CentOS
The intent of this walk through is to install a very base/bare bones installation of CentOS that runs only ZoneMinder. This would be for a dedicated ZoneMinder server with no GUI or any unnecessary services running. The reason for the very light-weight installation is to make the majority of system resources available to ZoneMinder, not the OS. With this installation, memory is reduced to around 140-160MB, and CPU usage is practically nonexistent. The CentOS base installation is very easy to install and doesn’t take too much time as long as you have some type of broadband connection. There are many ways to install CentOS, but this article covers only two, because they are related.
All CLI operations/commands in this How-To are done as root, in the /root directory. The reasoning is that this system would be in a secure environment to begin with. However, if you need to add a user to run these services to better secure the system, then you can, but keep in mind that some items must run as root.
CentOS 5.6 & ZoneMinder 1.25.0
This guide is for CentOS v5.6 with ZoneMinder v1.25.0 which are the newest released versions as of this update (Summer 2011). If you are attempting to install newer versions of either using this guide, you will have to adjust file and directory names denoted below. Notes for using this guide with CentOS 6 are in chapter 2.
Step One - Get CentOS
You can download the “.iso” file(s) for CentOS from http://www.centos.org/
Alternatively download the net-install version of CentOS which is basically just the first CD.
Here is one location to download the net-install version:
Download i386: http://mirror.chpc.utah.edu/pub/centos/5.6/isos/i386/CentOS-5.6-i386-netinstall.iso
Download 64 bit: http://centos.cs.wisc.edu/pub/mirrors/linux/centos/5.6/isos/x86_64/CentOS-5.6-x86_64-netinstall.iso
Mirrors List: http://www.centos.org/mirrors/
Step Two - Installation Source
Regardless of which method you use, the next few steps are the same.
Begin by booting your system up with either cd/dvd.
Choose the options that best fit your environment until you reach the “Installation Method”.
Choose HTTP ONLY if you are using the net-install method. Otherwise, you probably want to choose Local CDROM.
If you are using the net-install method then enter:
Website Name: mirror.centos.org
CentOS Directory: (for i386) /centos/5.6/os/i386
CentOS Directory: (for 64 bit) /centos/5.6/os/x86_64
Step Three - Installation Packages
On the first screen, un-check "Desktop - Gnome" then check "Server" (not Server-GUI)
Make sure that you have "Customize now" selected at the bottom. (do not check "Packages from CentOS Extras")
Click "Next" to continue
Once presented with the custom package selection, un-check/check the following:
Applications = Check only "Editors" and "Text Based Internet" Development = Check only "Development Libraries" and "Development Tools" Servers = Un-check everything Base System = Check only "Base" (you can check Administration Tools and System Tools if you need them, but they are not necessary)
Now let the system finish the installation.
Step Four - Configuration
After the first reboot, the setup screen should appear. If not, log into the system and type "setup"
Select "Firewall Configuration" and set the "Security Level" and "SELinux" to "Disabled."
Next, we are going to disable a number of system services. Go back to the setup screen and select "System Services"
Un-Check:
apmd bluetooth cups hidd ip6tables iptables netfs nfslock pcscd portmap
After disabling the services, select "Disable Now and On Boot", exit the setup tool, and log into the system if you haven't already.
- Screen is a simple program that allows you to run commands from a "Hosted" command line interface. This helps if you loose your connection to the server for any reason in that it enables you to resume (screen -r) right where you left off. Often times, I will start a large update/upgrade, leave it for the day, then come back and see where it's at later. Screen allows you to do that without having to be connected.
- Install Screen
yum install screen
- To start a screen session just type
screen
- If you get disconnected and need to resume your session of screen simply type
screen -r
Step Five - Installing ZoneMinder 1.25.0
First, we need to download files and prepare the system
- Add the RPM Forge repository to CentOS. This will allow the installation of a number of services/applications later without having to manually install them.
