Difference between revisions of "Dummies Guide"

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This is a short guide for using ZM. It's concise, and tells you what you need to know.
This is a lot of what I know about surveillance cameras and ZM.


If you wish to view the full ZM Documentation, I recommend viewing it through the PDF view, as the sphinx website doesn't render efficiently on my computer. PDF View: https://readthedocs.org/projects/zoneminder/downloads/pdf/stable/
If you wish to view the full ZM Documentation, I recommend viewing it through the PDF view, as the sphinx website is not efficient and requires javascript. PDF View: https://readthedocs.org/projects/zoneminder/downloads/pdf/stable/
If you want a hard copy, you can order the documentation through a self publishing service like lulu.com
 
Zoneminder is a powerful tool, but it has a learning curve. The forums are there to answer questions. Search then post if its not already answered.
 
On the learning curve: It can be some work (depending on how complex your system is), but you will become a proficient gnulinux sysadmin if you familiarize yourself with ZM and its many features. If you buy an off the shelf DVR you won't learn nearly as much (if anything). Additionally, these skills are valuable for 'any' Unix-based server (DB, website, email server, kiosk, etc).
 
If you are already knowledgeable about unix based computers, then you shouldn't have any trouble.


==Install==
==Install==
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These are the best supported install guides.
These are the best supported install guides.


Ubuntu or Debian / Devuan is recommended.
[[Debian]] is recommended. Ubuntu always has problems with updates.


Some install guides omit required dependencies using VLC as a source type (libvlc). Search forum and wiki if this is necessary.
Even numbers are stable. Use those. Odd numbers are testing/development.  


Here's a guide for using an external HDD: [https://wiki.zoneminder.com/Using_a_dedicated_Hard_Drive Using a dedicated Hard Drive]
Here's a guide for using an external HDD: [https://wiki.zoneminder.com/Using_a_dedicated_Hard_Drive Using a dedicated Hard Drive]
For ZM < 1.29 Make sure you add <code>innodb_file_per_table=1</code> and ensure that the ZM database is InnoDB format, otherwise you may run into the issues described in [[MySQL]]. This should not be necessary in 1.30.4 and later.
If you want to use the bleeding edge / unstable release (not recommended for new users) you can grab the [https://launchpad.net/~iconnor ubuntu ppa], and the debian repo [http://zmrepo.zoneminder.com/debian/storageareas is here]. Add debian repo in apt like e.g.
<pre>
deb http://zmrepo.zoneminder.com/debian/storageareas jessie/
</pre>


==Test out a Camera==
==Test out a Camera==
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Once you get ZM installed, you will want to test out a camera.
Once you get ZM installed, you will want to test out a camera.
You can do a webcam, or you can do an IP camera.  
You can do a webcam, or you can do an IP camera.  
See the [https://wiki.zoneminder.com/Hardware_Compatibility_List Hardware Compatibility LIst]
See the [[Hardware_Compatibility_List]]


I recommend you start with an old Axis IP Camera. They are well documented and easy to setup.  
I recommend you start with an early [[Axis]]. They are well documented and easy to setup.  
Buy an old one for $10-20. Follow the instructions on either the Zoneminder Hardware compatiblity list,
Old ones go for $10-20. Follow the instructions on either the Zoneminder Hardware compatibility list,
on ispyconnect's url list, or in the user manual for the camera. Any respectable camera will document it's RTSP and MJPEG and JPG paths for you to access. ONVIF is also an option to find the paths for RTSP cameras. This is covered in more detail in [[Finding Camera Stream Paths]].
on ispyconnect's url list, or in the user manual for the camera. Any respectable camera will document it's RTSP and MJPEG / JPG paths for you to access. ONVIF is also an option to find the path for RTSP cameras. This is covered in more detail in [[Finding Camera Stream Paths]].




Follow the instructions in the Hardware Compatiblity List for parameters
Follow the instructions in the Hardware Compatibility List for parameters
for setting up a camera the first time. If you have an error, look at the logs.
for setting up a camera the first time. If you have an error, look at the logs. FFMPEG and VLC can be used to test that the streams are valid. e.g. from terminal: ffmpeg -i rtsp://username:password@<ipaddress>:554/path output.mp4 This is faster than using ZM.


IP address, path, port, and Resolution must be correct. Most other fields can be left at defaults. If you are using MJPEG you use the http option (of remote). If you are using H264 / RTSP you use the RTSP or RTP option. If this doesn't make sense, read the rest of this document.
In ZM, IP address, path, port, and Resolution must be correct. Most other fields can be left at defaults.


If you can view the MJPEG or JPG url in your browser, you will be in good shape. Take that path, and put it into Zoneminder. If the camera requires authorization, consult the user manual, or you can try adding the username and password before the ip like so username:password@ipaddress
Use vlc or ffplay like this:
e.g. root:mypass@192.168.1.5
ffplay http://192.168.1.5/mjpg/video.mjpg
This is an alternative to 192.168.1.5?username=root&pwd=mypass which most guides tell you to do. Both will work, however the latter can vary in what keywords it uses while the former requires no keywords.
or ffmpeg
ffmpeg -i http://192.168.1.5/mjpg/video.mjpg output.mp4
or
ffplay rtsp://<user>:<pass>@<hostname/ip>:554/axis-media/media.amp?videocodec=h264&resolution=320x240
or
ffprobe rtsp://<user>:<pass>@<hostname/ip>:554/axis-media/media.amp?videocodec=h264
If the camera requires authorization, consult the user manual, or you can try adding the username and password before the ip like so username:password@ipaddress This is an alternative to 192.168.1.5?username=root&pwd=mypass which most guides tell you to do. Both will work, however the former is easier.


If pass is blank, you type in root:@192.168.1.5
If pass is blank, you type in root:@192.168.1.5
RTSP usually specifies the port and uses rtsp, instead of http. e.g. <code>rtsp://user:password@192.168.1.10:554/somepath</code>


==Obtaining more Cameras==
==Obtaining more Cameras==
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* '''LOCAL''' Camera connected directly to computer (webcam, or analog camera thorugh bttv card)(typically /dev/video0)
* '''LOCAL''' Camera connected directly to computer (webcam, or analog camera thorugh bttv card)(typically /dev/video0)


* '''REMOTE''' Grab MJPEG stream or RTSP (h264) stream from IP camera on the network
* '''REMOTE''' (obsolete) Precursor to ffmpeg.


* '''FILE''' Grab a jpg file somewhere locally and display that (you provide jpeg images that change from somewhere). Can be used in unusual ways (i.e. a slide show, <insert use here>).
* '''FILE''' Grab a jpg file somewhere locally and display that (you provide images that change from anywhere on the filesystem). Can be used in unusual ways (i.e. a slide show, <insert use here>).


