82 lines
2.9 KiB
Plaintext
82 lines
2.9 KiB
Plaintext
New installs
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============
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1. Unless you are already using the MySQL server or you are running it
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remotely you will need to ensure that the server is installed and secured:
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yum install mysql-server
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chkconfig mysql on
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service mysql start
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mysql_secure_installation
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2. You will need to create the ZoneMinder database. These commands should do
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the trick, assuming your database server is local:
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mysql -u root -p < /usr/share/zoneminder/db/zm_create.sql
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mysqladmin reload
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3. The database needs a user. One is not created by default because this would
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introduce an obvious security issue. The following should set this up:
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mysql -u root -p
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grant select,insert,update,delete on zm.* to 'zmuser'@localhost identified by 'zmpass';
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Obviously, change at least zmpass to an actual, secure password or
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passphrase. You can change zmuser as well if you like.
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4. Edit /etc/zm.conf and, at the bottom, change ZM_DB_PASS and perhaps
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ZM_DB_USER to match.
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5. Edit /etc/php.ini, uncomment the date.timezone line, and add your local
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timezone. For whatever reason, PHP will complain loudly if this is not set,
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or if it is set incorrectly, and these complaints will show up in the
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zoneminder logging system as errors.
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If you are not sure of the proper timezone specification to use, look in
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/etc/sysconfig/clock.
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6. This package probably does not work with SELinux enabled at the moment. It
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may be necessary to disable SELinux for httpd, or even completely for
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ZoneMinder to function. This will be addressed in a later release. Run
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setenforce 0
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for testing, and edit /etc/sysconfig/selinux to disable it at boot time.
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7. Enable and start the zoneminder service:
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systemctl enable zoneminder.service
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systemctl start zoneminder.service
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8. The ZoneMinder web interface is disabled by default (which makes it rather
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useless but also secure by default), you will need to edit
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/etc/httpd/conf.d/zoneminder.conf to enable it. Afterwards, you can start
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the web server:
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systemctl enable httpd.service
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systemctl start httpd.service
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9. You should immediately visit http://localhost/zm and secure the system if
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it is network facing. To do this:
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a) click Options, then System.
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b) check OPT_USE_AUTH.
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c) set AUTH_HASH_SECRET to a random string.
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d) click Save and refresh the main browser window.
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e) You should be prompted to log in; the default username/password is admin/admin.
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f) Open Options again, choose the newly visible Users tab.
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g) click the admin user and set a password.
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Upgrades
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========
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1. Update /etc/zm.conf. Check for any new settings and update the version
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information. Comparing /etc/zm.conf and /etc/zm.conf.rpmnew should help to
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do this.
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2. You will need to upgrade the ZoneMinder database as described in the
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manual. This command should be sufficient when run as root:
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zmupdate.pl --version=<from version>
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