Difference between revisions of "MySQL"
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== | ==Setup== | ||
MySQL (or MariaDB) creates a db named zm after ZoneMinder is installed. | MySQL (or MariaDB) creates a db named zm after ZoneMinder is installed. | ||
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</pre> | </pre> | ||
There are some .sql setup scripts. And typically, permissions are granted for zmuser to access the zm database. This may or may not be done manually depending on what install guide you follow. It is recommended to use the guides here: [[Debian]] or [[Ubuntu]]. Sometimes things break, and you will need to rebuild the database, so for reference the steps are kept below (example from Debian): | |||
mysql -u root -p < /usr/share/zoneminder/db/zm_create.sql | mysql -u root -p < /usr/share/zoneminder/db/zm_create.sql | ||
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==Backup== | ==Backup== | ||
There are two options: 1) Backup the full database. 2) Backup only the configuration. | |||
See | |||
For 1), It does not backup any videos or images. So you will have a copy of all metadata referring to events, yet the video files on the filesystem will not be saved. If it's necessary to have an offsite backup, you may want to consider a VPS as storage. Amazon S3FS support is built into Zoneminder and that is one option. Though it can be as simple as rsync-ing videos to a network share. See [https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=32&t=23815 link on the forums] | |||
For 2), the config saved will allow you to restore all the camera configuration, zones, filters, runstates, etc... It will not, however save any event data, nor will it save any videos. If you have a hardware failure, you will lose all camera footage, and event data. For less critical installations, this is acceptable. Since most events are exported shortly after they happen, most users will want to use option 2. | |||
/usr/bin/zmaudit.pl is usually recommended to be run to cleanup some broken database to filesystem references. | |||
===Full Backup=== | ===Full Backup=== | ||
This may take a while. It is recommended to stop the Zoneminder service while this backup is running. | |||
mysqldump -u root zm > zmdb.sql | mysqldump -u root zm > zmdb.sql | ||
'''Restore''' | '''Restore''' | ||
mysql -u root zm < zmdb.sql | mysql -u root zm < zmdb.sql | ||
===Backup config only=== | ===Backup config only=== | ||
This will run quickly: usually less than a second. The Zoneminder service does not need to be stopped. | |||
<pre>DATE="$(date +'%D'|sed 's/\//_/g')" | <pre>DATE="$(date +'%D'|sed 's/\//_/g')" | ||
mysqldump -u root zm --ignore-table=zm.Events --ignore-table=zm.Frames --ignore-table=zm.Logs --ignore-table=zm.Stats --ignore-table=zm.Events_Day --ignore-table=zm.Events_Hour --ignore-table=zm.Events_Month --ignore-table=zm.Events_Week --ignore-table=zm.Event_Summaries > zmdb_configonly_$DATE.sql | mysqldump -u root zm --ignore-table=zm.Events --ignore-table=zm.Frames --ignore-table=zm.Logs --ignore-table=zm.Stats --ignore-table=zm.Events_Day --ignore-table=zm.Events_Hour --ignore-table=zm.Events_Month --ignore-table=zm.Events_Week --ignore-table=zm.Event_Summaries > zmdb_configonly_$DATE.sql | ||
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'''Restore from config only or Recreate db''' | '''Restore from config only or Recreate db''' | ||
As mentioned above, if restoring to a new machine and starting from scratch, you will need to add permissions for zmuser to mysql. If you are restoring the config without the events table, you may need to recreate the db. | |||
mysql -u root -e "drop database zm;" | mysql -u root -e "drop database zm;" | ||
mysql -u root -e "create database zm;" | mysql -u root -e "create database zm;" | ||
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mysql -u root -e "grant all on zm.* to 'zmuser'@localhost identified by 'zmpass';" | mysql -u root -e "grant all on zm.* to 'zmuser'@localhost identified by 'zmpass';" | ||
You may also want to run zmupdate.pl -f to make sure the database is updated properly. | |||
===Regular Backups=== | ===Regular Backups=== | ||
You should use cron to do regular backups (where mysql_config_backup.sh is the script above, with chmod +x) . You may also want to keep copies offsite, in case of catastrophic hard drive failure. | |||
in /etc/crontab | in /etc/crontab | ||
0 12 1 * * root cd /home/user/zmbackups && /home/user/mysql_config_backup.sh | 0 12 1 * * root cd /home/user/zmbackups && /home/user/mysql_config_backup.sh | ||
==Example Queries== | ==Example Queries== | ||
Here are a number of MySQL queries that may be useful for Zoneminder. Often, accessing the database from the terminal will be faster than using the web gui. | |||
