81da33ba81
The fork() architecture from the previous commit is also deemed a failure. Reverted back to v1.5.t19 code. I'll start from scratch, using this commit as the new base.
147 lines
5.9 KiB
Markdown
147 lines
5.9 KiB
Markdown
# Motion Watch #
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Motion Watch is a video surveillance application that monitors the video feeds
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of an IP camera and records only footage that contains motion. The main
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advantage of this is reduced storage requirements as opposed to continuous
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recording because only video footage of interest is recorded to storage.
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The entire app is designed to operate on just one camera but multiple instances
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of this app can be used to operate multiple cameras.
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### Usage ###
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```
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Usage: mow <argument>
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-h : display usage information about this application.
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-c : path to the config file(s).
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-v : display the current version.
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note: multiple -c config files can be passed, reading from left
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to right. any conflicting values between the files will
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have the latest value from the latest file overwrite the
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the earliest.
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```
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### Config File ###
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The config file is a simple text file that contain parameters that dictate the
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behavior of the application. Below is an example of a config file with all
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parameters supported and descriptions of each.
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```
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# Motion Watch config file
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#
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# note all lines in this config file that starts with a '#' are ignored.
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# also note to avoid using empty lines. if you're going to need an empty
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# line, start it with a '#'
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#
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recording_stream = rtsp://1.2.3.4:554/h264
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# this is the url to the main stream of the IP camera that will be used
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# to record footage.
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#
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web_root = /var/www/html
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# this is the output directory that will be used to store recorded footage
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# from the cameras as well as the web interface for the application.
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# warning: this will overwrite any existing index.html files so be sure
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# to choose a directory that doesn't have an existing website.
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#
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buff_dir = /tmp
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# this application records small clips of the footage from the camera and
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# then stores them into this directory. any clips with motion detected in
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# them are moved to web_root; if no motion is detected, they are deleted.
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# it is highly recommend to use a ramdisk tempfs for this since this
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# directory is used for large amounts of writes.
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#
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cam_name = cam-1
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# this is the optional camera name parameter to identify the camera. this
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# name will be used to form the directory structure in the web_root as
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# well as buff_dir. if not defined, the name of the config file will be
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# used.
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#
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pix_thresh = 150
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# this value tells the application how far different the pixels need to be
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# before the pixels are actually considered different. think of this as
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# pixel diff sensitivity, the higher the value the lesser the sensitivity.
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#
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frame_gap = 20
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# this value is used to tell the application how far in between frames to
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# check the pixel diffs for motion. the lower the value, the more frames
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# will be checked, however with that comes higher cpu usage.
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#
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img_thresh = 80000
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# this indicates how many pixels need to be different in between frame_gap
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# before it is considered motion. any video clips found with frames
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# exceeding this value will be moved from buff_dir to web_root.
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#
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clip_len = 20
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# this parameter indicate the amount of seconds to record in each video
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# clip from the camera that will be stored and then processed in buff_dir.
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#
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num_of_clips = 3
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# this will tell the application how many video clips should be recorded
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# to buff_dir from the camera before the recording loop pauses to do some
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# house keeping. by house keeping, it will wait until all motion detection
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# threads are finished, reload the config file and then call the post_cmd
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# if no motion was detected in any of the video clips.
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#
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post_cmd = move_the_ptz_camera.py
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# this an optional command to run after num_of_clips is met. one great use
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# for this is to move a ptz camera to the next position of it's patrol
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# pattern. note: the call to this command will be delayed if motion was
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# detected.
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#
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max_days = 15
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# this defines the maximum amount of days worth of video clips that is
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# allowed to be stored in the web_root. whenever this limit is met, the
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# oldest day and all of it's associated video clips will be deleted.
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#
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max_clips = 30
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# this is the maximum amount of video clips that is allowed to be stored
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# in web_root per day. whenever this limit is met, the oldest clip is
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# deleted.
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#
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max_log_size = 50000
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# this is the maximum byte size of all log files that can be stored in
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# web_root. whenever this limit is met, the log file will be deleted and
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# then eventually recreated blank.
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#
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vid_container = mp4
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# this is the video file format to use for recording footage from the
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# camera. the format support depends entirely on the under laying ffmpeg
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# installation.
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#
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vid_codec = copy
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# this is the video codec to use when pulling footage from the camera
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# via ffmpeg. the default is "copy" meaning it will just match the codec
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# from the camera itself without trans-coding.
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#
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web_text = #dee5ee
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# this can be used to customize the color of the text in the web
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# interface. it can be defined as any color understood by html5 standard.
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#
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web_bg = #485564
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# this can be used to customize the background color of the web
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# interface. just like web_text, it also follows the html5 standard.
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#
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web_font = courier
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# this will customize the text font family to use in the web interface.
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# it is recommended to use mono-spaced font because this is also used to
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# display logs and logs are best displayed in mono-spaced font.
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```
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### Setup/Build/Install ###
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This application is currently only compatible with a Linux based operating
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systems that are capable of installing opencv. The following 3 scripts make
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building and then installing convenient.
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```
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sh ./setup.sh <--- only need to run this once if compiling for the first
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sh ./build.sh time or if upgrading from the ground up.
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sh ./install.sh
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```
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```
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note 1: be sure to run setup.sh and install.sh as root (or use sudo).
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note 2: if building from scratch the following scripts will need to
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be run in this order - setup.sh -> build.sh -> install.sh.
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```
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