* '''FFMPEG''' and '''LIBVLC''' use the respective libraries to pull a stream similar to REMOTE does for RTSP only. The forum recommends to use FFMPEG, if you are using RTSP. This is an alternative for REMOTE.
* '''FFMPEG''' and '''LIBVLC''' use the respective libraries to pull a stream similar to REMOTE does for RTSP only. They can also watch MJPEG streams and the former can loop local video files.


Local I do not recommend. BTTV pci cards for analog cameras are limited in resolution (704x480px). HD Analog cameras are compatible through remote if the video encoder outputs an RTSP/MJPEG stream (unknown if works with local). A video encoder is basically a DVR that serves video on the network. More details below.
And some others...


After that you have FILE and REMOTE. I have not used FILE for anything but testing. I will cover REMOTE.
FFMPEG / LibVLC is recommended. Don't confuse [[LibVNC]] with LibVLC. LibVNC is for recording VNC (i.e. screenrecording).


 
'''FFMPEG''' has the option of RTSP (h264) or MJPEG streams.  
'''REMOTE''' has the option of either RTSP (h264) or MJPEG streams.  




===MJPEG===
===MJPEG===
These include Arecont Vision, Axis, Bosch, Foscam, Grandstream, Instar, Messoa, Zavio and others.  
Older cameras from 2000's. E.g.[[Arecont Vision]], [[Axis]], Bosch, [[Foscam]], [[Grandstream]], Instar, Messoa, Zavio and others.  
The prices scale with features. Old indoor Axis cameras at 480p-720p resolution (no IR) can be found
The prices scale with features. Old indoor Axis cameras at 480p-720p resolution (no IR) can be found
online easily for $10-80. It is easy to find MJPG cameras of 480p resolution with IR. It is generally more expensive to find 720p MJPEG cameras with IR, but they exist. More pixels means higher cost.
online easily for $10-30. These are generally obsolete.
 
Also see, [https://wiki.zoneminder.com/Hardware_Compatibility_List#Single_Board_Computers SBC cameras].


===RTSP===
===RTSP===
These cameras use h264 compression. However ZM decodes all incoming video to jpeg files,
2010's and newer cameras: These cameras use h264 (or h265) compression. They serve it on an RTSP server. h264 means less bytes, so you end up using less HDD space than compared with MJPEG. H264 is recommended when possible.
so it's not as efficient. This requires libvlc, or ffmpeg to convert
the video to jpg files. It's easier to find a 1080p RTSP camera, for $70 vs. an 1080p MJPEG camera, generally.
 
Note: Users with 1.32+ can use H264 passthrough, which writes the h264 direct to mp4, and saves some CPU usage.


===Conclusion===
Note: Users with 1.32+ can use '''H264 passthrough''', which writes the h264 direct to mp4, and saves some CPU usage. .


Using Remote you must choose either MJPEG, RTSP, or a mix.
===How Powerful of a Computer to Use===
If you want a high quantity of cameras, it's more efficient
to use all MJPEG cameras. If you have a small number, or If you want to purchase high-end
server hardware, then it doesn't matter. With powerful enough server hardware, you will be able
to run 20-30 HD cameras of either type without difficulty, if not more.


Let me state again - '''high-end''' server hardware will perform better than desktop, or low end server hardware. I have seen this firsthand between two servers: KFSN4-DRE and the KGPE-D16.  The latter runs ZM with 25+ cameras, not breaking a sweat. The former reaches a limit at about 10. Note that I run MJPEG only. Load averages 1.5 - 2.5 for 32 cores. A bigger limitation is HDD size.  
High-end server hardware will perform better than desktop, or low end server hardware. I have seen this firsthand between two servers: KFSN4-DRE and the KGPE-D16.  The latter runs ZM with 25+ cameras, not breaking a sweat. The former reaches a limit at about 10. Another limitation is HDD size.  


I needed the most affordable HD MJPEG cameras, so I searched and settled on the Foscam 9805's and 9804's. However they are no longer being sold by Foscam. New Foscam models do not have MJPEG and I don't recommend them. You can buy 9805 online used, but the quality may be lower and I also don't recommend it. It depends what hardware and software version they are. The E models with new software tend to be 3FPS while the W models with old firmware and hardware I have seen run 1FPS. I currently recommend buying Axis (new or used), although they do not have IR. This is not a problem, as outdoors IR on cameras attracts spider webs, and external IR is recommended, anyways. Another brand I have found success with is DLink. The DCS-932 cameras are good, although they are SD resolution and the IR is 10m (short range IR). Otherwise, any respectable name brand camera will work. Look through the hardware compatibility list. Read the user manual before you purchase the camera, and look for the following: Outdoors/indoors, IR/no-IR, Resolution (and double check the JPEG stream has the higher resolution, if using MJPEG). IR can be supplimented with external appliances. External IR, may have a light sensor which turns on IR when dark enough, simply provide power.
I currently recommend buying Axis (new is expensive, so you'll probably purchase used), although many do not have IR. This is not a problem, as outdoors IR on cameras attracts spider webs, and external IR is recommended. Another recommended brand is Hikvision. Hikvision can be bought new for a lower price if warranty is an issue (for business clients that can't afford Axis). The cameras work well with ZM, and are configurable without Windows, Otherwise, any respectable name brand camera will work. Look through the hardware compatibility list. Read the user manual before you purchase the camera, and look for the following: Outdoors/indoors, IR/no-IR, Resolution. IR can be supplemented with external appliances. You can also put pesticide on the cameras to deter bugs... (although I wouldn't).


=== A note on Analog Cameras ===
=== A note on Analog Cameras ===


If you are upgrading an existing camera installation, you will likely have coaxial cables for the old cameras. These can be used with Zoneminder in either LOCAL, or REMOTE. LOCAL, via a PCI or PCI-Express card, REMOTE through a video encoder that takes the analog stream and converts to either MJPG or RTSP. I recommend the latter.  
There is an option to use a coax to ethernet adapter. You need two pieces. One is the sender, one is the receiver. They may or may not be identical. These allow the use of IP Cameras over coax. Search ebay. Altronix ebridge ones are about $120 for a pair or adapters (you need a pair for each camera). If this is too much money, you may keep the old coax cameras. See: IP Video Encoders [https://wiki.zoneminder.com/Hardware_Compatibility_List#IP_Video_Encoder]. Honestly, just run ethernet if you have a chance. Customers expect HD these days.  


There is no reason to rip out, or ignore old coaxial cables. They are perfectly viable for Zoneminder. They may be a step behind the IP cameras, however they can be used.
I have not worked with HD analog over coax, and I don't recommend it. I did try to keep old coax cameras but they became obsolete. IP cameras are the way to go.
 
Also consider investing in HD Analog cameras. However you are on your own here. I have not researched into this. It should be possible to get an HD Analog Video Encoder that will take an HD analog camera and offer for Zoneminder to read as an RTSP/MJPEG stream. If you are doing this, beware that you research and try to get one that follows a standard for CCTV HD encoding. Otherwise, you might be at the mercy of one brand. Also consider the existing coaxial cable. Long cable runs may not be able to handle HD Analog, as easily as old video. When in doubt, just use traditional NTSC or PAL video.