Here is an example of how you can change a parameter in the ZM database by logging into MySQL: | |||
mysql | su - root | ||
mysql -u root zm | |||
> show tables; | > show tables; | ||
> select * from Users | > select * from Users\G | ||
> update Users set MaxBandwidth = 'Low' where Username = 'user1'; | > update Users set MaxBandwidth = 'Low' where Username = 'user1'; | ||
A full list of db columns can be found in | Here is a one line command for changing a parameter without logging into MySQL. | ||
mysql -u root zm -e "update Monitors set DecoderHWAccelName = 'NULL' where DecoderHWAccelName = 'vaapi';" | |||
A full list of db columns can be found in the [https://www.github.com/zoneminder/zoneminder/ source code] under the db folder. If any of these queries fail, review the field names. Things change in the db from time to time. | |||
===Change Storage Area for Multiple Cameras=== | ===Change Storage Area for Multiple Cameras=== | ||
If you have multiple cameras set to a storage area. It would be tedious to manually update each one. | |||
Storage Area is the key StorageID in Monitors (1.32.3), therefore | Storage Area is the key StorageID in Monitors (1.32.3), therefore | ||
use tmux to view mysql | use tmux to view mysql | ||
select * from Monitors\G | select * from Monitors LIMIT 1\G #review fields | ||
select StorageId from Monitors \G #see current settings | |||
use ctrl-b pageup pagedn to navigate and review fields. | use ctrl-b pageup pagedn to navigate and review fields. | ||
press q to exit this view. | press q to exit this view. | ||
update Monitors set StorageId = 2 where StorageId = 0; | update Monitors set StorageId = 2 where StorageId = 0; | ||
In practice you would probably set specific monitors, not all of them. | |||
===Set all Cameras to Use H264 Encode=== | ===Set all Cameras to Use H264 Encode=== | ||
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update Monitors set VideoWriter = 1 where VideoWriter = 0; | update Monitors set VideoWriter = 1 where VideoWriter = 0; | ||
In 1.36 you should also set the following, otherwise HEVC aka H265 will be used. | In 1.36 you should also set the following, otherwise HEVC aka H265 will be used (H265 support in 2024 is still limited in browsers and not recommended). | ||
update Monitors set OutputCodec = 27; | update Monitors set OutputCodec = 27; | ||
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update Monitors set SaveJPEGs = 0 where SaveJPEGs = 3; | update Monitors set SaveJPEGs = 0 where SaveJPEGs = 3; | ||
Though, you may want to use passthrough instead of encode when possible. | Though, you may want to use passthrough instead of encode when possible. This example is more of an example of ZM SQL administration, not a recommendation for Zoneminder settings. | ||
===Set all cameras to limit zma to 2 FPS=== | ===Set all cameras to limit zma to 2 FPS=== | ||
Framerate in the analysis (previously zma) can be limited to lower CPU use. | |||
'''1.30.4 or older:''' | '''1.30.4 or older:''' | ||
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(1.34) | (1.34) | ||
UPDATE Monitors SET LabelFormat ="%N - %m-%d-%Y %H:%M:%S %z" WHERE LabelFormat ="%N - %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %z"; | UPDATE Monitors SET LabelFormat ="%N - %m-%d-%Y %H:%M:%S %z" WHERE LabelFormat ="%N - %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %z"; | ||
===Change All Cameras to Have mm/dd/yy and 12 hour / AM/PM in Timestamp=== | |||
(1.34) | |||
UPDATE Monitors SET LabelFormat ="%N - %m/%d/%Y %l:%M:%S %p" WHERE LabelFormat ="%N - %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %z"; | |||
The %z is for offset from GMT, which most people won't need. These can be found from the man page for date. | |||
Or: | |||
UPDATE Monitors SET LabelFormat ="%N - %m/%d/%Y %l:%M:%S %p" WHERE LabelFormat ="%N - %d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S"; | |||
You can review the existing Timestamps with: | |||
select LabelFormat from Monitors\G | |||
Zoneminder must be restarted for changes to take effect. | |||
'''Note''' that for fail2ban, you may want to use the '''DATETIME_OVERRIDE_PATTERN''' in options. See [[ZMNinja]]. | |||
===Check Value of AUTH_RELAY=== | ===Check Value of AUTH_RELAY=== | ||
If you set Auth relay to none, then it's possible to access cameras from wan via direct monitor link. So check any WAN accessible installations. | If you set Auth relay to none, then it's possible to access cameras from wan via a direct monitor link. So check any WAN accessible installations. | ||
cd zoneminder | cd zoneminder | ||
