2376 lines
124 KiB
Plaintext
2376 lines
124 KiB
Plaintext
05/02/04 ZoneMinder 1.17.2 README 1
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ZoneMinder v1.17.2
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1. Introduction
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Welcome to ZoneMinder, the all-in-one Linux GPL'd security camera
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solution.
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A few months back my garage was burgled and all my wine and power
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tools were nicked! I realised shortly after that if I'd just had a
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camera overlooking the door then at least I'd have know exactly
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when and who did the dirty deed. And so ZoneMinder was born. It's
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still a baby but hopefully it can grow up to be something that can
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be genuinely useful and maybe one day either prevent similar
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incidents or perhaps bring some perpetrators to justice.
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ZoneMinder is designed around a series of independent components
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that only function when necessary limiting any wasted resource and
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maximising the efficiency of your machine. A fairly ancient
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Pentium II PC should be able to track one camera per device at up
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to 25 frames per second with this dropping by half approximately
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for each additional camera on the same device, additional cameras
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on other devices do not interact so can maintain this frame rate.
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Even monitoring several cameras still will not overload the CPU as
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frame processing is designed to synchronise with capture and not
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stall it.
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As well as being fast ZoneMinder is designed to be friendly and
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even more than that, actually useful. As well as the fast video
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interface core it also comes with a user friendly and
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comprehensive PHP based web interface allowing you to control and
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monitor your cameras from home or even at work or on the road. It
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supports variable web capabilities based on available bandwidth.
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The web interface also allows you to view events that your cameras
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have captured and archive them or review them time and again, or
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delete the ones you no longer wish to keep. The web pages directly
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interact with the core daemons ensuring full co-operation at all
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times. ZoneMinder can even be installed as a system service
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ensuring it is right there if your computer has to reboot for any
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reason.
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The core of ZoneMinder is the capture and analysis of images and
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there is a highly configurable set of parameters that allow you to
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ensure that you can eliminate false positives whilst ensuring that
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anything you don't want to miss will be captured and saved.
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ZoneMinder allows you to define a set of 'zones' for each camera
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of varying sensitivity and functionality. This allows you to
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eliminate regions that you don't wish to track or define areas
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that will alarm if various thresholds are exceeded in conjunction
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with other zones.
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ZoneMinder is fresh off the keyboard and so comes with no warranty
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whatsoever, please try it, send your feedback and if you get
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anything useful out of it please let me know.
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ZoneMinder is free but if you do get ZoneMinder up and running and
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find it useful then please feel free to visit
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http://www.zoneminder.com/donate.html where any donations will be
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appreciated and will help to fund future improvements of
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ZoneMinder. This would be especially appreciated if you use
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ZoneMinder as part of your business or to protect your property.
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2. Requirements
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ZoneMinder needs a couple of things to work.
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Firstly, it uses MySQL so you'll need that. In order to compile
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you need to make sure you have a development installation and not
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just a runtime, this is because it needs to use the MySQL header
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files. If you are running an RPM based distribution then it's
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probably worth installing all the pure mysql rpm files to be sure
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you have the right ones.
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Next it does things with JPEGs so you'll need at least libjpeg.a
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which I think come as standard nowadays with most distributions.
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It also uses the netpbm utilities in a very limited way to
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generate thumbnails under certain circumstances though this can be
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modified.
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ZoneMinder can generate MPEG videos if necessary, for this you'll
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need either ffmpeg (recommended) or the Berkeley MPEG encoder
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(mpeg_encode). If you don't have either, don't worry, as the
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options will be hidden and you'll not really miss much. The web
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interface uses PHP and so you need that in your apache or other
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web server as well, make sure MySQL support is available either
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statically or as a module. There are also various perl modules
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that you may need that vary depending on which options you choose
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on installation, for more details see later in this document.
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Finally, there is quite a bit of image streaming in the package.
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So if you don't have Netscape or another browser that supports
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image streaming natively I recommend you get the excellent
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Cambozola java applet from
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http://www.charliemouse.com/code/cambozola/ which will let you
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view the image stream in Internet Explorer and others. Otherwise
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you're limited to just refreshing still images.
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Hardware-wise, ZoneMinder has been used with various video and USB
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cameras with the V4L interface. I don't have a lot of cameras
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myself so I've not had change to test it with a huge range
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personally however there is a list of devices that are definitely
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known to work on the web site. Please let me know if your camera
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works and is not listed. You do need to have Video 4 Linux
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installed. I've not got too many machines so I've only really used
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it on various RedHat distributions, which seem to have everything
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there by default I think. SlackWare does need a bit more tinkering
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than other distributions; there is a document on the web site
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describing what users have had to do to get it working. Please
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give me feedback on other distributions not listed on the site.