# For i386 CentOS 5.x run: rpm -Uhv http://apt.sw.be/redhat/el5/en/i386/rpmforge/RPMS/rpmforge-release-0.3.6-1.el5.rf.i386.rpm (for CentOS 6.x, see: http://apt.sw.be/redhat/el6/en/i386/rpmforge/RPMS/rpmforge-release-0.5.2-1.el6.rf.i686.rpm and http://apt.sw.be/redhat/el6/en/i386/rpmforge/RPMS/rpmforge-release-0.5.2-2.el6.rf.i686.rpm) # For 64 bit CentOS 5.x run: rpm -Uhv http://apt.sw.be/redhat/el5/en/x86_64/rpmforge/RPMS/rpmforge-release-0.3.6-1.el5.rf.x86_64.rpm (for CentOS 6.x, See http://apt.sw.be/redhat/el6/en/x86_64/rpmforge/RPMS/rpmforge-release-0.5.2-1.el6.rf.x86_64.rpm and http://apt.sw.be/redhat/el6/en/x86_64/rpmforge/RPMS/rpmforge-release-0.5.2-2.el6.rf.x86_64.rpm)
- Download the needed files, ZoneMinder 1.25.0 and the Cambozola addon
wget http://www2.zoneminder.com/downloads/ZoneMinder-1.25.0.tar.gz wget http://www.zoneminder.com/sites/zoneminder.com/downloads/cambozola.jar
- Now let's install all the services and programs that will be needed (If you encounter any dependency errors using yum, try running yum clean all then re-try the install command(s).)
- tip: Copy/paste two lines at a time
yum -y install mysql mysql-server mysql-devel php php-gd php-mysql httpd gcc \ pcre-devel gd mod_ssl glib2-devel gcc-c++ ntp gnutls-devel ImageMagick yum -y install libjpeg-devel perl-Archive-Tar perl-MIME-Lite perl-MIME-tools \ perl-Date-Manip perl-LWP-UserAgent-Determined yum -y install perl-PHP-Serialization perl-Device-SerialPort perl-Archive-Zip perl-Sys-Mmap \ perl-Module-Load subversion git yasm
- Now let's update everything within the new CentOS install
yum -y update
- At this point, it might be useful to reboot your system. Oddly, sometimes things don't work right unless you reboot after all the updates
reboot -or- shutdown -r now
- After rebooting, log into your system
Install ffmpeg
- Now we need to make sure we use the latest "tested" version of "ffmpeg". This is the latest version of ffmpeg that the ZoneMinder developers have tested with. Download, compile and install ffmpeg:
git clone git://git.videolan.org/ffmpeg.git cd ffmpeg ./configure --enable-gpl --enable-shared --enable-pthreads make
- The following commands must be done as root
make install make install-libs
edit /etc/ld.so.conf and add the line "/usr/local/lib"
ldconfig -v
- Next, run 'ffmpeg' from the command line. Make sure you do not get any errors:
ffmpeg
- If 'ffmpeg' runs correctly, you'll see something similar to this:
ffmpeg version N-32260-gaebb56e, Copyright (c) 2000-2011 the FFmpeg developers built on Aug 31 2011 21:41:49 with gcc 4.1.2 20080704 (Red Hat 4.1.2-50) configuration: --enable-shared --enable-swscale --enable-gpl --enable-pthreads libavutil 51. 14. 0 / 51. 14. 0 libavcodec 53. 12. 0 / 53. 12. 0 libavformat 53. 10. 0 / 53. 10. 0 libavdevice 53. 3. 0 / 53. 3. 0 libavfilter 2. 37. 0 / 2. 37. 0 libswscale 2. 0. 0 / 2. 0. 0 libpostproc 51. 2. 0 / 51. 2. 0 Hyper fast Audio and Video encoder usage: ffmpeg [options] [[infile options] -i infile]... {[outfile options] outfile}... Use -h to get full help or, even better, run 'man ffmpeg'
Enable services
- Turn everything on. These commands must be run as root.
chkconfig httpd on chkconfig mysqld on chkconfig ntpd on service httpd start service mysqld start service ntpd start
Install Zoneminder
- Next, we need to extract the contents of the ZoneMinder "tar" file, then jump into its directory.
cd /root/ # Or your work directory for this installation tar -zxvf ZoneMinder-1.25.0.tar.gz cd ZoneMinder-1.25.0
- Now we are going to configure ZoneMinder with some additional parameters. What is listed are the default CentOS directory locations.