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This also means that you can get direct video URLs from a secure LAN without authentication, if desired. | This also means that you can get direct video URLs from a secure LAN without authentication, if desired. | ||
https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?t=28144&p=117900#p117900 | |||
===Add API/Mobile User with View Permissions=== | ===Add API/Mobile User with View Permissions=== | ||
mysql -u zmuser -p | mysql -u zmuser -p | ||
use zm; | use zm; | ||
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</small> | </small> | ||
===Delete User=== | |||
===Delete User | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
select * from Users where Username="Defunct User"\G | select * from Users where Username="Defunct User"\G | ||
delete from Users where Username="Defunct User"; | delete from Users where Username="Defunct User"; | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
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13 rows in set (3.46 sec) | 13 rows in set (3.46 sec) | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
http://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=40&p=119899&sid=c115f6a9443d70e8a4cb00c5e04883f8#p119899 | |||
===Disable Logging via cli=== | ===Disable Logging via cli=== | ||
Here is an example where mysql is scripted from the shell. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
#!/bin/bash | #!/bin/bash | ||
echo "Disabling logging by setting to -5 (1 for debug, -5 for nothing)" | echo "Disabling logging by setting to -5 (1 for debug, -5 for nothing)" | ||
mysql -u root | mysql -u root zm -e "Update Config set Value = '-5' where Name = 'ZM_LOG_LEVEL_SYSLOG';" | ||
mysql -u root | mysql -u root zm -e "Update Config set Value = '-5' where Name = 'ZM_LOG_LEVEL_FILE';" | ||
mysql -u root | mysql -u root zm -e "Update Config set Value = '-5' where Name = 'ZM_LOG_LEVEL_DATABASE';" | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
And restart zm. | And restart zm. | ||
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===Set all video lengths to be 1 hour=== | ===Set all video lengths to be 1 hour=== | ||
UPDATE Monitors SET SectionLength = "3600" where SectionLength = "600"; | UPDATE Monitors SET SectionLength = "3600" where SectionLength = "600"; | ||
When in record/mocord, this can be useful for smaller setups, or where you want to limit the number of videos created. It can, however | |||
make finding motion events more difficult, so is not | make finding motion events more difficult, so it is not ideal for all scenarios. | ||
===Set AlarmMaxFrame to 3=== | ===Set AlarmMaxFrame to 3=== | ||
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update zm.Monitors set AlarmFrameCount="3" where AlarmFrameCount="1"; | update zm.Monitors set AlarmFrameCount="3" where AlarmFrameCount="1"; | ||
The default value is 1. This | The default value is 1. This may avoid glitches causing alarms (camera feed errors can cause a blank screen for 1 frame). | ||
===Search the Config table for an Option=== | |||
All items in the 'Option' menu of the website are stored in the config table. This table has over two hundred entries. It's not easy to find a particular setting. While you can run MySQL from shell and export to a file, here's a way to do it within SQL. Say for example you wanted to search for the timezone setting (reference:https://forums.zoneminder.com/posting.php?t=33626) | |||
select * from Config where Name like '%time%'\G | |||
Here the percentage sign serves as a wildcard, meaning that the string (not case sensitive) time will appear somewhere within the Name field. | |||
==Optimization== | ==Optimization== | ||
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If this happens, blank out the password for admin, and you should be able to login with a blank password. | If this happens, blank out the password for admin, and you should be able to login with a blank password. | ||
mysql -u root -p -e 'update Users set Password = "" where Username = "admin";' | |||
Here is a hash (1.37) for the the word password instead of it being blank: | |||
mysql -u root -p -e 'update Users set Password = "$2y$10$4Hg40fdwsq.DhiSPSRRAA.NONOj0mJK4yYMvFmL14T1IVJpsNhy2." where Username = "admin";' | |||
update Users set Password = "" where | |||
( | |||
update Users set Password = ""; | |||
ref: https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=14543 | ref: https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=14543 | ||
