Difference between revisions of "External Live Stream"
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It should be possible to get CSS on this page, so the videos auto fill the page appropriately (haven't gotten around to it) but it's also possible to use sed here to adjust the pixels as needed | It should be possible to get CSS on this page, so the videos auto fill the page appropriately (haven't gotten around to it) but it's also possible to use sed here to adjust the pixels as needed | ||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sed s/oldpx/newpx/g -i cameras.html | sed -e 's/oldpx/newpx/g' -i cameras.html | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Revision as of 13:20, 23 February 2021
Here is an html file you might use in a ZM client Desktop SBC Camera Monitor to view the streams from the ZM Server. You will need to adjust the resolution, number of cameras, and monitor id of the URL to your setup.
In my experience, Clients viewing the Streams (up to 3 clients, with 20+ cameras) do not slow down the ZM Server.
For more details, see Dummies_Guide#Watching_the_Cameras
<html><body bgcolor="black"> <img width="412px" height="268px" src="http://IPOFZMSERVER/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=jpeg&monitor=1&scale=100"&user="watchinguser"&pass="somepassword" > <img width="412px" height="268px" src="http://IPOFZMSERVER/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=jpeg&monitor=2&scale=100"&user="watchinguser"&pass="somepassword" > <img width="412px" height="268px" src="http://IPOFZMSERVER/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=jpeg&monitor=3&scale=100"&user="watchinguser"&pass="somepassword" > <img width="412px" height="268px" src="http://IPOFZMSERVER/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=jpeg&monitor=4&scale=100"&user="watchinguser"&pass="somepassword" > <img width="412px" height="268px" src="http://IPOFZMSERVER/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=jpeg&monitor=5&scale=100"&user="watchinguser"&pass="somepassword" > <img width="412px" height="268px" src="http://IPOFZMSERVER/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=jpeg&monitor=6&scale=100"&user="watchinguser"&pass="somepassword" > </body> </html>
Setup
In 1.32 and 1.34, you may have to adjust the following setting for auth_relay if authentication is used. Note that this conflicts with ZMNinja, which requires auth_relay to be set to hashed, I believe.
Post by rockedge» Fri Jun 30, 2017 8:09 pm in a WordPress page or post I use something like this: Remember that with certain authorizations set, the URL would be slightly different. this URL works when : Options->System->OPT_USE_AUTH = ON Options->System->AUTH_TYPE = Builtin Options->System->AUTH_RELAY = NONE Code: Select all <h2><img class="aligncenter" src="http://your_zm_server/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=jpeg&scale=100&maxfps=5&buffer=1000&monitor=1&user=admin" alt="stream down" width="420" height="340" /></h2>
ref:https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=36&t=26292
Note that this URL omits password. But it is given in the preface example.
Tips
Quickly Change pixel settings for page
It should be possible to get CSS on this page, so the videos auto fill the page appropriately (haven't gotten around to it) but it's also possible to use sed here to adjust the pixels as needed
sed -e 's/oldpx/newpx/g' -i cameras.html
Refresh Page Periodically
You can do this with xdotool (see Dedicated_SBC_Camera_Monitor#Refresh_Screen_Periodically )or possibly with html:[1]
<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="300">
Scale may be required for large numbers of cameras or SBCs
See that scale=100 option in the URL? That is used to (obviously) downscale the video stream. If you have a 2K stream, but you are viewing it at 640x480, you don't need 100% scaling. Lower the number to keep the bandwidth down.
Where this is required, is when you have a lot of monitors, say 20+ cameras. Or you have an SBC that can't handle full res streams. In these scenarios, if you don't scale, you will either see the CPU max out on the watching computer, or you will see video feeds drop in and out periodically. For more details, see how ZM handles the URL for montage.
Single Snapshot URL
The URL for a single snapshot is:
http://serverip/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=single&monitor=2&scale=100&maxfps=5&buffer=1000&user=somename&pass=somepass
Adjust Monitor # as needed.
Alternative Single Snapshop JPG via ZMU
zmu is a binary, along with zma, and zmc that can do various functions. One of them is creating a jpeg.
/usr/bin# zmu -h zmu <-d device_path> [-v] [function] [-U<username> -P<password>] zmu <-m monitor_id> [-v] [function] [-U<username> -P<password>] General options: -h, --help : This screen -v, --verbose : Produce more verbose output ... -i, --image [image_index] : Write captured image to disk as <monitor_name>.jpg, last image captured or specified ring buffer index if given.
ffplay
It's equally possible to use ffplay to directly stream the camera feed (bypassing ZM) to the desktop. Although refreshing may be more involved.