==Watching the Cameras==
==Watching the Cameras==


Cameras can be watched from ZM web server. Montage view is good. See notes section for a hint about > 6 camera setups.
Cameras can be watched from the ZM apache server website and/or ZMNinja.


Another way is to make an html file on a remote machine with the following code embedded in an img tag. Adjust monitor ID as needed.
For business customers offer both choices to the customer. Or build something custom if you like. HTML imagemaps work well.
[https://wiki.zoneminder.com/How_to_stream_from_another_ZoneMinder_installation  How to stream from another ZoneMinder installation]. Also an easy way to embed video in a website (img tag). It is possible to use FFServer as a server for a website. FFServer (part of FFMPEG project) will take the video feed, and offer it up to clients. I have used FFServer with [[Zmodopipe]]. See [[Dedicated SBC Camera Monitor]] for notes on refreshing the stream periodically.


Streaming in ZM, does not slow it down, in my experience.
You can make fully customizable pages i.e. make an html file on a remote machine with the following code embedded in an img tag. Adjust monitor ID as needed.
[https://wiki.zoneminder.com/How_to_stream_from_another_ZoneMinder_installation  How to stream from another ZoneMinder installation]. Also an easy way to embed video in a website (img tag). See [[Dedicated SBC Camera Monitor]] for an example of a computer that only displays the streams. [[https://wiki.zoneminder.com/Example_Camera_View_HTML]] has the HTML code for API/non-API usage.


If you embed the URL in an img tag, include http prefix or it wont work.
If you embed the URL in an img tag, include http prefix or it wont work.
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</pre>
</pre>


=== Quick Example ===
When you have > 6 cameras, you can either use firefox and edit about:config (explained below in guide), or see
https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?t=28168&p=113934#p113934
for instructions regarding multi port.
 
Watch the scale parameter. That can be adjusted for clients with low power CPUs (ARM SBCs) if whole img boxes seem to drop out. Note that scale does require some CPU on the server side.
 
One note: If you have alternative high/low resolution cameras (motion detect on the low res, record on the high res). You might not want customers to view the low res cameras. In this case, make a group of the high res cameras, and set that to be the default view.
 
=== Embedding ZM in a webpage ===


[[Example Camera View HTML]]
[[Example Camera View HTML]]
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[https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=37&t=26982 Embedding Streaming Video in External Website] from Forums
[https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=37&t=26982 Embedding Streaming Video in External Website] from Forums


==Recording in Zoneminder==
https://wiki.zoneminder.com/External_Live_Stream#Imagemap_of_Cameras - Highly recommended for medium / large installations.
 
==Monitor Settings in Zoneminder==
The zmc binary handles recording and analysis (1.36).


You can record everything (good, but no way to find events). You can modect everything (light HDD use, but misses stuff). You can mocord everything (best, but uses HDD). And finally, You can mix it up. I would recommend in small setups, to throw a >1TB HDD in there for videos and set everything to mocord. For larger setups, you will want to customize each camera based on its priority.  
    * use full res stream as the source
    * set camera in zm to use passthrough (not decode) (must be h264, not h265).
    * set resolution in zm to be lower than the actual stream. if you have a 2,3,or 4K stream,  
      set it to somewhere around 320x240 or 640x480. Note that it must be the same aspect ratio (so
      some fraction of the original stream, e.g. 1920x1080 would be 480x270).
    * set analysis fps to 2
    * mode can be modect or mocord. I prefer modect with some exceptions.
    * set the zone similar to the example zone image below.


By doing this you will get a low res live view and analysis, but the recorded videos will be full res when watched. This is the easiest way to setup ZM. You can also use linked monitors or have multiple streams, but neither of those options are worth the trouble. Note that there may be a warning in ZM about the stream not matching the resolution but that can be ignored (it is a warning, not an error). This has been discussed on the forums, search there for further details.
https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=31334&p=124410
In ZM 1.32+, you can use multiple HDs (as many as you like), and assign cameras to where they should be saved. These are '''storage areas'''


==Motion Detection==
==Motion Detection==
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'''What's all this motion detection stuff, anyhow?'''
'''What's all this motion detection stuff, anyhow?'''


The strength of zoneminder lies in its motion detection (thus the 'zone' in zoneminder, being the motion detection zones). See: [https://wiki.zoneminder.com/Understanding_ZoneMinder%27s_Zoning_system_for_Dummies  Understanding Zoneminder's Zoning system for Dummies]
The challenge of all surveillance systems lies in its motion detection analysis (thus the 'zone' in zoneminder, being the motion detection zones). See: [https://wiki.zoneminder.com/Understanding_ZoneMinder%27s_Zoning_system_for_Dummies  Understanding Zoneminder's Zoning system for Dummies]. Zones have their gotchas, and you may want to consider ZMES. Like AI, expect 90% but do not ever expect 100%. You will need hardware motion sensors for 100%.


Start with the most sensitive settings, and make them less sensitive until no false alarms are recorded. Night IR detects more false events than daylight. Monitoring for all alarms can easily be done by <code>$ tail -f /var/log/syslog</code> in Devuan based distros.
'''Help, I missed an event!?'''


Or you can record everything, if modect isn't working. Mocord will combine both modect and record, having everything recorded, but making a graph where motion occurs (in '''show timeline'''). Mocord is the best, but uses more HDD. Beware of running into issues with [[PurgeWhenFull]] not able to keep up.
You can re run analysis on old videos with: https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=24686 and https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=28013&p=109190  You can re-create videos from your (JPEG ONLY) footage, and then reanalyze them. (those with ffmpeg mp4s created, may need to combine the footage into one video, then make that a video source in zm as file.).


See also: https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=31355 to run zm on files on the server filesystem.


'''Why motion detection?'''


Using modect or mocord is '''recommended''' here. Because you are able to click from the main zm index - events - '''show timeline''', and from there quickly review your modect events. Because you save HDD space. And [[SMS Notifications]] and [[ZMTrigger]] can be setup off of modect alarms (the latter requiring either modect, mocord, or nodect).


'''Sizing Zones Tip'''
<pre>My first thought is the threshold is too low. It happened to me when I
first started with ZM. I figured out a little trick:


'''Any downsides?'''
Draw a new zone a little smaller than you appear in the video. The zone
will tell you the number of pixels or the percent of the whole frame.
Compare that to the size you have setup to detect. If you are using
percent try changing to pixels, that will not require the math to adjust
the percent.</pre>
ref: http://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=40&t=30570


Zones must be tuned to be sensitive enough to see all events, but not so sensitive as to detect false alarms. This requires work, and is not guaranteed to work 100% even after tweaking.
'''I'm still getting false alerts!'''