Alternatively you can add a new password to the ZM DB. Note that mysql passwords for ZM must be encrypted. You can't just query add a new plaintext password. The following should work with mariaDB, and mysql < 8.0.11 (untested). You may also need to run zmupdate.pl -f (passwords on 1.34+ are encrypted with bcrypt and this will use perl libraries to encrypt the password if it is not. To explain this clearly, what you do is enter a plaintext password, and then run zmupdate.pl which will encrypt it for you. | Alternatively you can add a new password to the ZM DB. Note that mysql passwords for ZM must be encrypted. You can't just query add a new plaintext password. The following should work with mariaDB, and mysql < 8.0.11 (untested). You may also need to run zmupdate.pl -f (passwords on 1.34+ are encrypted with bcrypt and this will use perl libraries to encrypt the password if it is not. To explain this clearly, what you do is enter a plaintext password, and then run zmupdate.pl which will encrypt it for you. | ||
'''MariaDB''' [zm]> update Users set Password=PASSWORD(NewPassword) where Username="David"; | '''MariaDB''' [zm]> update Users set Password=PASSWORD(NewPassword) where Username="David"; | ||
Reference: [https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/encryption-functions.html#function_password Mysql Reference Docs 8 : Password Function Deprecated] | Reference: [https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/encryption-functions.html#function_password Mysql Reference Docs 8 : Password Function Deprecated] | ||
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Where you would substitute the source entries for whichever updates you need. | Where you would substitute the source entries for whichever updates you need. | ||
===[ERROR] InnoDB: Missing FILE_CHECKPOINT at ########## between the checkpoint ########## and the end=== | ===[ERROR] InnoDB: Missing FILE_CHECKPOINT at ########## between the checkpoint ########## and the end=== | ||
This error can happen when you have a larger ZM setup that | This error can happen when you have a larger ZM setup that suffers an abrupt power loss. What happens is that | ||
mysql will fail to start. And if you run it in debug mode with '''mysqld --verbose''' it will give the | mysql will fail to start. And if you run it in debug mode with '''mysqld --verbose''' it will give the | ||
error message above as the first reason why it won't start. | error message above as the first reason why it won't start. | ||
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the dump. There is a chance that dumping the database can fail, so you will want to have other db backups available. | the dump. There is a chance that dumping the database can fail, so you will want to have other db backups available. | ||
You should have a cron script that regularly backs up at least the config. Here are the full steps: | You should have a cron script that regularly backs up at least the config. Here are the full steps: | ||
reference: https://dba.stackexchange.com/questions/317572/mariadb-missing-file-checkpoint | |||
* set innodb_force_recovery=1 in /etc/mysql/my.cnf (or mariadb.cnf)(if mysql doesn't open in the next step, increment the numbers by one. I found it was necessary to use 4 or 6). | |||
* start mysql ('''mysqld --verbose''')(if it later has trouble closing, just kill the process once your work is over)(check htop to make sure mysql is idle before running the kill command) | |||
* dump the database with '''mysqldump -u root zm > zmdb.sql''' | |||
* close mysql | |||
* delete the entire contents of /var/lib/mysql EXCEPT for /var/lib/mysql/mysql. | |||
* comment out innodb_force_recovery | |||
* start mysql normally (service mysql start) | |||
* recreate the zm database: | |||
mysql -u root -e "create database zm;" | |||
mysql -u root zm < /usr/share/zoneminder/db/zm_create.sql | |||
mysql -u root zm < zmdb.sql | |||
mysql -u root -e "grant all on zm.* to 'zmuser'@localhost identified by 'zmpass';" | |||
If all goes well, you should be back up and running. If there is still an error, you may need to restore from an earlier backup. | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== |
Revision as of 07:50, 18 November 2024
Setup
MySQL (or MariaDB) creates a db named zm after ZoneMinder is installed.
$ mysql -u root -p > >use zm; >show tables; >select * from Monitors\G
There are some .sql setup scripts. And typically, permissions are granted for zmuser to access the zm database. This may or may not be done manually depending on what install guide you follow. It is recommended to use the guides here: Debian or Ubuntu. Sometimes things break, and you will need to rebuild the database, so for reference the steps are kept below (example from Debian):
mysql -u root -p < /usr/share/zoneminder/db/zm_create.sql mysql -u root -p -e "grant all on zm.* to 'zmuser'@localhost identified by 'zmpass';" mysqladmin -u root -p reload
Backup
There are two options: 1) Backup the full database. 2) Backup only the configuration.