./configure --with-webdir=/var/www/html/zm --with-cgidir=/var/www/cgi-bin
Note: It seems for Zoneminder to build with newer versions of ffmpeg, (certainly 0.6.3) you'll need to append CPPFLAGS="-D__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS" to the end of the ./configure line thus:
./configure --with-webdir=/var/www/html/zm --with-cgidir=/var/www/cgi-bin --with-ffmpeg=/usr/local/share/ffmpeg CPPFLAGS="-D__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS"
There is a section in the FAQ "When running configure, I get a lot of messages about not being able to compile the ffmpeg libraries" about this [[1]].
Worth mentioning here is the section in the FAQ under the heading "My load is too high, how can I reduce it?" [[2]]. This descibes how you can possibly reduce CPU load by half by changing the system's jpeg libraries and building Zoneminder with processor specific instructions.
By default ZM_DB_HOST=localhost, ZM_DB_NAME=zm, ZM_DB_USER=zmuser, and ZM_DB_PASS=zmpass.
- Change "zmuser" (if you want) with the user that you will use within MySQL to access the ZoneMinder database
- Change "zmpass" with the password you will be using with the "zmuser" account
So if you wish to change it, use a command like:
./configure --with-webdir=/var/www/html/zm --with-cgidir=/var/www/cgi-bin --with-webuser=apache --with-webgroup=apache ZM_DB_HOST=localhost ZM_DB_NAME=zm ZM_DB_USER=zmuser ZM_DB_PASS=zmpass
- if you get the configure "error zm requires libmysqlclient.a" with 64 bit CentOS add the following to the end of your configure statement
--with-extralibs="-L/usr/lib64 -L/usr/lib64/mysql"
e.g. For CentOS 5.6 64-bit with support for ffmpeg. The whole command must be executed on one line. Make sure to change the zmpass to a password that matches your installation.
./configure --with-webdir=/var/www/html/zm --with-cgidir=/var/www/cgi-bin --with-ffmpeg=/usr/local/share/ffmpeg --with-webuser=apache --with-webgroup=apache ZM_DB_HOST=localhost ZM_DB_NAME=zm ZM_DB_USER=zmuser ZM_DB_PASS=zmpass --with-extralibs="-L/usr/lib64 -L/usr/lib64/mysql" CXXFLAGS="-D__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS"
- Run make and make install after running the configuration steps above.
make # Run the next command as root make install
Configure MySQL
- Need to add a password for the root user of MySQL
- Create the zm database
- Create the zm database user with permissions and password
mysql mysql> SET PASSWORD FOR root@localhost=PASSWORD('new_root_password');
>Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> create database zm;
>Query OK, 1 row affected (0.01 sec)
mysql> CREATE USER 'your_zm_user'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'your_zm_password_from_above';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.01 sec)
mysql> grant CREATE, INSERT, SELECT, DELETE, UPDATE on zm.* to your_zm_user@localhost;
>Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.02 sec)
mysql> exit
>Bye
- Import the tables into the zm database
cd /root/ZoneMinder-1.25.0 mysql -u root -p zm < db/zm_create.sql
Finalize Installation of ZoneMinder
All remaining CLI commands need to be run as root.
- Make ZoneMinder startup automatically after a reboot
# from the ZoneMinder-1.25 source directory cp scripts/zm /etc/init.d/ chmod +x /etc/init.d/zm chkconfig zm on
- Add the Cambozola Java web interface
cp cambozola.jar /var/www/html/zm/
- Make sure you have permission to view it from apache:
chown apache:apache /var/www/html/zm/cambozola.jar
- Start ZoneMinder
service zm start
Note: You may get an error when you try to start Zoneminder using the 'zm' startup script as per this forum post: [[3]] . The reason for this was the default 'zm' startup script was formatted with DOS line endings. If you get the errors as detailed in the above post then the fix is to convert the 'zm' file to use UNIX style line endings. You can do this in the Vim text editor whilst editing the 'zm' file thus: ':set fileformat=unix' then save the file ':wq'. You can also use the utility dos2unix to convert the file.
