Provided by: zoneminder_1.36.33+dfsg1-1build4_amd64 bug

NAME

       zoneminder - ZoneMinder Documentation

USER GUIDE

   Introduction
       Welcome to ZoneMinder, the all-in-one security camera solution for Linux with GPL License.

       Commercial  “security  systems”  are  often  designed  as  a  monitoring  system with little attention to
       recording quality. In such a system, locating and exporting relevant video can be challenging  and  often
       requires  extensive  human  intervention.  ZoneMinder  was  designed  to provide the best possible record
       quality while allowing easy searching, filtering and exporting of security footage.

       ZoneMinder is designed around a series of independent  components  that  only  function  when  necessary,
       limiting any wasted resource and maximising the efficiency of your machine. An outdated Pentium II PC can
       have  multiple  recording devices connected to it, and it is able to track one camera per device at up to
       25 frames per second, which drops by approximately half for each additional camera on  the  same  device.
       Additional  cameras on devices that do not interact with other devices can maintain the 25 frame rate per
       second. Monitoring several cameras will  not  overload  the  CPU  as  frame  processing  is  designed  to
       synchronise with capture.

       A  fast video interface core, a user-friendly and comprehensive PHP based web interface allows ZoneMinder
       to be efficient, friendly and most importantly useful. You can control  and  monitor  your  cameras  from
       home,  at  work, on the road, or a web-enabled cell phone. It supports variable web capabilities based on
       available bandwidth. The web interface also allows you to view events that your  cameras  have  captured,
       which  can be archived, reviewed or deleted. The web application directly interacts with the core daemons
       ensuring full co-operation at all times. ZoneMinder can also be installed as a system service to reboot a
       system remotely.

       The core of ZoneMinder is the capture and analysis of images and a highly configurable set of  parameters
       that eliminate false positives whilst ensuring minimum loss of footage. For example, you can define a set
       of ‘zones’ for each camera of varying sensitivity and functionality. This eliminates zones that you don’t
       wish  to  track  or  define  areas that will alarm if various thresholds are exceeded in conjunction with
       other zones.

       ZoneMinder is free under GPL License, but if you do find it  useful,  then  please  feel  free  to  visit
       https://zoneminder.com/donate/ and help us fund our future improvements.

   Components
       ZoneMinder is not a single monolithic application but is formed from several components. These components
       primarily  include  executable  compiled  binaries  which do the main video processing work, perl scripts
       which usually perform helper and/or external interface tasks and php web scripts which are used  for  the
       web interface.

   System Overview
       Depicted below is a high level diagram of the ZoneMinder system with key components [image]

       A brief description of each of the principle components follows.

   Binaries
       zmc    This  is  the  ZoneMinder  Capture  daemon. This binary’s job is to sit on a video device and suck
              frames off it as fast as possible, this should  run at more or less constant speed.

       zma    This is the ZoneMinder Analysis daemon. This is the  component  that  goes  through  the  captured
              frames  and  checks  them for motion which might generate an alarm or event. It generally keeps up
              with the Capture daemon but if very busy may skip some frames to prevent it falling behind.

       zms    This is the ZoneMinder Streaming server. The web interface connects with this to get real-time  or
              historical  streamed  images.  It runs only when a live monitor stream or event stream is actually
              being viewed and dies when the event finishes or the associate web page is closed. If you find you
              have several zms processes running when nothing is being viewed then it is likely you need a patch
              for apache (see the Troubleshooting section). A non-parsed header version of zms, called  nph-zms,
              is also installed and may be used instead depending on your web server configuration.

       zmu    This  is  the  ZoneMinder Utility. It’s basically a handy command line interface to several useful
              functions. It’s not really meant to be used by anyone except the web page  (there’s  only  limited
              ‘help’ in it so far) but can be if necessary, especially for debugging video problems.

   PHP
       As  well  as  this  there are the web PHP files in the web directory. Currently these consist of a single
       skin with Classic and Flat styles.

       Classic
              Original ZoneMinder skin

       Flat   An updated version of Classic skin, retaining the same layout with a more modern style. Originally
              a skin this is now just a CSS style.

   Perl
       Finally some perl scripts in the scripts directory. These scripts all have some configuration at the  top
       of the files which should be viewed and amended if necessary and are as follows.

       zmpkg.pl
              This  is  the  ZoneMinder  Package  Control  script. This is used by the web interface and service
              scripts to control the execution of the system as a whole.

       zmdc.pl
              This is the ZoneMinder Daemon Control script. This is used by the web interface and  the  zmpkg.pl
              script  to control and maintain the execution of the capture and analysis daemons, amongst others.
              You should not need to run this script yourself, although you can use it to  start/top  individual
              ZM processes.

       zmfilter.pl
              This  script  controls  the  execution of saved filters and will be started and stopped by the web
              interface based on whether there are filters that have been defined to be  autonomous(background).
              This  script  is  also  responsible  for  the automatic uploading of events to a 3rd party server.
              Prior to 1.32 there was one zmfilter.pl process.  In 1.32 onwards we start a  zmfilter.pl  process
              for  each background filter so that the processing time of one filter doesn’t delay the processing
              of another filter.