For 1), It does not backup any videos or images. So you will have a copy of all metadata referring to events, yet the video files on the filesystem will not be saved. If it's necessary to have an offsite backup, you may want to consider a VPS as storage. Amazon S3FS support is built into Zoneminder and that is one option. Though it can be as simple as rsync-ing videos to a network share. See link on the forums
For 2), the config saved will allow you to restore all the camera configuration, zones, filters, runstates, etc... It will not, however save any event data, nor will it save any videos. If you have a hardware failure, you will lose all camera footage, and event data. For less critical installations, this is acceptable. Since most events are exported shortly after they happen, most users will want to use option 2.
/usr/bin/zmaudit.pl is usually recommended to be run to cleanup some broken database to filesystem references.
Full Backup
This may take a while. It is recommended to stop the Zoneminder service while this backup is running.
mysqldump -u root zm > zmdb.sql
Restore
mysql -u root zm < zmdb.sql
Backup config only
This will run quickly: usually less than a second. The Zoneminder service does not need to be stopped.
DATE="$(date +'%D'|sed 's/\//_/g')" mysqldump -u root zm --ignore-table=zm.Events --ignore-table=zm.Frames --ignore-table=zm.Logs --ignore-table=zm.Stats --ignore-table=zm.Events_Day --ignore-table=zm.Events_Hour --ignore-table=zm.Events_Month --ignore-table=zm.Events_Week --ignore-table=zm.Event_Summaries > zmdb_configonly_$DATE.sql
Restore from config only or Recreate db
As mentioned above, if restoring to a new machine and starting from scratch, you will need to add permissions for zmuser to mysql. If you are restoring the config without the events table, you may need to recreate the db.
mysql -u root -e "drop database zm;" mysql -u root -e "create database zm;" mysql -u root zm < /usr/share/zoneminder/db/zm_create.sql mysql -u root zm < zmdb.sql mysql -u root -e "grant all on zm.* to 'zmuser'@localhost identified by 'zmpass';"
You may also want to run zmupdate.pl -f to make sure the database is updated properly.
Regular Backups
You should use cron to do regular backups (where mysql_config_backup.sh is the script above, with chmod +x) . You may also want to keep copies offsite, in case of catastrophic hard drive failure.
in /etc/crontab 0 12 1 * * root cd /home/user/zmbackups && /home/user/mysql_config_backup.sh
Example Queries
Here are a number of MySQL queries that may be useful for Zoneminder. Often, accessing the database from the terminal will be faster than using the web gui.
Here is an example of how you can change a parameter in the ZM database by logging into MySQL:
su - root mysql -u root zm > show tables; > select * from Users\G > update Users set MaxBandwidth = 'Low' where Username = 'user1';
Here is a one line command for changing a parameter without logging into MySQL.
mysql -u root zm -e "update Monitors set DecoderHWAccelName = 'NULL' where DecoderHWAccelName = 'vaapi';"
A full list of db columns can be found in the source code under the db folder. If any of these queries fail, review the field names. Things change in the db from time to time.
Change Storage Area for Multiple Cameras
If you have multiple cameras set to a storage area. It would be tedious to manually update each one.
Storage Area is the key StorageID in Monitors (1.32.3), therefore
use tmux to view mysql
select * from Monitors LIMIT 1\G #review fields select StorageId from Monitors \G #see current settings
use ctrl-b pageup pagedn to navigate and review fields.
press q to exit this view.
update Monitors set StorageId = 2 where StorageId = 0;
In practice you would probably set specific monitors, not all of them.
Set all Cameras to Use H264 Encode
Per previous example: (1.32.3 tested, review your tables for changes)
update Monitors set VideoWriter = 1 where VideoWriter = 0;
In 1.36 you should also set the following, otherwise HEVC aka H265 will be used (H265 support in 2024 is still limited in browsers and not recommended).
update Monitors set OutputCodec = 27; update Monitors set Encoder = "libx264";
You may also want to disable JPEG encoding.
update Monitors set SaveJPEGs = 0 where SaveJPEGs = 3;
Though, you may want to use passthrough instead of encode when possible. This example is more of an example of ZM SQL administration, not a recommendation for Zoneminder settings.