You may want to run [[ZMES]]. It's not too difficult to setup, but it will require more resources.
See https://wiki.zoneminder.com/ZMES


'''Tips'''
====Example Zone====
[[File:Filters example.png|300px|thumb|right|Basic zone for a 320x240 stream that won't miss events. Though it will still detect false ones without ZMES.]]
Start out with Best, High Sensitivity. Change to pixels instead of percent, and start around 500 (or even 200 depending on whether you are around 640x480 or 320x240). This is a good start, but it may still require [[ZMES]]. For bounding boxes, you should try to use rectangles or squares. I believe someone in the forum mentioned this will save on calculation of the CPU, but regardless, it just looks better. Use the boxes in the bottom to line up X and Y appropriately. See image.


*Zones should be as small as possible, and you should use as few zones per monitor, to lower CPU usage.
===Zone Tips===
*If you see events with 1 or 2 alarm frames occuring, you can make a background filter to delete these.
*Aggressive Modect usage can run into issues with [[PurgeWhenFull]], beware.
*Transitions from [https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=36&t=27141 daylight to IR] cause false alarms. The solution is to "Set a max alarmed area so it doesn't alarm if the whole area is changing".
*I prefer the usage of external hardware motion sensors via [[ZMTrigger]] over modect. Less CPU, and more reliable / flexible.


 
* Zones should be as small as possible, and you should use as few zones per monitor, to lower CPU usage.
'''Conclusion'''
* Analysis FPS can be limited to 2 FPS to lower CPU usage. '''IMPORTANT''' (do not limit Max FPS, only analysis).
 
* Aggressive Modect usage can run into issues with [[PurgeWhenFull]]
After all is said and done, motion detection works but has limitations. Motion detection tends to report false alarms from weather, wildlife, changing from IR to Day sensor, and others. For users that need accurate motion detection, you will either need to A) tune the zones so that no false alarms occur (see [https://wiki.zoneminder.com/Understanding_ZoneMinder%27s_Zoning_system_for_Dummies  Understanding Zoneminder's Zoning system for Dummies]) or B) use the cameras built in motion detection or C) use external motion sensors with [[ZMTrigger]] or some combination of the above.
* Transitions from [https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=36&t=27141 daylight to IR] cause false alarms. The solution is to "Set a max alarmed area so it doesn't alarm if the whole area is changing" or use ZMES.
* You can use external hardware motion sensors via [[ZMTrigger]] over modect, when high reliability / low false alarms is required. More setup cost / time though.
* JPEG saving, should be avoided on H264 streams when possible. Use H264 passthrough. Consider how decoding the H264 stream to JPEG uses CPU, while passthrough will avoid this conversion step.
* From forum: "In zones, switch to pixels, reduce minimum area/pixels/blobs etc to less than 1000. I find either 500 or 1000 works well."


==Hardware Advice==
==Hardware Advice==


When setting up the cameras, here is some advice.
When setting up the cameras, here is some advice.
* Use fuses on the PSU output to the cameras, if using passive POE adaptors.
* Don't do anything but 802.3af POE. Passive POE is more trouble than its worth. There are 5/8 port POE switches, use those.
* Use barrel plug splitters, and use one 12V PSU. (i.e. a barrel plug that is a 1 to 5 splitter). Cameras in my experience use around 200-400mA of current at 12V (400mA is when IR LEDs are on).
* If you purchase axis cameras, be aware that the cameras are 5V and the barrel plug is 4.0mm x 1.7mm. It's easiest to use POE on these (and all cameras actually).
* If you purchase axis cameras, be aware that the cameras are 5V and the barrel plug is 4.0mm x 1.7mm. It's easiest to use POE on these.
* Installing areas where the temperature is high may cause early camera failure (especially for cheaper cameras). Even something as simple as a corner of an enclosed room where the heater runs / sun shines all day may be enough heat. Cameras can be damaged by direct sunlight.
* Installing areas where the temperature is high may cause early camera failure (especially for cheaper cameras). Even something as simple as a corner of an enclosed room where the sun shines all day may be enough heat.


==Troubleshooting==
==Troubleshooting==
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* Enable component logs and navigate to /var/log/zm/.
* Enable component logs and navigate to /var/log/zm/.
* Enable debug logs on a part of ZM, and set path to /var/log/zm/zm_element_debug+ (note you must set the path to /var/log/zm or it will put the debug files in the root home folder.


* <code># tail -F /var/log/syslog</code>
* <code># tail -F /var/log/syslog</code>
* <code># multitail -du -s 5 /var/log/zm/*</code>


* Beware of underlying hardware faults such as bad RAM.
* Beware of underlying hardware faults such as bad RAM.
* Disable logs after you are done.


==Notes==
==Notes==
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* Some cams will have two video streams (e.g. Hikvision, Amcrest). The resolutions/video type may or may not be the same. For example, there may be a low resolution mjpeg stream, and a high resolution RTSP stream. Read the data sheet / user manual for cameras you intend to purchase.
* Some cams will have two video streams (e.g. Hikvision, Amcrest). The resolutions/video type may or may not be the same. For example, there may be a low resolution mjpeg stream, and a high resolution RTSP stream. Read the data sheet / user manual for cameras you intend to purchase. Multiple streams are desirable. On Axis cameras, you can simply specify the resolution at the end of the path, e.g. &resolution=320x240, (certain model) Foscams have videoMain, and videoSub. There are different variations. One hikvision even had 3(!) streams.


* I found it helpful to include monitor ID in camera names, as you run into monitor ID in logs often.
* I found it helpful to include monitor ID in camera names, as you run into monitor ID in logs often.
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* With server motherboard hardware, you will be able to have more cameras (servers are more powerful, and better servers will have better performance).
* With server motherboard hardware, you will be able to have more cameras (servers are more powerful, and better servers will have better performance).


* I use ext4 filesystem for the HDDs. I had tried using ext2 filesystem for better performance, but the fsck time is prohibatively slow for ext2 (>24 hours for >2TB). Ext4 seems to work well. Older ext2, or ext3 fs can be upgraded to ext4.
* I use ext4 filesystem for the HDDs. I had tried using ext2 filesystem for better performance, but the fsck time is prohibatively slow for ext2 (>24 hours for >2TB). Ext4 seems to work well. Older ext2, or ext3 fs can be upgraded to ext4. Other filesystems are generally, not recommended. Ext4 works fine. You have been warned.
 
* If you have more than 6 cameras you may want to setup multi-port as an alternative to firefox about:config edits. See: https://medium.com/zmninja/multi-port-storage-areas-and-more-d5836a336c93    Note: article written by zm dev. See also [[Multi_Port]]
 
* See [[Multi_Port]]
 
* Edit /etc/default/rcS (applies to devuan/trisquel) and make sure auto FSCK is enabled. Failure to set this, will require manual intervention when the server is repairing the filesystem, requiring you to press a key.
 
* Make sure the BIOS is set to power on after power fails.
 
* Don't set a Max FPS limit on REMOTE or FFMPEG, or VLC cameras in Zoneminder. The FPS should only to be set at the IP camera itself. Max FPS limiting is for LOCAL cameras, only.