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3. Building
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The first thing you need to do is run the included configure
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script to define some initial configuration, just type
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./configure --with-mysql=<your MySQL root> --with-webdir=<your web
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directory> --with-cgidir=<your cgi directory>
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where --with-mysql identifies the root directory where you have
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installed MySQL (usually /usr), --with-webdir is the directory to
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which you want to install the PHP files, and --with-cgidir is the
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directory to which you want to install CGI files. These
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directories could be /var/www/html/zm and /var/www/cgi-bin for
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example. There are also two further arguments you can add if your
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web user and group are not both 'apache'. These are --with-webuser
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and --with-webgroup. Type
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./configure -help
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for details.
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That's the build configuration sorted out. The next thing you have
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to do is do a little more runtime specific configuration.
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ZoneMinder config is scattered around various files in the
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distribution so to make things easier for you there is a
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ZoneMinder configuration utility included. Type
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perl ./zmconfig.pl
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to get it started. It is an interactive utility and will prompt
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you by asking you various questions. For most questions typing '?'
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will give you additional help if you need it. Once you've answered
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all the questions it will write out a configuration file called
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'zmconfig.txt' and then process various files to substitute the
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information in them. If you run it again it will remember your
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answers from. If you just want to rerun the substitutions you can
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run zmconfig.pl in non-interactive mode by typing
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perl ./zmconfig.pl -noi
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which will just read your file and do the substitutions with no
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questions asked. There are two classes of options, 'core' options
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which much be specified with zmconfig which detail things such as
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database passwords which are compiled into ZoneMinder and other
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options with are stored in the database and which can be modified
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dynamically via the 'options' section of the web interface. Only
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the first set need to be completed with zmconfig at this stage. If
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you want to change just a few options and can't access the options
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dialog via the web you can append them as parameters to zmconfig
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and it will just ask you about those. So for example,
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perl ./zmconfig.pl ZM_STRICT_VIDEO_CONFIG
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however it is fairly dumb will not tell you if you make a typo and
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misspell an option.
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Among the first questions zmconfig.pl asks you are to do with the
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database and the next thing you should do is create it and the
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associated database users. You may notice that there are two sets
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of users and passwords. This is because the streaming server and
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utility binaries require only read access to the database so you
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may wish to create both a full access user and a limited access
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user. You can of course set both to the full access user. The
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included schema (zmschema.sql) can be used to actually create the
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tables required. The database is usually called just 'zm'.
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If you are a first time user the first run of zmconfig.pl will
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warn you about the missing database, you can ignore those errors
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this time. Once you've run it for the first time the schema file
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should have your desired database name in it so use it to create
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the database (see below). Once the database and permissions are
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set up rerun zmconfig.pl with the -noi option to get it to load
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the configuration into your new database.
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If you are upgrading from a previous version you can use zmalter-
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x.y.z.sql to upgrade your database and make the necessary changes
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where x.y.z identifies the version of ZoneMinder you had installed
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previously. So if you are going from version 0.9.7 to version
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0.9.11 you would run the scripts for all intervening versions to
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get to the current one, i.e. zmalter-0.9.7.sql, zmalter-0.9.8.sql,
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zmalter-0.9.9.sql and zmalter0.9.10.sql.
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For a new installation the simplest way to create your database
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and users is as follows,
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mysql mysql < zmschema.sql
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mysql mysql
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grant select,insert,update,delete on <your database name>.* to
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'<your first username>'@localhost identified by '<your first
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password>';
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grant select on <your database name>.* to '<your second
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username>'@localhost identified by '<your second password>'
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quit
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mysqladmin reload
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You may need to supply a username and password to the mysql
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commands in the first place to give yourself sufficient privileges
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to perform the required commands. If you want to host your
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database on a different machine than that which ZoneMinder is
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running on then use the hostname of the remote machine instead of
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localhost.
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Then just type 'make' and off you go.
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4. Installation
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Once the build has completed you should have several shiny new
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binaries. I will now briefly describe what each of them does.
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zmc - This is the ZoneMinder Capture daemon. This binary's job
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is to sit on a video device and suck frames off it as fast as
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possible, this should run at more or less constant speed.
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zma - This is the ZoneMinder Analysis daemon. This is the
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component that goes through the captured frames and checks them
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for motion which might generate an alarm or event. It generally
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keeps up with the Capture daemon but if very busy may skip some
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frames to prevent it falling behind.
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zmf - This is the ZoneMinder Frame daemon. This is an optional
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daemon that can run in concert with the Analysis daemon and
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whose function it is to actually write captured frames to disk.
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This frees up the Analysis daemon to do more analysis (!) and so
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keep up with the Capture daemon better. If it isn't running or
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dies then the Analysis daemon just writes them itself.
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zms - This is the ZoneMinder Streaming server. The web interface
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connects with this to get real-time or historical streamed
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images. It runs only when a live monitor stream or event stream
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is actually being viewed and dies when the event finishes or the
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associate web page is closed. If you find you have several zms
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processes running when nothing is being viewed then it is likely
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you need a patch for apache (see the Troubleshooting section).