Set all cameras to limit zma to 2 FPS
Framerate in the analysis (previously zma) can be limited to lower CPU use.
1.30.4 or older:
update Monitors set AnalysisFPS="2.00" where AnalysisFPS="0";
1.34 or newer:
Analysisfps cell in zm.Monitors table has changed, therefore: instead of = 0.00 or = null we must do is null
update Monitors set AnalysisFPSLimit="2.00" where AnalysisFPSLimit is NULL;
Change All Cameras to Have mm/dd/yy Instead of dd/mm/yy in Timestamp
(1.34)
UPDATE Monitors SET LabelFormat ="%N - %m-%d-%Y %H:%M:%S %z" WHERE LabelFormat ="%N - %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %z";
Change All Cameras to Have mm/dd/yy and 12 hour / AM/PM in Timestamp
(1.34)
UPDATE Monitors SET LabelFormat ="%N - %m/%d/%Y %l:%M:%S %p" WHERE LabelFormat ="%N - %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %z";
The %z is for offset from GMT, which most people won't need. These can be found from the man page for date. Or:
UPDATE Monitors SET LabelFormat ="%N - %m/%d/%Y %l:%M:%S %p" WHERE LabelFormat ="%N - %d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S";
You can review the existing Timestamps with:
select LabelFormat from Monitors\G
Zoneminder must be restarted for changes to take effect.
Note that for fail2ban, you may want to use the DATETIME_OVERRIDE_PATTERN in options. See ZMNinja.
Check Value of AUTH_RELAY
If you set Auth relay to none, then it's possible to access cameras from wan via a direct monitor link. So check any WAN accessible installations.
cd zoneminder grep -ri auth_relay select * from Config where Name = "ZM_AUTH_RELAY"\G
This also means that you can get direct video URLs from a secure LAN without authentication, if desired.
https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?t=28144&p=117900#p117900
Add API/Mobile User with View Permissions
mysql -u zmuser -p use zm; INSERT INTO Users(Username,Password,Language,Enabled,Stream,Events,Monitors,APIEnabled) VALUES("testguy",Password("somepass"),"en_us","1","View","View","View","1"); \q zmupdate.pl -f
(-f will 'freshen' up the db, encrypting password with bcrypt, handled by perl in zmupdate.pl.in) Note: If you add a user and don't specify APIEnabled or not, it will default to enabled.
Delete User
select * from Users where Username="Defunct User"\G delete from Users where Username="Defunct User";
Estimate RAM usage from Monitors
select x.Id, x.Width, x.Height, x.ImageBufferCount, x.Colours, x.BufferSpace as BufferMB, 1.2*sum(x.BufferSpace) over (Order by Id) as RunningTotalMB_w_OH from (select Id, Width,Height,ImageBufferCount,Colours,(Width*Height*ImageBufferCount*Colours/1024/1024) as BufferSpace from Monitors order by Id) x;
results:
+----+-------+--------+------------------+---------+---------------+---------------------+ | Id | Width | Height | ImageBufferCount | Colours | BufferMB | RunningTotalMB_w_OH | +----+-------+--------+------------------+---------+---------------+---------------------+ | 1 | 1920 | 1080 | 100 | 3 | 593.26171875 | 711.914062500 | | 2 | 1920 | 1080 | 50 | 3 | 296.63085938 | 1067.871093756 | | 5 | 1920 | 1080 | 40 | 3 | 237.30468750 | 1352.636718756 | | 6 | 704 | 480 | 20 | 3 | 19.33593750 | 1375.839843756 | | 7 | 704 | 480 | 20 | 3 | 19.33593750 | 1399.042968756 | | 8 | 1920 | 1080 | 20 | 3 | 118.65234375 | 1541.425781256 | | 9 | 704 | 480 | 20 | 3 | 19.33593750 | 1564.628906256 | | 10 | 704 | 480 | 20 | 3 | 19.33593750 | 1587.832031256 | | 11 | 640 | 480 | 20 | 1 | 5.85937500 | 1594.863281256 | | 12 | 480 | 360 | 20 | 1 | 3.29589844 | 1598.818359384 | | 13 | 2560 | 1920 | 110 | 4 | 2062.50000000 | 4073.818359384 | | 14 | 2560 | 1920 | 121 | 4 | 2268.75000000 | 6796.318359384 | | 15 | 640 | 480 | 20 | 4 | 23.43750000 | 6824.443359384 | +----+-------+--------+------------------+---------+---------------+---------------------+ 13 rows in set (3.46 sec)
Disable Logging via cli
Here is an example where mysql is scripted from the shell.