* When viewing the cameras in Firefox, once you get more than 6 cameras from ZM on the browser Firefox will not display the seventh. This is due to a limit of Firefox and can be adjusted in about:config. See: [https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=32&t=23417&p=89249  ZM Forums: Problems when two people are watching live] [http://kb.mozillazine.org/Network.http.max-persistent-connections-per-server Network.http.max-persistent-connections-per-server]. This max persistent connections per server must be > 6 in order to see > 6 camera streams.
* Do NOT point cameras at bright light, such as facing a window, a garage door, or anything that generates glare. It will blur the image / potentially damage the camera's image sensor.


* Adding "< /dev/null" to the ffmpeg path used by ZM seems to fix some issues. See [https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=32&t=23861&p=91771  ZM Forums: Truncated Video Export]
* Buy a set of adapters such as these: to use with your normal 5.5 2.1mm barrel plug. Search multi type 23 or 28 dc power adapter. EDIT: actually only use poe (but picture left as these are useful).


* If you are going to use a BT878 based card, you can add a heatsink onto the top of all *878 chips. This has been mentioned in the [https://forums.zoneminder.com/search.php?keywords=heatsink+bt878 forums in various spots], Use a ruler, and measure the dimensions in mm, then purchase one on digikey. A heatsink attached to the plastic of the IC, instead of the actual IC die is not ideal, but it will help. EDIT: I'm not sure if this is necessary, in hindsight. Also consider a video encoder instead of a BT878 card (e.g. search auction sites for 1 or 2 or 4 channel video encoder).
[[File:Universal-28pcs-5-5x2-1mm-Multi-type-Male-Jack-for-DC-Plugs-for-AC-Power-Adapter.jpg 640x640.jpg|200px|Coaxial barrel plug adaptors||Universal 28pcx Multi type Male Jack for DC Plugs]]


* Edit /etc/default/rcS (applies to devuan/trisquel) and make sure auto FSCK is enabled. Failure to set this, will require manual intervention when the server is repairing the filesystem, requiring you to press a key.
* I made a script to watch cameras that drop out, and disable/re-enable them for my 1.29 setup. See [https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=26909 here]. This also doubles as a notification in case the cameras somehow are powered off. You'll get emails telling you cameras are down. EDIT: See note about poorly supported cameras above. With good cameras, this does not occur. Rabbit hole warning. Stick with quality name brands.
 
* If you are setting up mobile phones with ZMNinja, and the wifi is the same WAN IP as the camera system, setup a VPS with a http/https proxy and point zmninja at the proxy. The proxy can be as simple as:
<pre>
sudo iptables-legacy -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 80 -j
DNAT --to-destination <officeip>:80
sudo iptables-legacy -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 443 -j
DNAT --to-destination <officeip>:443
sudo iptables-legacy -t nat -A POSTROUTING -j MASQUERADE
</pre>
Note that you might want to set nonstandard ports.
 
* run 2k cameras at least for business customers. People like hi res. You should have a low res, and a hi res stream. The hi res is record only with no analysis or decoding (using passthrough). The low res is mocord and the one they watch on ZMNinja or the console.
 
* the more you overbuild the cpu, the faster you can go.
 
* use zmninja + the website. offer customers both apps. there are also some other apps available. (e.g. possibly zmsquarer).


* Make sure the BIOS is set to reboot after power fails.
* For old coax cameras, buy a coax to ethernet adapter such as the ebridge series by Altronix. These allow use of an ip camera on a coax link. Or, better yet just run ethernet.


* Set colourspace to 32-bit for a possible performance boost.
*https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?p=130577&hilit=1.37#p130577 See this note about slow playback in ZM < 1.37.


* Don't set an FPS limit on REMOTE or FFMPEG, or VLC cameras in Zoneminder. The FPS should only to be set at the IP camera itself. FPS limiting is for LOCAL cameras, only.
* For numerous camera setups (10+), you will make your life easier if you deploy all the same model of camera or at least the same resolution. This way you can reuse zone settings across the db.


* With larger camera setups (one 10, one >20 cameras) I needed to change the watchdog timer (/usr/bin/zmwatch.pl) from the default of 10 seconds to 30 or 60 seconds in order to avoid periodic drop outs of individual cameras. The cameras would drop, and not return, unless i restarted zoneminder or disabled and enabled that camera. This setting is managed in options - system. If you see dropouts after that, review /usr/bin/zmwatch.pl and insert additional logging. You can also add a hack to the API so that if cameras drop out they are restarted. See documentation of ZM API. For my setups, they typically drop out once a day on specific cameras. Other cameras will never drop out.
* fine tune zones with scripts on zm  https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?t=31355&p=124557#p124557 make 24 hour sequence, and fix ir false alarms


* Do NOT point cameras at bright light, such as facing a window, a garage door, or anything that generates glare. It will blur the image.
* Always make sure you have a cellphone to test the alignment of the camera. Nothing beats being able to adjust the camera while looking at the feed.


* Best buy a set of adaptors such as these: to use with your normal 5.5 2.1mm barrel plug. Search multi type 23 or 28 dc power adapter.
* Wireguard and remote cameras may need some tuning. Or you can bypass VPNs altogether. https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?p=135840


[[File:Universal-28pcs-5-5x2-1mm-Multi-type-Male-Jack-for-DC-Plugs-for-AC-Power-Adapter.jpg 640x640.jpg|200px|Coaxial barrel plug adaptors||Universal 28pcx Multi type Male Jack for DC Plugs]]
* If you use ZMNinja, and have the API wan accessible, you may want to consider the security hardening listed on [[ZMNinja]].


* I made a script to watch cameras that drop out, and disable/reenable them for my 1.29 setup. See [https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=26909 here]. This also doubles as a notification in case the cameras somehow are powered off. You'll get emails telling you cameras are down.
* Video playback performance will always be better via VLC or mpv as opposed to the ZM web interface. Read: https://wiki.zoneminder.com/Filters#Create_Single_Video_of_Multiple_Events


==See Also==
==See Also==


*[[Cron]] example
* [[API]]
 
* [[Cron]] example


* [[Dedicated SBC Camera Monitor]] Guides for using a Beaglebone Black or Desktop as a client to watch the ZM Server.
* [[Dedicated SBC Camera Monitor]] Guides for using a Beaglebone Black or Desktop as a client to watch the ZM Server.


*[[Example Camera View HTML]] A quick html file you can deploy on clients to watch the server.
* [[Docker]]
 
* [[External Live Stream]] A quick html file you can deploy on clients to watch the server.
 
* [[Exporting Videos Hack]] (not recommended)
 
* [[Filters]] Examples


*[[Exporting Videos Hack]] (not recommended)
* [[Finding Camera Stream Paths]]


*[[Finding Camera Stream Paths]]
* [[ffmpeg]] Example usage, and notes.