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zmu - This is the ZoneMinder Utility. It's basically a handy
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command line interface to several useful functions. It's not
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really meant to be used by anyone except the web page (there's
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only limited 'help' in it so far) but can be if necessary,
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especially for debugging video problems.
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zmfix - This is a small binary that exists only to ensure that
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the video device files can be read by the main capture daemons.
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It is often the case that these device files are set to be
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accessible by root only on boot. This binary runs setuid and
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ensures that they have appropriate permissions. This is not a
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daemon and runs only on system start and then exits.
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As well as this there are the web PHP files in the web directory
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and some perl scripts in the scripts directory. These scripts all
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have some configuration at the top of the files which should be
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viewed and amended if necessary and are as follows.
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zmpkg.pl - This is the ZoneMinder Package Control script. This
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is used by the web interface and service scripts to control the
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execution of the system as a whole.
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zmdc.pl - This is the ZoneMinder Daemon Control script. This is
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used by the web interface and the zmpkg.pl script to control and
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maintain the execution of the capture and analysis daemons,
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amongst others. You should not need to run this script yourself.
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zmfilter.pl - This script controls the execution of saved
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filters and will be started and stopped by the web interface
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based on whether there are filters that have been defined to be
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autonomous. This script is also responsible for the automatic
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uploading of events to a 3rd party server.
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zmaudit.pl - This script is used to check the consistency of the
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event file system and database. It can delete orphaned events,
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i.e. ones that appear in one location and not the other as well
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as checking that all the various event related tables are in
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line. It can be run interactively or in batch mode either from
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the command line or a cron job or similar. In the zmconfig.pl
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there is an option to specify fast event deletes where the web
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interface only deletes the event entry from the database itself.
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If this is set then it is this script that tidies up the rest.
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zmx10.pl - This is an optional script that can be used to
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initiate and monitor X10 Home Automation style events and
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interface with an alarm system either by the generation of X10
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signals on ZoneMinder events or by initiating ZoneMinder
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monitoring and capture on receipt of X10 signals from elsewhere,
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for instance the triggering of an X10 PIR. For example I have
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several cameras that don't do motion detection until I arm my
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alarm system whereupon they switch to active mode when an X10
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signal is generated by the alarm system and received by
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ZoneMinder.
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zmwatch.pl - This is a simple script purely designed to keep an
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eye on the capture daemons and restart them if they lockup. It
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has been known for sync problems in the video drivers to cause
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this so this script makes sure that nothing important gets
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missed.
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zm - This is the (optional) ZoneMinder init script, see below
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for details.
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Finally, check zm_config.php in the web directory and amend any
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configuration necessary in there. Most will have already been done
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by the configuration utilities but some scripts have a 'VERBOSE'
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flag you can set to get more debug out.
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At this stage typing 'make install' will install everything to the
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desired locations, you may wish to su to root first though. The
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installation routine will copy the binaries and scripts to your
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chosen install location, usually /usr/local/bin and then move zms
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to your cgi-bin area. It will then copy the web files to your
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chosen directory and ensure they have the right permissions.
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Finally it tries to link zm.php to index.php but will not
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overwrite an existing file if it already exists.
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The 'zm' script does not get installed automatically as it is not
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necessary for the operation of the ZoneMinder setup per se and is
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not necessarily supported for distributions other than RedHat
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However if you want to ensure that the ZoneMinder daemons are
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started on reboot etc copy it to your init.d directory, usually
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something like /etc/rc.d/init.d and then add it by doing
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chkconfig --add zm
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or similar command for your distribution. ZoneMinder will then
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start up when your machine reboots and can be controlled (by the
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root user) by doing 'service zm start' or 'service zm stop' etc.
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You may need to use the '-levels' parameter to chkconfig to ensure
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that ZoneMinder is started when you need it to.
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Now start your web browser and point it at your zm.php and off you
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go.
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5. Tutorial
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What you see now (and subsequently) depends on whether you chose
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to run ZoneMinder in authenticated mode or not. This is an option
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that lets you specify whether anyone that goes to the ZoneMinder
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web pages must authenticate themself in order to be given
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permissions to perform certain tasks. If you chose this mode then
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you will need to log in here. By default a fully privileged user
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'admin' has been created with a password also of 'admin'. You
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should change this password as soon as possible.
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Once you've logged in, or if you are running in un-authenticated
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mode, you will now see the ZoneMinder Console window. This will
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resize itself to avoid being too intrusive on your desktop. Along
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the top there are several informational entries like the time of
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the last update and the current server load. There will also be an
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indication of the system state which will probably say 'stopped'
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to start with. This is a link that you can click on to control the
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ZoneMinder system as a whole. Below that are various other links
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including one detailing the current user (in authenticated mode
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only) and one allowing you to configure your bandwidth. This last
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one enables you to optimise your settings depending on where you
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are, the actual values relating to this are defined in the
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options. If you are using a browser on the same machine or network
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then choose high, over a cable or DSL link maybe choose medium and
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over a dialup choose low. You can experiment to see which is best.