#!/bin/bash echo "Disabling logging by setting to -5 (1 for debug, -5 for nothing)" mysql -u root zm -e "Update Config set Value = '-5' where Name = 'ZM_LOG_LEVEL_SYSLOG';" mysql -u root zm -e "Update Config set Value = '-5' where Name = 'ZM_LOG_LEVEL_FILE';" mysql -u root zm -e "Update Config set Value = '-5' where Name = 'ZM_LOG_LEVEL_DATABASE';"
And restart zm.
Set all video lengths to be 1 hour
UPDATE Monitors SET SectionLength = "3600" where SectionLength = "600";
When in record/mocord, this can be useful for smaller setups, or where you want to limit the number of videos created. It can, however make finding motion events more difficult, so it is not ideal for all scenarios.
Set AlarmMaxFrame to 3
From Understanding_ZoneMinder's_Zoning_system_for_Dummies:
update zm.Monitors set AlarmFrameCount="3" where AlarmFrameCount="1";
The default value is 1. This may avoid glitches causing alarms (camera feed errors can cause a blank screen for 1 frame).
Search the Config table for an Option
All items in the 'Option' menu of the website are stored in the config table. This table has over two hundred entries. It's not easy to find a particular setting. While you can run MySQL from shell and export to a file, here's a way to do it within SQL. Say for example you wanted to search for the timezone setting (reference:https://forums.zoneminder.com/posting.php?t=33626)
select * from Config where Name like '%time%'\G
Here the percentage sign serves as a wildcard, meaning that the string (not case sensitive) time will appear somewhere within the Name field.
Optimization
MySQLTuner
mysqltuner
Then read the output, and perform any recommended database tweaks.
Other
mysqlcheck -u root -p --optimize --databases zm
This will attempt to optimize your databases. Functions are limited with InnoDB format, however.
Troubleshooting
API Can't Connect
If you change the DB password from the default, the API CakePHP config files will need to have their password changed as well.
IBData files Large
In ZoneMinder 1.28, I had an issue with the ibdata1 file in /var/lib/mysql/ growing too large. It includes some database information and in my 10GB root partition, was taking up 8GB. This was because the DB was not in InnoDB format. Zoneminder 1.32 and newer, defaults to InnoDB, and this section can be ignored.
The solutions I found were:
- backup zm database, delete zm db, delete ibdata file, then restore database How to Shrink/Purge Ibdata1 file
OR
- Move the ibdata file to another partition
OR
- Change DB type to InnoDB (requires backup, deletion, and restoring db, per first solution)
Changing the database type to have an innodb file per each table as mentioned in the "how to shrink purge ibdata1 file in mysql" link will keep less data used in the ibdata1 file in the future, allowing the former to be deleted when not needed. On the other hand the ibdata file by default, will not shrink, ever. This may not be an issue in MariaDB.
Looking for the least invasive procedure, I went with moving /var/lib/mysql, and adding the optional my.cnf parameter. This required the following tricks (may only apply to Ubuntu 14.04).
There are a number of guides on moving Mysql, yet many of them omit adding the alias to apparmors settings. This is required. Failing to do so will result in "Job failed to start" when mysql is run with #service mysql start
.
A guide that covers all the steps required to move mysql on Ubuntu Trusty without omitting anything is here: Ask Ubuntu: Moving Mysql datadir Note that within my mysql installation there was no socket file in /var/lib or in my.cnf.
After moving the Data directory, I ended up backing up the zm db and restoring it anyways, in order to get the ibdata files to split correctly. This is not hard to do. The only DB you need to mysqldump from a stock ZM installation is the ZM db. And it's also the only DB you need restore.
For a full walkthrough on converting a MyISAM DB to InnoDB (also covers backing up ZM DB) see Enable and convert MySQL to innodb file per table for Zoneminder.