*[[MJPEG_vs_H264]] For ZM < 1.31, use MJPEG for large deployments
* https://wiki.zoneminder.com/How_to_view_recorded_history_from_show_timeline
 
* [[LibVNC]] Screen recording in Zoneminder
 
* [[Multi_Port]] For streaming more than 6 cameras at once to a browser.


* [[MySQL]] can require some optimizing, and there are potential gotchas. Though newer releases of Zoneminder may have resolved some of the issues.
* [[MySQL]] can require some optimizing, and there are potential gotchas. Though newer releases of Zoneminder may have resolved some of the issues.
*[[OpenVPN]] tips


* [[PurgeWhenFull]] requires configuration on larger systems, or systems where events are created at a pace faster than PurgeWhenFull can keep up. Failure to do so, will result in all events being blank, and you will have to fix it.
* [[PurgeWhenFull]] requires configuration on larger systems, or systems where events are created at a pace faster than PurgeWhenFull can keep up. Failure to do so, will result in all events being blank, and you will have to fix it.
Line 250: Line 319:


* [[Zmodopipe]] Is a tool that can tie an analog DVR system to Zoneminder, although it is far from perfect. I have documented it there, and recommend purchasing a (some #) channel video encoder instead.
* [[Zmodopipe]] Is a tool that can tie an analog DVR system to Zoneminder, although it is far from perfect. I have documented it there, and recommend purchasing a (some #) channel video encoder instead.
* [[ZMNinja]] - General usage, also Geoblocking w/apache.


* [[ZMTrigger]] is a tool that can be used to take outside information and overlay it onto the camera display. For example, you might take the temperature, or wind speed, and overlay it on a camera. It can also be used as external motion detection. Experience with electronics and microcontrollers such as AVRs, Pics, and the Arduino IDE are applicable here.
* [[ZMTrigger]] is a tool that can be used to take outside information and overlay it onto the camera display. For example, you might take the temperature, or wind speed, and overlay it on a camera. It can also be used as external motion detection. Experience with electronics and microcontrollers such as AVRs, Pics, and the Arduino IDE are applicable here.
Line 255: Line 326:
===Other Users===
===Other Users===


*[[How to share an USB camera from a remote ZM server to another ZM Server]]
* [[How to share an USB camera from a remote ZM server to another ZM Server]]
 
* [[General Notes]]
 
* https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=32&t=23815&hilit=i+run+this+script+every+night Backup DB script (Recommended)
 
* https://wiki.zoneminder.com/Ubuntu_Install_ZoneMinder_on_Ubuntu_Server Apache Hardening
 
* https://github.com/lbdc/zm_movie_bootstrap Create timelapse videos (adjust fps) or just export. Terminal or GUI. Good example of a basic ZM hack interfacing with db, and querying video files.
 
* [[AxisMotionDetection]] - for offloading motion detection on Axis cameras and using ZMTrigger to receive the alerts (will save CPU).
 
* https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?p=131662#p131662 - URL for users to login to.


*[[General Notes]]
* https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?t=31005&start=15 - Run cameras at low res, yet using passthrough to get full res with modect on the low res stream and live.


*[https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=32&t=23815&hilit=i+run+this+script+every+night Backup DB script (Recommended)]
* https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?t=31355 - Rerun a video through the zones to tune them.


*[[Ffmpeg]]
[[Category:Dummies_Guide]]

Latest revision as of 21:55, 31 October 2024

This is a lot of what I know about surveillance cameras and ZM.

If you wish to view the full ZM Documentation, I recommend viewing it through the PDF view, as the sphinx website is not efficient and requires javascript. PDF View: https://readthedocs.org/projects/zoneminder/downloads/pdf/stable/ If you want a hard copy, you can order the documentation through a self publishing service like lulu.com

Zoneminder is a powerful tool, but it has a learning curve. The forums are there to answer questions. Search then post if its not already answered.

On the learning curve: It can be some work (depending on how complex your system is), but you will become a proficient gnulinux sysadmin if you familiarize yourself with ZM and its many features. If you buy an off the shelf DVR you won't learn nearly as much (if anything). Additionally, these skills are valuable for 'any' Unix-based server (DB, website, email server, kiosk, etc).

If you are already knowledgeable about unix based computers, then you shouldn't have any trouble.

Install

Use the install guides provided by Bbunge on the wiki: Zoneminder Wiki: Contents These are the best supported install guides.

Debian is recommended. Ubuntu always has problems with updates.

Even numbers are stable. Use those. Odd numbers are testing/development.

Here's a guide for using an external HDD: Using a dedicated Hard Drive

Test out a Camera

Once you get ZM installed, you will want to test out a camera. You can do a webcam, or you can do an IP camera. See the Hardware_Compatibility_List

I recommend you start with an early Axis. They are well documented and easy to setup. Old ones go for $10-20. Follow the instructions on either the Zoneminder Hardware compatibility list, on ispyconnect's url list, or in the user manual for the camera. Any respectable camera will document it's RTSP and MJPEG / JPG paths for you to access. ONVIF is also an option to find the path for RTSP cameras. This is covered in more detail in Finding Camera Stream Paths.


Follow the instructions in the Hardware Compatibility List for parameters for setting up a camera the first time. If you have an error, look at the logs. FFMPEG and VLC can be used to test that the streams are valid. e.g. from terminal: ffmpeg -i rtsp://username:password@<ipaddress>:554/path output.mp4 This is faster than using ZM.

In ZM, IP address, path, port, and Resolution must be correct. Most other fields can be left at defaults.

Use vlc or ffplay like this:

ffplay http://192.168.1.5/mjpg/video.mjpg
or ffmpeg
ffmpeg -i http://192.168.1.5/mjpg/video.mjpg output.mp4
or
ffplay rtsp://<user>:<pass>@<hostname/ip>:554/axis-media/media.amp?videocodec=h264&resolution=320x240
or 
ffprobe rtsp://<user>:<pass>@<hostname/ip>:554/axis-media/media.amp?videocodec=h264

If the camera requires authorization, consult the user manual, or you can try adding the username and password before the ip like so username:password@ipaddress This is an alternative to 192.168.1.5?username=root&pwd=mypass which most guides tell you to do. Both will work, however the former is easier.

If pass is blank, you type in root:@192.168.1.5

RTSP usually specifies the port and uses rtsp, instead of http. e.g. rtsp://user:password@192.168.1.10:554/somepath

Obtaining more Cameras

In ZoneMinder, when you add a camera, you have a few options:

  • LOCAL Camera connected directly to computer (webcam, or analog camera thorugh bttv card)(typically /dev/video0)
  • REMOTE (obsolete) Precursor to ffmpeg.
  • FILE Grab a jpg file somewhere locally and display that (you provide images that change from anywhere on the filesystem). Can be used in unusual ways (i.e. a slide show, <insert use here>).
  • FFMPEG and LIBVLC use the respective libraries to pull a stream similar to REMOTE does for RTSP only. They can also watch MJPEG streams and the former can loop local video files.