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This setting is retained on a per machine basis with a persistent
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cookie. Also on this line are a number of other links that will be
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covered below.
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Please bear in mind that from here on the descriptions of the web
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pages are based on what you will see if you are running as a fully
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authenticated user. If you are running in un-authenticated mode or
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as a less privileged user then some elements may not be shown or
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will be disabled.
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5.1. Defining Monitors
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To use ZoneMinder properly you need to define at least one
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Monitor. Essentially, a monitor is associated with a camera and
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can continually check it for motion detection and such like. So,
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next click 'Add New Monitor' to bring up the dialog. You will see
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a bunch of things you have to fill in.
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To help you get started on the video configuration the best thing
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is to us a tool like 'xawtv' (http://bytesex.org/xawtv/) to get a
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picture you're happy with, and to check your camera works. Then
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run 'zmu -d <device_no> -q -v' to get a dump of the settings
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(note, you will have to additionally supply a username and
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password to zmu if you are running in authenticated mode). You can
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then enter these values into the video related options of the
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monitor configuration panel. The 'device_no' referred to here is a
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number corresponding to the digit at the end of your device file,
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so /dev/video0 has a 'device_no' of 0 etc. If 'zmu' gives you an
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error related to permissions run 'zmfix -a' to make sure you can
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access all the video devices.
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The options are divided into a set of tabs to make it easier to
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edit. You do not have to 'save' to change to different tab so you
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can make all the changes you require and then click 'Save' at the
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end. The individual option are explained in a little more detail
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below,
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'Monitor' Tab
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Name - The name for your monitor. In theory this can eb
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anything you like but some users have reported problems with
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some characters. So to be on the safe side choose something
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fairly brief and with just letters and numbers and no
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punctuation or spaces..
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Function - This essentially defines what the monitor is doing.
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This can be one of the following;
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<20> 'None' - The monitor is currently disabled and no streams can
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be viewed or events generated.
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<EFBFBD> 'Monitor' - The monitor will only stream feeds but no image
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analysis is done and so no alarms or events will be generated,
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<EFBFBD> 'Modect' - or MOtion DEteCTtion. All captured images will be
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analysed and events generated where motion is detected,
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<EFBFBD> 'Record' - In this case continuous events of a fixed length
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are generated regardless of motion which is analogous to a
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convention time-lapse video recorder. No motion detection takes
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place in this mode.
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<EFBFBD> 'Mocord' - This is a hybrid of Modect and Record and results
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in both fixed length events being recorded and also any motion
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being highlighted within those events.
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Generally speaking it is best to choose 'Monitor' as an
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initial setting here..
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Section Length - This specifies the length (in seconds) of any
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fixed length events produced when the monitor function is
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'Record' or 'Mocord'. Otherwise it is ignored. This should
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not.be so long that events are difficult to navigate nor so
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short that too many events are generated. A length of between
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300 and 900 seconds I recommended.
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Frame Skip - This setting also applies only to the 'Record' or
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'Mocord' functions and specifies how many frames should be
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skipped in the recorded events. The default setting of zero
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results in every captured frame being saved, whereas one would
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mean that one frame is skipped between each saved one, two
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means that two frames are skipped between each saved one etc.
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An alternate way of thinking is that one in every '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.
|
||
|
||
Run Mode - Two choices are available here. 'Continuous' 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 'Triggered' means that
|
||
the decision about whether the daemons should actually be
|
||
active is devolved to an external triggering mechanism.
|
||
|
||
Triggers - This small section lets you select which triggers
|
||
will apply if the run mode has been set to 'triggered' 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
|
||
'cron' jobs or other mechanisms to actually control the camera
|
||
and keep them completely outside of the ZoneMinder settings.
|
||
|
||
Source Type - 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.
|
||
|
||
'Source' Tab (local device)
|
||
|
||
Device Number/Channel - 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.
|
||
|
||
Device Format - 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.
|
||
|
||
Capture Palette - 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.
|
||
|
||
Capture Width/Height - 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.
|
||
|
||
Orientation - 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 'Rotate Right' here then set the height to be 352 and
|
||
width to be 288.
|
||
|
||
'Source' Tab (remote device)
|
||
|
||
Remote Host/Port/Path - For remote cameras use these fields to
|
||
enter the full URL of the camera. Basically if your camera is
|
||
at http://camserver.home.net:8192/cameras/camera1.jpg 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 <username>:<password>@<hostname>.com.
|
||
|
||
Remote Image Colours - 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.
|
||
|
||
Capture Width/Height - As per local devices.
|
||
|
||
Orientation - As per local devices.
