get any build problems then just let me know and I'll try and tell you how to fix them. Alternatively if you are an automake/autoconf expert then please let me know what to do! There are a couple of files in the package that come from other packages, this is just to simplify the build and reduce dependencies on other packages. Anything ZM specific is named as such. It is possible to rebuild the whole thing from the enclosed automake files but if you do you will have to ensure that the installation part for the php and cgi files in the src/Makefile.in and web/Makefile.in is reconstructed, as it is not present by default. Installation ============ Once the build has completed you should have several shiny new binaries. I will now briefly describe what each of them do. zmc - This is the ZoneMinder Capture daemon. This binary's job is to sit on a video device and such frames off it as fast as possible, this should run at more or less constant speed. zma - This is the ZoneMinder Analysis daemon. This is the component that goes through the captured frames and checks them for alarming events. It generally keeps up with the zmc but if very busy may skip some frames to prevent it falling behind. zms - This is the ZoneMinder Streaming server. The web interface connects with this to get real-time or historical streamed images. zmu - This is the ZoneMinder Utility. It's basically a handy command line interface to several useful functions. Not really meant to be used by anyone except the web page (there's no 'help' in it yet) but can be if necessary. As well as this there are the web PHP files in the web directory and some perl scripts in the scripts directory, only one of which is actually required for a minimal installation. These scripts all have some configuration at the top of the files which should be viewed and amended if necesary and are as follows. zmdc.pl - This is the ZoneMinder Daemon Control. This is used by the web interface to control the execution of the capture and analysis daemons amongst others. You should not need to run this script yourself. zmfilter.pl - This script control 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 so you will need to modify it to suit your confguration. zmaudit.pl - This script is used to check the consistency of the event file system and database. It can delete orphaned events, ie. 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.php 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. zmx10.pl - This is an option 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 ZM events or by initiating ZM monitoring and capture on receipt of X10 signals from elsewhere, for instance the setting of a domestic alarm system. Finally, check zmconfig.php in the web directory and amend any configuration necessary in there. At this stage typing 'make install' will install these everything to the desired locations. Start your web browser and point it at zm.php and off you go. Tutorial ======== To start with you should see the ZM Console window, this will resize itself to avoid being too intrusive on your desktop. Along the top there is a set of links to configure your bandwidth, this allows you to optimise your settings depending on where you are and the actual options relating to this are defined at the top of the index.php file. 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. Defining Monitors ----------------- To use ZM properly you need to define at least one Monitor. Essentially a monitor is attached to a camera and will continually check it for motion detection and such like. So, next click 'Add New Monitor' to bring up the dialog. First choose a name for it, anything you like. The next field is 'Function' which essentially defines what the monitor is doing. This can be 'None' meaning the monitor is currently disabled, 'Passive' meaning you can watch the streams coming from the camera but no alarms or events will be generated, or 'Active' meaning all the images will be analysed as well as the stream being available to watch. Generally you'll want 'Active' but for now leave this at 'None'. Next enter the device number that your camera is attached to. If it's /dev/video0 enter '0' etc. Some video devices, e.g. BTTV cards support multiple cameras so in the Channel box choose the appropriate channel, or leave it at zero if you're using a USB camera or one without channels. Next enter the video format, and 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 352x288 and then perhaps increasing and seeing how performance is affected. This size should be adequate in most cases. Finally enter the colour depth. ZM supports both greyscale and 24 bit colour, so enter 1 or 3 here. Currently it doesn't support any of the more esoteric formats, like 15 bit etc. Click 'update' to add your monitor. On the main console listing you will now see your monitor and some of its vital statistics. Each column is also a link and you get to other functions of ZM by choosing the appropriate one. For the most part I'll describe them left to right but lets start with the Device column which you'll see showing red. This means that that device 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 device listed in the Device column, and start the daemons manually, or click on the Function listed and change it to 'Active', which will ensure that the appropriate daemons are started automatically. 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. If you have several cameras (and thus monitors) on a device the device status colour reflects all of them, so if just one monitor is active then both daemons will be running even if all the other monitors are switched off. 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 like a bad path etc. 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 a 'Scan' link appears which allows you to cycle through a shot from each of your monitors (unless they are switched off) and get a still image from each in turn. Clicking on the image will take you to the monitor watch window, which will be discussed shortly. Returning to the main console window, if you click the Id of your monitor in the listing then you will have the opportunity to edit any of the settings your originally defined your monitor to have. Defining Zones -------------- The next important thing to do is set up Zones for your monitors 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. Firstly the zone Name appears, you can change this to be more representative if you like, though it isn't used much except for logging and debugging. After that is the zone Type, this is one of the more important concepts in ZM and there are four to choose from. The one you'll use most and which will be set for your default zone if 'Active'. This means that this zone will trigger an alarm on any events that occur within that meet the selection criteria. The next two options I'll cover shortly but the one at the bottom is Inactive, which is the opposite of Active. In this zone type no alarms will ever be reported. 