And some others...

FFMPEG / LibVLC is recommended. Don't confuse LibVNC with LibVLC. LibVNC is for recording VNC (i.e. screenrecording).

FFMPEG has the option of RTSP (h264) or MJPEG streams.


MJPEG

Older cameras from 2000's. E.g.Arecont Vision, Axis, Bosch, Foscam, Grandstream, Instar, Messoa, Zavio and others. The prices scale with features. Old indoor Axis cameras at 480p-720p resolution (no IR) can be found online easily for $10-30. These are generally obsolete.

RTSP

2010's and newer cameras: These cameras use h264 (or h265) compression. They serve it on an RTSP server. h264 means less bytes, so you end up using less HDD space than compared with MJPEG. H264 is recommended when possible.

Note: Users with 1.32+ can use H264 passthrough, which writes the h264 direct to mp4, and saves some CPU usage. .

How Powerful of a Computer to Use

High-end server hardware will perform better than desktop, or low end server hardware. I have seen this firsthand between two servers: KFSN4-DRE and the KGPE-D16. The latter runs ZM with 25+ cameras, not breaking a sweat. The former reaches a limit at about 10. Another limitation is HDD size.

I currently recommend buying Axis (new is expensive, so you'll probably purchase used), although many do not have IR. This is not a problem, as outdoors IR on cameras attracts spider webs, and external IR is recommended. Another recommended brand is Hikvision. Hikvision can be bought new for a lower price if warranty is an issue (for business clients that can't afford Axis). The cameras work well with ZM, and are configurable without Windows, Otherwise, any respectable name brand camera will work. Look through the hardware compatibility list. Read the user manual before you purchase the camera, and look for the following: Outdoors/indoors, IR/no-IR, Resolution. IR can be supplemented with external appliances. You can also put pesticide on the cameras to deter bugs... (although I wouldn't).

A note on Analog Cameras

There is an option to use a coax to ethernet adapter. You need two pieces. One is the sender, one is the receiver. They may or may not be identical. These allow the use of IP Cameras over coax. Search ebay. Altronix ebridge ones are about $120 for a pair or adapters (you need a pair for each camera). If this is too much money, you may keep the old coax cameras. See: IP Video Encoders [1]. Honestly, just run ethernet if you have a chance. Customers expect HD these days.

I have not worked with HD analog over coax, and I don't recommend it. I did try to keep old coax cameras but they became obsolete. IP cameras are the way to go.

Watching the Cameras

Cameras can be watched from the ZM apache server website and/or ZMNinja.

For business customers offer both choices to the customer. Or build something custom if you like. HTML imagemaps work well.

You can make fully customizable pages i.e. make an html file on a remote machine with the following code embedded in an img tag. Adjust monitor ID as needed. How to stream from another ZoneMinder installation. Also an easy way to embed video in a website (img tag). See Dedicated SBC Camera Monitor for an example of a computer that only displays the streams. [[2]] has the HTML code for API/non-API usage.

If you embed the URL in an img tag, include http prefix or it wont work.

img width="500px" height="500px" src="http://zmserveripaddress/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=jpeg&monitor=#&scale=100&maxfps=5&user=username&pass=password"

Call it locally:

firefox file:///home/username/file.html

When you have > 6 cameras, you can either use firefox and edit about:config (explained below in guide), or see https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?t=28168&p=113934#p113934 for instructions regarding multi port.

Watch the scale parameter. That can be adjusted for clients with low power CPUs (ARM SBCs) if whole img boxes seem to drop out. Note that scale does require some CPU on the server side.

One note: If you have alternative high/low resolution cameras (motion detect on the low res, record on the high res). You might not want customers to view the low res cameras. In this case, make a group of the high res cameras, and set that to be the default view.

Embedding ZM in a webpage

Example Camera View HTML

Embedding Streaming Video in External Website from Forums

https://wiki.zoneminder.com/External_Live_Stream#Imagemap_of_Cameras - Highly recommended for medium / large installations.

Monitor Settings in Zoneminder

The zmc binary handles recording and analysis (1.36).

   * use full res stream as the source
   * set camera in zm to use passthrough (not decode) (must be h264, not h265).
   * set resolution in zm to be lower than the actual stream. if you have a 2,3,or 4K stream, 
     set it to somewhere around 320x240 or 640x480. Note that it must be the same aspect ratio (so 
     some fraction of the original stream, e.g. 1920x1080 would be 480x270).
   * set analysis fps to 2
   * mode can be modect or mocord. I prefer modect with some exceptions.
   * set the zone similar to the example zone image below.

By doing this you will get a low res live view and analysis, but the recorded videos will be full res when watched. This is the easiest way to setup ZM. You can also use linked monitors or have multiple streams, but neither of those options are worth the trouble. Note that there may be a warning in ZM about the stream not matching the resolution but that can be ignored (it is a warning, not an error). This has been discussed on the forums, search there for further details.

https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=31334&p=124410

In ZM 1.32+, you can use multiple HDs (as many as you like), and assign cameras to where they should be saved. These are storage areas

Motion Detection

What's all this motion detection stuff, anyhow?

The challenge of all surveillance systems lies in its motion detection analysis (thus the 'zone' in zoneminder, being the motion detection zones). See: Understanding Zoneminder's Zoning system for Dummies. Zones have their gotchas, and you may want to consider ZMES. Like AI, expect 90% but do not ever expect 100%. You will need hardware motion sensors for 100%.

Help, I missed an event!?

You can re run analysis on old videos with: https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=24686 and https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=28013&p=109190 You can re-create videos from your (JPEG ONLY) footage, and then reanalyze them. (those with ffmpeg mp4s created, may need to combine the footage into one video, then make that a video source in zm as file.).

See also: https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=31355 to run zm on files on the server filesystem.


Sizing Zones Tip

My first thought is the threshold is too low. It happened to me when I 
first started with ZM. I figured out a little trick:

Draw a new zone a little smaller than you appear in the video. The zone 
will tell you the number of pixels or the percent of the whole frame. 
Compare that to the size you have setup to detect. If you are using 
percent try changing to pixels, that will not require the math to adjust 
the percent.

ref: http://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=40&t=30570

I'm still getting false alerts!

You may want to run ZMES. It's not too difficult to setup, but it will require more resources. See https://wiki.zoneminder.com/ZMES

Example Zone

Basic zone for a 320x240 stream that won't miss events. Though it will still detect false ones without ZMES.

Start out with Best, High Sensitivity. Change to pixels instead of percent, and start around 500 (or even 200 depending on whether you are around 640x480 or 320x240). This is a good start, but it may still require ZMES. For bounding boxes, you should try to use rectangles or squares. I believe someone in the forum mentioned this will save on calculation of the CPU, but regardless, it just looks better. Use the boxes in the bottom to line up X and Y appropriately. See image.