MySQL server has gone away error with ZMTrigger
See ZMTrigger#MySQL_server_has_gone_away_error
MySQL Out Of Memory
If you have recently added more cameras (especially higher resolution and framerate) and you find that periodically ZM is crashing, it may be caused by MySQL running out of RAM. As an example, I have 26 cameras, ranging from 1024x720 to SD analog resolution with framerates of 3 for the HD, and 5 for the SD. This is running under 8GB of RAM. If I add two more 1024x720 cameras with a higher framerate of 5 or 6 (and double the ZMA/ZMC CPU usage) my server will periodically run out of memory and crash. Now, it's important to note that the memory doesn't run out immediately - instead, over a period of an hour or 30 minutes, or two hours (or more), the RAM will become overloaded and begin swapping, at which point there is a user mode crash from numerous programs. The lesson to all of this, is to beware of overloading a system. You may need more powerful hardware. Or split the load over multiple servers.
Forgot Root Password for MySQL
dpkg-reconfigure mysql-server-#.# works in older Debian releases, but not as of Bullseye.
Other options: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/resetting-permissions.html
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7534056/mysql-root-password-change
Forgot Admin Password for Zoneminder
There are different ways to resolve this. The easiest method, is probably option 3.
- Option 1: black out password
If this happens, blank out the password for admin, and you should be able to login with a blank password.
mysql -u root -p -e 'update Users set Password = "" where Username = "admin";'
Here is a hash (1.37) for the the word password instead of it being blank:
mysql -u root -p -e 'update Users set Password = "$2y$10$4Hg40fdwsq.DhiSPSRRAA.NONOj0mJK4yYMvFmL14T1IVJpsNhy2." where Username = "admin";'
ref: https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=14543
Alternatively you can add a new password to the ZM DB. Note that mysql passwords for ZM must be encrypted. You can't just query add a new plaintext password. The following should work with mariaDB, and mysql < 8.0.11 (untested). You may also need to run zmupdate.pl -f (passwords on 1.34+ are encrypted with bcrypt and this will use perl libraries to encrypt the password if it is not. To explain this clearly, what you do is enter a plaintext password, and then run zmupdate.pl which will encrypt it for you.
MariaDB [zm]> update Users set Password=PASSWORD(NewPassword) where Username="David";
Reference: Mysql Reference Docs 8 : Password Function Deprecated
- Option 2: Delete DB and restore from backup.
- Option 3: Turn off Auth, fix, turn auth on
From the forums.
Best bet is to turn off auth, use UI to change admin password, turn auth back on. So to turn if off use mysql mysql -u zmuser -p zm UPDATE Config set Value=0 where Name='ZM_OPT_USE_AUTH';
Manually Update MySQL if zmupdate.pl fails
This shouldn't be required but for reference (from: https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?p=131434#p131434)
mysql -u root use zm source /usr/share/zoneminder/db/zm_update-1.36.16.sql source /usr/share/zoneminder/db/zm_update-1.36.18.sql quit
Where you would substitute the source entries for whichever updates you need.
[ERROR] InnoDB: Missing FILE_CHECKPOINT at ########## between the checkpoint ########## and the end
This error can happen when you have a larger ZM setup that suffers an abrupt power loss. What happens is that mysql will fail to start. And if you run it in debug mode with mysqld --verbose it will give the error message above as the first reason why it won't start.
The steps to resolve this, are to start the db in innodb recovery mode, dump the full database, delete all files from /var/lib/mysql except for the mysql folder (careful!), start mysql again, then recreate zm and restore the dump. There is a chance that dumping the database can fail, so you will want to have other db backups available. You should have a cron script that regularly backs up at least the config. Here are the full steps:
reference: https://dba.stackexchange.com/questions/317572/mariadb-missing-file-checkpoint
- set innodb_force_recovery=1 in /etc/mysql/my.cnf (or mariadb.cnf)(if mysql doesn't open in the next step, increment the numbers by one. I found it was necessary to use 4 or 6).
- start mysql (mysqld --verbose)(if it later has trouble closing, just kill the process once your work is over)(check htop to make sure mysql is idle before running the kill command)
- dump the database with mysqldump -u root zm > zmdb.sql
- close mysql
- delete the entire contents of /var/lib/mysql EXCEPT for /var/lib/mysql/mysql.
- comment out innodb_force_recovery
- start mysql normally (service mysql start)
- recreate the zm database:
mysql -u root -e "create database zm;" mysql -u root zm < /usr/share/zoneminder/db/zm_create.sql mysql -u root zm < zmdb.sql mysql -u root -e "grant all on zm.* to 'zmuser'@localhost identified by 'zmpass';"
If all goes well, you should be back up and running. If there is still an error, you may need to restore from an earlier backup.