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. The next option is Inclusive and you'd use this zone type 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. The final 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. I mentioned above that Inactive zones may be overlain 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 not overlaps to 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. The rest of the zone settings are slightly simpler to explain. The first is Units 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. 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 ZM in general is not at home to Mr Floating Point for reasons of performance. 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 Cartesian. 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 and all following options are irrelevant for Inactive zones and you will be prevented from setting them. Motion Detection ----------------- The options that follow are all related to motion detection and now would be a good time to describe how that works. Once a stream of images starts coming through the zma daemon will begin analysing them initially there will be a warm- up period where it does nothing except start to build up a reference image. This image is a composite of the previous images and by default is formed of by applying the current image as 10% of the previous reference image. Thus each images 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 of 10% can be varied 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. So to go back to the settings, the next one is an alarm threshold, this represents the difference in value between a pixel and it's predecessor. 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. 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 is matched or exceed 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. To combat this ZM 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. The options that control this are the Filter Width and Height settings, which are always pixels and which should be fairly small, and an odd number. Application of this filter removes any tiny or discontinuous pixels that don't form part of a discrete block. Following that are two further bounds that specify the limits of pixels that would cause an alarm after this filtering process. As the filtering process only removes 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. 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. Finally the Minimum and Maximum Blobs specify the limits of the actual number of blobs detected. If an image change satisfies all these requirements it becomes an alarm event. Viewing Monitors ---------------- 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 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. 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 cooling down, 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. 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 configuration at the top of the index.php file. 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. Below the status is a list of recent events that have occurred, by default this is a listing of just the last 12 but clicking on 'All' will give you a full list and 'Archive' will take you to the event archive for this monitor, more on this later. Clicking on any of the column headings will sort the events appropriately. 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 post amble 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. The score is an arbitrary value that essentially represents the percentage of pixels in the zone that are in blobs divided by 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. Filtering Events ---------------- 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 it's 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. 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 filter comprised of many expressions you will also get the option to bracket parts of the filter to ensure you can express it as desired. 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. 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'. 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. This functionality is explained in more detail elsewhere. 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 it's 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. Viewing Events -------------- 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. 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 it's detail and scroll through the various images that make up 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). 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. The final option of generating an MPEG video is experimental and not likely to be highly useful. It uses the Berkeley MPEG encoder and will generate a short video which will be downloaded to your browsing machine to view. Due to the relatively slow frame rate that ZM will capture at and the high minimum frame rate that the encoder uses, each image is included twice. 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. 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. That 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. Have fun, please report any bugs or features you'd like to see and hopefully ZM can be your camera monitoring friend! Philip Coombes (philip.coombes@zoneminder.com) - December 2002 Troubleshooting =============== 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 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 your system error log (probably /var/log/messages on RedHat) and your web server log (/var/log/httpd/error_log). There should be something in one of those that gives you some kind of tip off. Some things to check. 1. Device configuration. If you can't get your cameras to work in ZM, firstly make sure that you have the correct settings. Use xawtv or something like that to check for settings that work. If you can't get them to work with that then the likelihood is they won't work with ZM. 2. Device permissions. Since the ZM daemons are started by your web server, you need to ensure that your video devices can be opened by the associated user, usually apache or web. It is often the case that these files are created with read access by root only (and sometimes reset on a reboot) so you might need to chmod a+r /dev/video0 etc. to make them readable. 