|
||
|
||
'Timestamp' Tab
|
||
|
||
Timestamp Label Format - This relates to the timestamp that is
|
||
applied to each frame. It is a 'sprintf' 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't want a
|
||
timestamp or have a camera that puts one on itself then leave
|
||
this field blank.
|
||
|
||
Timestamp Label X/Y - 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.
|
||
|
||
'Buffers' Tab
|
||
|
||
Image Buffer Size - 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 'n' 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.
|
||
|
||
Warm-up Frames - 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.
|
||
|
||
Pre/Post Event Image Buffer - 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.
|
||
|
||
'Misc' Tab
|
||
|
||
Maximum FPS - 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.
|
||
|
||
FPS Report Interval - 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.
|
||
|
||
Reference Image Blend %ge - 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'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.
|
||
|
||
'X10' Tab
|
||
|
||
Note: This tab and it's options will only appear if you have
|
||
indicated that your system supports the X10 home automation
|
||
protocol during initial system configuration.
|
||
|
||
X10 Activation String - The contents of this field determine
|
||
when a monitor starts and/or stops being active when running
|
||
in 'Triggered; mode and with X10 triggers. The format of this
|
||
string is as follows,
|
||
|
||
n : 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.
|
||
|
||
!n : 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.
|
||
|
||
n+ : 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.
|
||
|
||
n+<seconds> : As per the previous mode except that the
|
||
monitor will deactivate itself after the given number of
|
||
seconds.
|
||
|
||
n- : 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.
|
||
|
||
n-<seconds> : As per the previous mode except that the
|
||
monitor will activate itself after the given number of
|
||
seconds.
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
X10 Input Alarm String - 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.
|
||
|
||
X10 Output Alarm String - 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.
|
||
|
||
Finally, click 'Save' to add your monitor.
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
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 'Monitor', which will ensure
|
||
that one or more 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 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.
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
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 '<n> 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 'Montage' 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.
|
||
|
||
|
||
5.2. Defining Zones
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
Name - 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.
|
||
|
||
Type - This is one of the more important concepts in
|
||
ZoneMinder and there are five to choose from.
|
||
|
||
Active : 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.
|
||
|
||
Inclusive : 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.
|
||
|
||
Exclusive : 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.
|
||
|
||
Preclusive : 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.
|
||
|
||
Inactive : 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.
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
Units - 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.
|
||
|
||
Min/Maximum X/Y - 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.
|
||
|
||
Alarm Colour - 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.
|
||
|
||
Min/Maximum Alarm Threshold - These setting are used to define
|
||
limits for 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.
|
||
|
||
Min/Maximum Alarmed Area - 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.
|
||
|
||
Filter Width/Height - 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.
|
||
|
||
Min/Maximum Filtered Area - 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.
|
||
|
||
Min/Maximum Blob Area - 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.
|
||
|
||
Min/Maximum Blobs - 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.
|
||
|
||
|
||
5.3. 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 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.
|
||
|
||
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 'options' 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.
|
||
|
||
Below the status is a list of recent events that have occurred, by
|
||
default this is a listing of just the last 10 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 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.
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
|
||
5.4. 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 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.
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
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
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
|
||
5.5. 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 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).
|
||
|
||
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 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.
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
|
||
5.6. Options and Users
|
||
The final area covered by the tutorial is the options and user
|
||
section. If you are running in authenticated mode and don'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.
|
||
|
||
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 '?'
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
If you have changed the value of an option you should then 'save'
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
One of the options you may notice in the 'System' 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 '*' 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.
|
||
|
||
As mentioned above, you may also see a 'users' 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.
|
||
|
||
There are also four values that define the user permissions, these
|
||
are 'stream', 'events', 'monitors' and 'system' Each can have
|
||
values of 'none', 'view' or 'edit' apart from 'stream' which has
|
||
no 'edit' setting. These values cover access to the following
|
||
areas; 'stream' defines whether a user is allowed to view the
|
||
'live' 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 'none'. The 'events' setting determines whether a user
|
||
can view and modify or delete any retained historical events. The
|
||
'monitors' setting specifies whether a user can see the current
|
||
monitor settings and change them. Finally the 'system' 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-'system' 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 'monitors' 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 'system' privileges then the monitors ids setting is
|
||
ignored and has no effect.
|
||
|
||
That'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.
|
||
|
||
Have fun, please report any bugs or features you'd like to see and
|
||
hopefully ZoneMinder can be your camera monitoring friend!
|
||
|
||
Philip Coombes (philip.coombes@zoneminder.com) - February 2004
|
||
|
||
|
||
6. 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 check on http://www.zoneminder.com/forums.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 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.
|
||
|
||
Some things to check.
|
||
|
||
o 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 <device_no> -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 'options' tab.
|
||
|
||
o 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!