Zone Tips

  • Zones should be as small as possible, and you should use as few zones per monitor, to lower CPU usage.
  • Analysis FPS can be limited to 2 FPS to lower CPU usage. IMPORTANT (do not limit Max FPS, only analysis).
  • Aggressive Modect usage can run into issues with PurgeWhenFull
  • Transitions from daylight to IR cause false alarms. The solution is to "Set a max alarmed area so it doesn't alarm if the whole area is changing" or use ZMES.
  • You can use external hardware motion sensors via ZMTrigger over modect, when high reliability / low false alarms is required. More setup cost / time though.
  • JPEG saving, should be avoided on H264 streams when possible. Use H264 passthrough. Consider how decoding the H264 stream to JPEG uses CPU, while passthrough will avoid this conversion step.
  • From forum: "In zones, switch to pixels, reduce minimum area/pixels/blobs etc to less than 1000. I find either 500 or 1000 works well."

Hardware Advice

When setting up the cameras, here is some advice.

  • Don't do anything but 802.3af POE. Passive POE is more trouble than its worth. There are 5/8 port POE switches, use those.
  • If you purchase axis cameras, be aware that the cameras are 5V and the barrel plug is 4.0mm x 1.7mm. It's easiest to use POE on these (and all cameras actually).
  • Installing areas where the temperature is high may cause early camera failure (especially for cheaper cameras). Even something as simple as a corner of an enclosed room where the heater runs / sun shines all day may be enough heat. Cameras can be damaged by direct sunlight.

Troubleshooting

  • Watch logs.
  • Use forum search.
  • Use web search.
  • Enable component logs and navigate to /var/log/zm/.
  • Enable debug logs on a part of ZM, and set path to /var/log/zm/zm_element_debug+ (note you must set the path to /var/log/zm or it will put the debug files in the root home folder.
  • # tail -F /var/log/syslog
  • # multitail -du -s 5 /var/log/zm/*
  • Beware of underlying hardware faults such as bad RAM.
  • Disable logs after you are done.

Notes

  • Some cams will have two video streams (e.g. Hikvision, Amcrest). The resolutions/video type may or may not be the same. For example, there may be a low resolution mjpeg stream, and a high resolution RTSP stream. Read the data sheet / user manual for cameras you intend to purchase. Multiple streams are desirable. On Axis cameras, you can simply specify the resolution at the end of the path, e.g. &resolution=320x240, (certain model) Foscams have videoMain, and videoSub. There are different variations. One hikvision even had 3(!) streams.
  • I found it helpful to include monitor ID in camera names, as you run into monitor ID in logs often.
  • Proprietary cameras are known to report to outside IPs. Don't give them internet access. Only the server should be wan-accessible. Make a separate network.
  • Many cameras have default telnet passwords, in addition to the default web access passwords. Change these or keep cameras away from the wan. Cameras are common botnet targets.
  • With server motherboard hardware, you will be able to have more cameras (servers are more powerful, and better servers will have better performance).
  • I use ext4 filesystem for the HDDs. I had tried using ext2 filesystem for better performance, but the fsck time is prohibatively slow for ext2 (>24 hours for >2TB). Ext4 seems to work well. Older ext2, or ext3 fs can be upgraded to ext4. Other filesystems are generally, not recommended. Ext4 works fine. You have been warned.
  • Edit /etc/default/rcS (applies to devuan/trisquel) and make sure auto FSCK is enabled. Failure to set this, will require manual intervention when the server is repairing the filesystem, requiring you to press a key.
  • Make sure the BIOS is set to power on after power fails.
  • Don't set a Max FPS limit on REMOTE or FFMPEG, or VLC cameras in Zoneminder. The FPS should only to be set at the IP camera itself. Max FPS limiting is for LOCAL cameras, only.
  • Do NOT point cameras at bright light, such as facing a window, a garage door, or anything that generates glare. It will blur the image / potentially damage the camera's image sensor.
  • Buy a set of adapters such as these: to use with your normal 5.5 2.1mm barrel plug. Search multi type 23 or 28 dc power adapter. EDIT: actually only use poe (but picture left as these are useful).

Universal 28pcx Multi type Male Jack for DC Plugs

  • I made a script to watch cameras that drop out, and disable/re-enable them for my 1.29 setup. See here. This also doubles as a notification in case the cameras somehow are powered off. You'll get emails telling you cameras are down. EDIT: See note about poorly supported cameras above. With good cameras, this does not occur. Rabbit hole warning. Stick with quality name brands.
  • If you are setting up mobile phones with ZMNinja, and the wifi is the same WAN IP as the camera system, setup a VPS with a http/https proxy and point zmninja at the proxy. The proxy can be as simple as:
sudo iptables-legacy -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 80 -j 
DNAT --to-destination <officeip>:80
sudo iptables-legacy -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 443 -j 
DNAT --to-destination <officeip>:443
sudo iptables-legacy -t nat -A POSTROUTING -j MASQUERADE

Note that you might want to set nonstandard ports.

  • run 2k cameras at least for business customers. People like hi res. You should have a low res, and a hi res stream. The hi res is record only with no analysis or decoding (using passthrough). The low res is mocord and the one they watch on ZMNinja or the console.
  • the more you overbuild the cpu, the faster you can go.
  • use zmninja + the website. offer customers both apps. there are also some other apps available. (e.g. possibly zmsquarer).
  • For old coax cameras, buy a coax to ethernet adapter such as the ebridge series by Altronix. These allow use of an ip camera on a coax link. Or, better yet just run ethernet.
  • For numerous camera setups (10+), you will make your life easier if you deploy all the same model of camera or at least the same resolution. This way you can reuse zone settings across the db.
  • Always make sure you have a cellphone to test the alignment of the camera. Nothing beats being able to adjust the camera while looking at the feed.
  • If you use ZMNinja, and have the API wan accessible, you may want to consider the security hardening listed on ZMNinja.

See Also

  • ffmpeg Example usage, and notes.
  • LibVNC Screen recording in Zoneminder
  • Multi_Port For streaming more than 6 cameras at once to a browser.
  • MySQL can require some optimizing, and there are potential gotchas. Though newer releases of Zoneminder may have resolved some of the issues.
  • PurgeWhenFull requires configuration on larger systems, or systems where events are created at a pace faster than PurgeWhenFull can keep up. Failure to do so, will result in all events being blank, and you will have to fix it.
  • Zmodopipe Is a tool that can tie an analog DVR system to Zoneminder, although it is far from perfect. I have documented it there, and recommend purchasing a (some #) channel video encoder instead.
  • ZMNinja - General usage, also Geoblocking w/apache.
  • ZMTrigger is a tool that can be used to take outside information and overlay it onto the camera display. For example, you might take the temperature, or wind speed, and overlay it on a camera. It can also be used as external motion detection. Experience with electronics and microcontrollers such as AVRs, Pics, and the Arduino IDE are applicable here.

Other Users

  • AxisMotionDetection - for offloading motion detection on Axis cameras and using ZMTrigger to receive the alerts (will save CPU).