3. 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 ZM, 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. 4. Use debug. ZM has various debug in it that by default will go into your system log (via syslog). These will be of the form of "Sep 14 14:50:11 localhost zma-0[1975]: INF [Front: 221000 - Processing at 4.26 fps ]" 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 DLVL_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 DBG_PRINT to 1 will output the debug on the console and setting DLVL_zmc (or DLVL_zma etc) to a number between 0 and 9 will emit progressively more debug though there's not a lot in there at present. 5. Paths. I admit it, the various paths in ZM are a bit of a nightmare. Make sure that they are all correct and that permissions are such that the various parts of ZM can actually run. Most of the places you need to specify this kind of information are at the top of the associated configuration files but I've not been able to get the automatic configure script to do all this by itself yet. 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 Whats New ========= Release 1.0.0 - 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. - Revamped to work better with configure scripts - Monitors now have more configuration options, including some that were statically defined before such as location and format of the image timestamps. - Removed Alarms table from schema as not required, never was actually.. - Added a number of new scripts, see the scripts directory - Added Fast delete to PHP files. This allows the web interface to only delete the event entries themselves for speed and them have the zmaudit script periodically tidy up the rest. - Added event filter to enable bulk viewing, upload or deletion of events according to various attributes. Filter can be saved and edited. - Added last event id to shared memory for auto-filtering etc. - Changed zmu -i option to write to monitor named image file. - Made shared memory management somewhat more sensible. - Now stores DB times as localtime rather than UTC avoiding daylight saving related bugs. - Fixed bug with inactive zones and added more debug. - Changed main functions to return int. - Added help and usage to zmu. - Fixed browser acceptance problem, more easily defaults to HTML. - Split out the PHP files into a bunch with specific functions rather than one monolithic one. - Fixed NetPBM paths and changed _SERVER to HTTP_SERVER_VARS. - Added HUP signal on zone deletion. - Added NETPBM_DIR and conditional netpbm stuff. - Removed hardcoded window sizes, all popup window dimensions can be specified in zmconfig.php - Changed form methods to 'get' from 'post' to avoid resubmit warnings all the time. - Added conditional sound to alarm on web interface. - Fixed syntax error when adding default monitor. - Some of the web views have changed slightly to accomdate the separate events view. - And much much more, probably. Release 0.0.1 - Initial release, therefore nothing new. To Do ===== Seeing as ZM 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. 1. Sort out the class structure - Frankly it's a bit of a mess at the moment with too many 'friends', it needs rationalising. 2. 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. 3. 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. 4. 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. 5. 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. 6. 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. 20. This will incur a slight penalty on startup and a very slight one on processing for all reasonably shaped zones. 7. Security - I think I need to give the php file a bit of a good going over as I'm sure it's not done in the most secure way regarding passing things onto command line, exposing file paths and other stuff. I'm a bit of a PHP novice, as I'm sure you can tell so might need help here. I should have done it in perl! 8. Mouseover help - A bit more help popping up when you mouseover things would be handy. A bit more help full stop actually. 9. 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. In version 1.0.0 there is a very basic crude initial version that probably won't work with your phone but its there as a testbed. Note, temporary WAP files are not tidied up properly so don't use it for extanded periods of time at present. 10. Email and SMS notifications - As with the FTP uploads, probably event the same daemon to let you know when something happens, perhaps configurable to report only certain types of events. 11. Templatise the php file. Personally I hate mixing up HTML and logic, perhaps use Smarty or something and separate the screens out from the rest. 12. 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. 13. Extend the X-10 integration - A handy feature would be to allow a generated event to trigger some other action perhaps to an attached X-10 interface, for instance turn lights on or make a dog barky noise! 14. 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. 15. Access control should probably be built in rather than relying on .htaccess etc. 16. I've got lots of ideas for enhancing the motion detection part with optional algorithms etc. Just got to find the time somewhere! 17. Create .rpm packages (as there can be several dependencies) and maybe other types of packages also, e.g. for Debian distributions. 18. Allow ZM to 'train' itself by allowing the user to select events that are considered important and to discard those that should be ignored. ZM will interpolate, add a bit of magic, and recommend settings that will support this selection automatically thereafter. 19. Add quotes to all PHP array references. I should have done it in the first place but I'm a perl person really and it kind of bugs me that you have to. Bugs ==== 1. Sometimes there is a sync error and very rarely a capture daemon just stops. Probably need a watchdog to restart it when this happens. 2. 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. Probably a bucket load more, just fire them at me. Non-Bugs ======== 1. 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? Everything else that isn't definitely broken is probably deliberate, or was once anyway. License ======= ZoneMinder is released under the GPL, see below. ZoneMinder README, $Date$, $Revision$ Copyright (C) 2002 Philip Coombes 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. 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. See the GNU General Public License for more details. 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 02111-1307, USA.