API ^^^ This document will provide an overview of ZoneMinder's API. This is work in progress. Overview ^^^^^^^^ In an effort to further 'open up' ZoneMinder, an API was needed. This will allow quick integration with and development of ZoneMinder. The API is built in CakePHP and lives under the ``/api`` directory. It provides a RESTful service and supports CRUD (create, retrieve, update, delete) functions for Monitors, Events, Frames, Zones and Config. Examples ^^^^^^^^ Here be a list of examples. Some results may be truncated. You will see each URL ending in either ``.xml`` or ``.json``. This is the format of the request, and it determines the format that any data returned to you will be in. I like json, however you can use xml if you'd like. (In all examples, replace 'server' with IP or hostname & port where ZoneMinder is running) API Version ^^^^^^^^^^^ To retrieve the API version: :: http://server/zm/api/host/getVersion.json Return a list of all monitors ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ :: curl -XGET http://server/zm/api/monitors.json Retrieve monitor 1 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ :: curl -XGET http://server/zm/api/monitors/1.json Change State of Monitor 1 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This API changes monitor 1 to Modect and Enabled :: curl -XPOST http://server/zm/api/monitors/1.json -d "Monitor[Function]=Modect&Monitor[Enabled]:true" Add a monitor ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This command will add a new http monitor. :: curl -XPOST http://server/zm/api/monitors.json -d "Monitor[Name]=Cliff-Burton \ &Monitor[Function]=Modect \ &Monitor[Protocol]=http \ &Monitor[Method]=simple \ &Monitor[Host]=usr:pass@192.168.11.20 \ &Monitor[Port]=80 \ &Monitor[Path]=/mjpg/video.mjpg \ &Monitor[Width]=704 \ &Monitor[Height]=480 \ &Monitor[Colours]=4" Edit monitor 1 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This command will change the 'Name' field of Monitor 1 to 'test1' :: curl -XPUT http://server/zm/api/monitors/1.json -d "Monitor[Name]=test1" Delete monitor 1 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This command will delete Monitor 1, but will _not_ delete any Events which depend on it. :: curl -XDELETE http://server/zm/api/monitors/1.json Return a list of all events ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ :: curl -XGET http://server/zm/api/events.json Note that events list can be quite large and this API (as with all other APIs in ZM) uses pagination. Each page returns a specific set of entries. By default this is 25 and ties into WEB_EVENTS_PER_PAGE in the ZM options menu. So the logic to iterate through all events should be something like this (pseudocode): (unfortunately there is no way to get pageCount without getting the first page) :: data = http://server/zm/api/events.json?page=1 # this returns the first page # The json object returned now has a property called data.pagination.pageCount count = data.pagination.pageCount; for (i=1, i=:2015-05-15 18:43:56/EndTime <=:2015-05-16 18:43:56.json To try this in CuRL, you need to URL escape the spaces like so: :: curl -XGET "http://server/zm/api/events/index/MonitorId:5/StartTime%20>=:2015-05-15%2018:43:56/EndTime%20<=:2015-05-16%2018:43:56.json" Return a list of events for all monitors within a specified date/time range ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ :: curl -XGET "http://server/zm/api/events/index/StartTime%20>=:2015-05-15%2018:43:56/EndTime%20<=:208:43:56.json" Configuration Apis ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The APIs allow you to access all the configuration parameters of ZM that you typically set inside the web console. This returns the full list of configuration parameters: :: curl -XGET http://server/zm/api/configs.json Each configuration parameter has an Id, Name, Value and other fields. Chances are you are likely only going to focus on these 3. (Example of changing config TBD) Run State Apis ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ZM API can be used to start/stop/restart/list states of ZM as well Examples: :: curl -XGET http://server/zm/api/states.json # returns list of run states curl -XPOST http://server/zm/api/states/change/restart.json #restarts ZM curl -XPOST http://server/zm/api/states/change/stop.json #Stops ZM curl -XPOST http://server/zm/api/states/change/start.json #Starts ZM Create a Zone ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ :: curl -XPOST http://server/zm/api/zones.json -d "Zone[Name]=Jason-Newsted \ &Zone[MonitorId]=3 \ &Zone[Type]=Active \ &Zone[Units]=Percent \ &Zone[NumCoords]=4 \ &Zone[Coords]=0,0 639,0 639,479 0,479 \ &Zone[AlarmRGB]=16711680 \ &Zone[CheckMethod]=Blobs \ &Zone[MinPixelThreshold]=25 \ &Zone[MaxPixelThreshold]= \ &Zone[MinAlarmPixels]=9216 \ &Zone[MaxAlarmPixels]= \ &Zone[FilterX]=3 \ &Zone[FilterY]=3 \ &Zone[MinFilterPixels]=9216 \ &Zone[MaxFilterPixels]=230400 \ &Zone[MinBlobPixels]=6144 \ &Zone[MaxBlobPixels]= \ &Zone[MinBlobs]=1 \ &Zone[MaxBlobs]= \ &Zone[OverloadFrames]=0" PTZ Control APIs ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ PTZ controls associated with a monitor are stored in the Controls table and not the Monitors table inside ZM. What that means is when you get the details of a Monitor, you will only know if it is controllable (isControllable:true) and the control ID. To be able to retrieve PTZ information related to that Control ID, you need to use the controls API This returns all the control definitions: :: curl http://server/zm/api/controls.json This returns control definitions for a specific control ID=5 :: curl http://server/zm/api/controls/5.json Host APIs ^^^^^^^^^^ ZM APIs have various APIs that help you in determining host (aka ZM) daemon status, load etc. Some examples: :: curl -XGET http://server/zm/api/host/daemonCheck.json # 1 = ZM running 0=not running curl -XGET http://server/zm/api/host/getLoad.json # returns current load of ZM curl -XGET http://server/zm/api/host/getDiskPercent.json # returns in GB (not percentage), disk usage per monitor (that is, space taken to store various event related information,images etc. per monitor) ``