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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
|
||
o You should be able to use a similar procedure 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.
|
||
o 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 '<?php echo $value ?>', it will be
|
||
something like this '<?= $value ?>' which is easier and quicker to
|
||
write as well as being neater. More information about this
|
||
directive can be seen at the following location,
|
||
http://www.php.net/manual/en/configuration.directives.php#ini.shor
|
||
t-open-tag. 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.
|
||
o 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
|
||
"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 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.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
o 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),
|
||
perl -MCPAN -eshell
|
||
|
||
this will then (eventually, after some configuration if it'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're not careful) if it asks you but everything
|
||
else should be quite straightforward.
|
||
|
||
o 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'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.
|
||
|
||
o 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=<n> for the OV511 driver and cams=<n> 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.
|
||
o 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).
|
||
o 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'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 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
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\.curr
|
||
ent or download the registry script to do it for you from
|
||
http://www.zoneminder.com/downloads/noIEClick.reg
|
||
|
||
|
||
7. Change Log
|
||
|
||
|
||
7.1. Release 1.17.2
|
||
Minor features, bug fixes and additional languages.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Add Max Alarm Threshold. Previously the alarm threshold
|
||
(which is the amount a pixel has to differ from it's counterpart
|
||
in the reference image) existed only in a 'minimum' 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
o 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
|
||
'zmupdate.pl' utility to rename all your old images by doing 'perl
|
||
zmupdate.pl -r' as a an appropriately privileged or root user.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Force Java. Previously ZoneMinder could be forced to override
|
||
it'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 'auto', 'yes' or 'no' to
|
||
be used to provide all alternatives.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
o New Languages. Translations for Japanese (ja_jp), French
|
||
(fr_fr) and Russian (ru_ru) are now included.
|
||
|
||
7.2. Release 1.17.1
|
||
Bugfixes and additional languages.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
o New Languages. Two new language files were added. These allow
|
||
ZoneMinder to use the German (de_de) and Polish (pl_pl) languages.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
7.3. Release 1.17.0
|
||
Language changes and other enhancements.
|
||
|
||
o Version Numbering. ZoneMinder version numbers have now
|
||
changed. This is to allow more frequent 'point' 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 x.y.z format where a
|
||
change in x signifies a major fundamental or architectural rework,
|
||
a change in y will indicate a new release containing incremental
|
||
feature changes or fixes recommend to all users and a change in z
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
o 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_nn_mm.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.
|
||
o Syntactic Improvements. Previously setting 'NOTICE' 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Minor Bugs. A number of minor bugs and inconsistencies were
|
||
corrected.
|
||
|
||
7.4. Release 0.9.16
|
||
Major useability enhancement and fixes.
|
||
|
||
o Run States. Instead of the old 'start/stop' 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.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Tabbed Monitor options. Specification and modification of
|
||
monitors is now in a tabbed form for easier navigation.
|
||
o Additional stream headers. The stream headers have been
|
||
changed to hopefully ensure that they are less likely to be
|
||
cached.
|
||
o Maximum process restart delay. zmdc.pl now has an upper limit
|
||
(15 minutes) to the time it waits before restarting continuously
|
||
crashing processes.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Adaptive Watchdog. zmwatch now more adaptive to actual frame
|
||
rates.
|
||
o 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!
|
||
o New zmconfig options. zmconfig.pl has a new option to run
|
||
with no database if necessary
|
||
o File reorganisation. Various administrative file changes and
|
||
reorgs.
|
||
o Compiler warnings. Various tweaks and mods to reduce compiler
|
||
and memory warnings.
|
||
o SQL Buffer size. Increased SQL buffer size to cope with large
|
||
pre-event buffers, plus a couple of other buffers have been
|
||
enlarged.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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
|
||
o Frame daemon stability. Changed image buffer in zmf to be
|
||
static rather than dynamic. This has made zmf much more stable.
|
||
o MPEG overwrite option. Fixed the 'Overwrite' checkbox in
|
||
video generation to actually overwite the video. Modded the page
|
||
slightly also.
|
||
|
||
o Daemon control improved. Changing between monitor functions,
|
||
e.g. Modect, Mocord etc now restarts the correct daemons.
|
||
|
||
o Improved time based filters. Filters that include time based
|
||
clauses now get executed regardless of whether new events are
|
||
being generated.
|
||
o Audit damon started unconditionally. zmaudit is now started
|
||
regardless of the setting of FAST_DELETES as zmfilter depends on
|
||
it being there.
|
||
o Filtering more active. zmfilter is now started in 'Monitor'
|
||
mode. It does not run in when monitors are completely off however.
|
||
o Stills paged. The stills view of events is now padinated for
|
||
easier navigation.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Settings in auth mode. Control of camera brightness, contrast
|
||
etc did not previously work when running in authorised mode. This
|
||
is now fixed.
|
||
o zms parameter bug fixed. The streaming server incorrectly
|
||
parsed and assigned one of it's arguments. This is now fixed.