- tick the box for support for the Cambozola addon within your ZoneMinder installation: http://ip-address/zm (Options->Images tab->OPT_CAMBOZOLA)
Now have fun and add your cameras to ZoneMinder knowing you now have a very stable and streamlined OS to run it on.
CentOS 6 Notes
The installation for CentOS 6 is pretty much the same. Download CentOS 6 minimal installation ISO (CentOS-6.0-i386-minimal.iso – 257MB). Burn to CD and install. We only want to be running in console text mode not GUI graphics mode. During installation configure network and tick to enable network adapter.
- Login as root and update the base install:
yum -y update
- Install required packages, other useful packages, and their dependencies
yum groupinstall core yum groupinstall base yum install gcc gcc-c++ wget bison mysql-devel mysql-server php php-mysql php-pear php-pear-DB php-mbstring \ nano tftp-server httpd make ncurses-devel libtermcap-devel sendmail sendmail-cf caching-nameserver \ sox newt-devel libxml2-devel libtiff-devel php-gd audiofile-devel gtk2-devel subversion nano kernel-devel \ bison-devel ncurses zlib zlib-devel openssl openssl-devel gnutls-devel php-process perl-Time-HiRes
Now we continue from step four (4).
Installation of ZoneMinder
- In step five (5) the command that seems to configure zoneminder correctly is:
CXXFLAGS=-D__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS ./configure --with-webdir=/var/www/html/zm \ --with-cgidir=/var/www/cgi-bin --with-webuser=apache --with-webgroup=apache \ ZM_DB_HOST=localhost ZM_DB_NAME=zm ZM_DB_USER=your_zm_user ZM_DB_PASS=your_zm_password ZM_SSL_LIB=openssl
Troubleshooting Blank Page
If everything went ok but when accessing zoneminder's web page at http://localhost/zm, the page is blank this means that there is a problem with PHP short tags. Edit setting short_open_tag in php.ini (/etc/php.ini) and change it to On.
- Restart apache server with:
service httpd restart
and you should be up and running.
Trouble shooting full drive when in Modcord mode
Since CentOS 5 the default structure that the system install on to you hard disk has changed, they now make a logical volume of 10% your dives space for the /root drive and the remaining drive as /home with the exception of the swap drive. The will cause Zoneminder to fill the /root drive very fast as the /var/www/html/zm/events directory is by default located here, you can use the system-config-lvm utility to re-adjust this partition balance.
== '''P.S.''' == aspcicc@jumpy.it (Update: This does not appear to be required any more.)
Hi! and thanks for your guide.. i want to add a little correction that have made me crazy to resolve, when I poweroff or reboot system i obtain an error related to mysql database and i have understood that the problem was because mysqld is stopped before zoneminder to be more specific there isn't a link under rc0.d (halt) and rc6.d (reboot) to zoneminder that for this lack is simply killed by killall. To resolve this problem you need to add at the start of zm (under /etc/init.d) the line
' # chkconfig: 345 99 01 ' (without ' of course)
and then run chkconfig --level 345 zm on chkconfig --level 06 zm off
So the link to shutdown zm is created under rc0.d and rc6.d and zoneminder is started at the end of poweron and stopped at the beginning of the poweroff
For information about priority starting and stopping processes see: http://www.netadmintools.com/art94.html
Added Dependency: ImageMagick
Removed Dependency: perl-Time-HiRes, which causes a conflict with the default perl package.
Also, mysql seems to install with no password for the root user, and the zm DB create script creates the database on the fly, which means that the database create command needs to have the "-p zm" removed from the command line.
Could someone verify that this is correct, to make sure it's not just something I missed?
Thanks! terry@cnysupport.com
Struggling to get x264 and ffmpeg working? I used the latest SVN versions not the Centos packages. But I was getting
ffmpeg: error while loading shared libraries: libavdevice.so.53: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
I followed these instructions:
cd /etc/ld.so.conf.d
- add another file: custom-libs.conf
- inside, put :
/usr/local/lib
- save the file
- run ldconfig
ldconfig
BeeryGaz