|
||
o zmu Brighness bug. Previously camera brightness was not
|
||
correctly parsed from command line options passed to zmu.
|
||
o Event window width variable. Event windows now scale to fit
|
||
the event image size.
|
||
|
||
7.5. Release 0.9.15
|
||
Various bug fixes from the last release and before.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o The SQL to create the Users table was mistakenly omitted from
|
||
the .12 database upgrade script this has now been corrected.
|
||
o A bug in zmfilter was pointed out whereby the dynamic loading
|
||
of the Zip or Tar archive modules depending on a preference
|
||
actually wasn't. It was looking for both and loading both at
|
||
compile time. This has now been modified to be fully runtime.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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 zmf weren't. A
|
||
change has been made whereby if set all greyscale JPEG images are
|
||
colourised in all circumstances.
|
||
|
||
7.6. Release 0.9.14
|
||
Major new feature and important bug-fixes.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
o Following a number of requests the .sock file directory is
|
||
now configurable in zmconfig.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o A bug was found in zmx10.pl causing a crash if time delayed
|
||
X10 events were used. This has now been fixed.
|
||
o Removed use of 'zmu' 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o All SQL buffers in the C++ code have been enlarged. There was
|
||
previously an issue with a buffer overflow on certain occasions.
|
||
|
||
7.7. Release 0.9.13
|
||
Beta version of several features and fixes, never generally
|
||
released.
|
||
|
||
o Following a number of requests the .sock file directory is
|
||
now configurable in zmconfig.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Fixed not numeric comparison in zmwatch which was causing, or
|
||
appeared to be causing, some errors.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Some redundant window scrollbars removed.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
7.8. Release 0.9.12
|
||
Mostly bug-fixes with a couple of minor features.
|
||
|
||
o Double first images. Fixed a problem where the first image of
|
||
an event was being recorded twice. I don't think this was at the
|
||
cost of any of the other images but one copy was an extra.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Fixed round detection problem. Although the existence or
|
||
otherwise of the 'round' 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.
|
||
o Fixed monitor rename bug. Renaming a monitor did not
|
||
correctly modify the events directory to reflect this. This has
|
||
now been fixed.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Fixed remote camera memory leak. A memory leak was reported
|
||
when capturing with remote cameras, this is now fixed.
|
||
o Orientation. Added option to rotate or invert captured images
|
||
for cameras mounted at unusual angles.
|
||
o 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's
|
||
suggested changes.
|
||
o Stylesheet change. Previously the stylesheet didn'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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Delete monitor confirm. Due to some unfortunate accidents by
|
||
users, attempts to delete monitors will now require confirmation.
|
||
o Detect linmysqlclient.a. Added better detection script into
|
||
'configure' top spot when libmysqlclient.a is missing.
|
||
|
||
7.9. Release 0.9.11
|
||
Various new features and fixes.
|
||
|
||
o Added stats view - 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.
|
||
|
||
o Tabulated events - The main events view is now tabulated to
|
||
look a bit nicer.
|
||
o New video palette support - 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.
|
||
o Added preclusive zones - 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.
|
||
o Fixed Mozilla JavaScript - Various JavaScript functionality
|
||
did not function on Mozilla, Netscape and other browsers. This is
|
||
now (hopefully) fixed.
|
||
o Allow image and mpegs to be attached to emails - 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!
|
||
o Fixed possible motion detection bug - I found a few double
|
||
declared local variables left over from the rewrite. This may have
|
||
affected the motion detection algorithm. Fixed now anyway.
|
||
o Modified scoring - 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.
|
||
o Fixed /cgi-bin path problem - 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.
|
||
o Improved video handling in browser - 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.
|
||
o Added ffmpeg support - 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.
|
||
o Colourise greyscale image files - 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.
|
||
o Fast RGB diffs - 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.
|
||
o Fixed STRICT_VIDEO_CONFIG - 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.
|
||
o Web colour change - 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!
|
||
|
||
7.10. Release 0.9.10
|
||
Many bug-fixes and major feature enhancements.
|
||
|
||
o Configure 'round' 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.
|
||
|
||
o Low event id bug - Fixed bug where events with an id of <
|
||
1000 were being cleaned up by zmaudit.pl by mistake.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Streamed cycle view - The monitor cycle view (the one where
|
||
each monitor is displayed sequentially) now supports streams as
|
||
well as stills.
|
||
o New 'montage' 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Option BGR->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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Alarm reference update - Added option to not blend alarmed
|
||
images into the reference image. See the help in zmconfig.pl for
|
||
caveats.
|
||
o Disappearing monitors - Fixed the disappearing monitor
|
||
problem in the console view where monitors with no events were
|
||
randomly not being shown.
|
||
o Clean and tidy - Cleaned up a load of compiler warnings and
|
||
miscellanea to ensure a cleaner happier build.
|
||
o 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).
|
||
o Expire streams - Added expiry headers to streamed images so
|
||
they will always display fully.
|
||
o Event navigation - Added next, prev, delete & next, delete &
|
||
prev navigation to events to allow you to quickly review events in
|
||
sequence as had been requested by a number of people.
|
||
o USR blocking - The debug USR signals were not being blocked
|
||
properly leading to nasty effects in zmc mostly.
|
||
o zmfilter execution - 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.
|
||
o zmdc short statuses - Removed the logging of the short status
|
||
values that zmdc.pl returns to it's clients which had been
|
||
clogging up the log file.
|
||
o 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't
|
||
think we need to talk about them here do we.
|
||
|
||
7.11. Release 0.9.9
|
||
Mainly bug-fixes and minor feature enhancements.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
o Added creation of events directory - Previously the 'events'
|
||
directory was not created on install, this has been fixed.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Corrected extraneous Width to be Height - The last version of
|
||
zmu included a Width comment which should have been height.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Zone deletion problem - A problem was found such that when
|
||
deleting zones the appropriate daemons were not being asked to
|
||
restart daemons correctly.
|
||
o Console changes - The current version number is now displayed
|
||
in the console. A refresh button has also been added along with a
|
||
minor reorg.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
7.12. Release 0.9.8
|
||
Several new features and bug-fixes
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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's using
|
||
o (especially with the -v option). These options can then be
|
||
used as a starting point for your ZoneMinder configuration.
|
||
o Added FPS in status field - The status field in the web
|
||
monitor views now contains an FPS setting as well as the status.
|
||
o Zmconfig changes - zmconfig handles missing options better
|
||
and rewrites config file even in non-interactive mode.
|
||
o Fixed config problems in zmcfg.h - Some config was not being
|
||
set up correctly in zmcfg.h.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Revamped the console window slightly - The console window has
|
||
now been reformatted slightly to give more and better information
|
||
including server load.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Fixed cambolzola opt bug - There was a bug in the Cambozola
|
||
options, I can't remember what it was but it's fixed!
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Looser video configuration - Some video configuration errors
|
||
can now be ignored via the STRICT_VIDEO_CONFIG option.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
7.13. Release 0.9.7
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
o Added zmconfig.pl script to help with configuration.
|
||
|
||
o Revamped to work better with configure scripts
|
||
o Monitors now have more configuration options, including some
|
||
that were statically defined before such as location and format of
|
||
the image timestamps.
|
||
o Removed Alarms table from schema as not required, never was
|
||
actually...
|
||
o Added a number of new scripts, see the scripts directory
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Added event filter to enable bulk viewing, upload or deletion
|
||
of events according to various attributes. Filter can be saved and
|
||
edited.
|
||
o Added last event id to shared memory for auto-filtering etc.
|
||
o Changed zmu -i option to write to monitor named image file.
|
||
o Made shared memory management somewhat more sensible.
|
||
o Now stores DB times as localtime rather than UTC avoiding
|
||
daylight saving related bugs.
|
||
o Fixed bug with inactive zones and added more debug.
|
||
o Changed main functions to return int.
|
||
o Added help and usage to zmu.
|
||
o Fixed browser acceptance problem, more easily defaults to
|
||
HTML.
|
||
o Split out the PHP files into a bunch with specific functions
|
||
rather than one monolithic one.
|
||
o Fixed NetPBM paths and changed _SERVER to HTTP_SERVER_VARS.
|
||
o Added HUP signal on zone deletion.
|
||
o Added NETPBM_DIR and conditional netpbm stuff.
|
||
o Removed hard coded window sizes, all popup window dimensions
|
||
can be specified in zmconfig.php
|
||
o Changed form methods to 'get' from 'post' to avoid resubmit
|
||
warnings all the time.
|
||
o Added conditional sound to alarm on web interface.
|
||
o Fixed syntax error when adding default monitor.
|
||
o Some of the web views have changed slightly to accommodate
|
||
the separate events view.
|
||
o And much much more, probably...
|
||
|
||
7.14. Release 0.0.1
|
||
Initial release, therefore nothing new.
|
||
|
||
|
||
8. To Do
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Mouseover help - A bit more help popping up when you
|
||
mouseover things would be handy. A bit more help full stop
|
||
actually.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Create .rpm packages (as there can be several dependencies)
|
||
and maybe other types of packages also, e.g. for Debian
|
||
distributions.
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o Add sound support to allow a captured audio channel to be
|
||
associated with a video device.
|
||
|
||
9. Bugs
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
o 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).
|
||
o 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.
|
||
Probably bucket loads more, just fire them at me.
|
||
|
||
|
||
10. Non-Bugs
|
||
|
||
o 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.
|
||
|
||
|
||
11. License
|
||
|
||
ZoneMinder is released under the GPL, see below.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
ZoneMinder README, $Date$, $Revision$
|
||
|
||
Copyright (C) 2003 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.
|
||
|