       zmaudit.pl
              This script is used to check the consistency of the event file system and database. It can  delete
              orphaned  events, i.e. ones that appear in one location and not the other as well as checking that
              all the various event related tables are in line. It can be run interactively  or  in  batch  mode
              either  from  the  command line or a cron job or similar. In the zmconfig.pl there is an option to
              specify fast event deletes where the web interface only deletes the event entry from the  database
              itself.  If  this is set then it is this script that tidies up the rest.  We do not recommend fast
              event deletion and we do not recommend having zmaudit.pl run in the background.  It is a very  ram
              cpu  and  disk  io  intensive program, constantly scanning every event.  Please run it manually or
              from a cron job on weekends or something.

       zmwatch.pl
              This is a simple script purely designed to keep an eye on the capture daemons and restart them  if
              they lockup. It has been known for sync problems in the video drivers to cause this so this script
              makes sure that nothing important gets missed.

       zmupdate.pl
              Currently this script is responsible for checking whether a new version of ZoneMinder is available
              and  other  miscellaneous  actions related to upgrades and migrations. It is also intended to be a
              ‘one stop shop’ for any upgrades and will execute everything necessary to update your installation
              to a new version.

       zmvideo.pl
              This script is used from the web interface to generate video files in various formats in a  common
              way.  You  can  also use it from the command line in certain circumstances but this is not usually
              necessary.

       zmx10.pl
              This is an optional script that can be used to initiate and  monitor  X10  Home  Automation  style
              events  and  interface  with an alarm system either by the generation of X10 signals on ZoneMinder
              events or by initiating  ZoneMinder  monitoring  and  capture  on  receipt  of  X10  signals  from
              elsewhere,  for  instance  the  triggering  of an X10 PIR. For example I have several cameras that
              don’t do motion detection until I arm my alarm system whereupon they switch to active mode when an
              X10 signal is generated by the alarm system and received by ZoneMinder.

       zmtrigger.pl
              This is an optional script that is a more generic solution to external triggering  of  alarms.  It
              can handle external connections via either internet socket, unix socket or file/device interfaces.
              You  can  either  use  it  ‘as  is’  if  you  can  interface with the existing format, or override
              connections and channels  to  customise  it  to  your  needs.  The  format  of  triggers  used  by
              zmtrigger.pl is as follows “<id>|<action>|<score>|<cause>|<text>|<showtext>” where

              • ‘id’ is the id number or name of the ZM monitor.

              • ‘action’  is  ‘on’,  ‘off’,  ‘cancel’  or  ‘show’ where ‘on’ forces an alarm condition on, ‘off’
                forces an alarm condition off and ‘cancel’ negates the previous ‘on’ or ‘off’. The ‘show’ action
                merely updates some auxiliary text which can optionally be displayed in the images  captured  by
                the monitor. Ordinarily you would use ‘on’ and ‘cancel’, ‘off’ would tend to be used to suppress
                motion  based events. Additionally ‘on’ and ‘off’ can take an additional time offset, e.g. on+20
                which automatically ‘cancel’s the previous action after that number of seconds.

              • ‘score’ is the score given to the alarm, usually to indicate it’s importance. For ‘on’  triggers
                it should be non-zero, otherwise it should be zero.

              • ‘cause’  is a 32 char max string indicating the reason for, or source of the alarm e.g. ‘Relay 1
                open’. This is saved in the ‘Cause’ field of the event. Ignored for ‘off’ or ‘cancel’ messages.

              • ‘text’ is a 256 char max additional info field, which is saved in the ‘Description’ field of  an
                event. Ignored for ‘off’ or ‘cancel’ messages.

              • ‘showtext’  is  up to 32 characters of text that can be displayed in the timestamp that is added
                to images. The ‘show’ action is designed to update this text without affecting  alarms  but  the
                text is updated, if present, for any of the actions. This is designed to allow external input to
                appear on the images captured, for instance temperature or personnel identity etc.

              Note that multiple messages can be sent at once and should be LF or CRLF delimited. This script is
              not  necessarily intended to be a solution in itself, but is intended to be used as ‘glue’ to help
              ZoneMinder interface with other systems. It  will  almost  certainly  require  some  customisation
              before  you can make any use of it. If all you want to do is generate alarms from external sources
              then using the ZoneMinder::SharedMem perl module is likely to be easier.

       zmcamtool.pl
              This optional script is new for the upcoming 1.27 release of ZoneMinder. It is intended to make it
              easy to do the following: bring in new ptz controls and camera presets, convert existing  monitors
              into  presets, and export custom ptz controls and presets. For the initial release, this script is
              not integrated into the UI and must be called from the command line.  Type ‘’zmcamtool.pl  –help’’
              from the command line to get an explanation of the different arguments one can pass to the script.

       zmcontrol-*.pl
              These  are a set of example scripts which can be used to control Pan/Tilt/Zoom class cameras. Each
              script converts a set of standard parameters used for camera  control  into  the  actual  protocol
              commands sent to the camera. If you are using a camera control protocol that is not in the shipped
              list  then  you  will have to create a similar script though it can be created entirely separately
              from ZoneMinder and does not need to named as these scripts are. Although the scripts are used  to
              action  commands  originated  from  the web interface they can also be used directly or from other
              programs or scripts, for instance to implement periodic scanning to different presets.

       zmtrack.pl
              This script is used to manage the experimental motion tracking  feature.  It  is  responsible  for
              detecting  that  an  alarm is taking place and moving the camera to point to the alarmed location,
              and then subsequently returning it to a defined standby location. As well as moving the camera  it
              also  controls  when  motion  detection is suspended and restored so that the action of the camera
              tracking does not trigger endless further alarms which are not justified.

       zm     This is the (optional) ZoneMinder init script, see below for details.

       zmeventnotification.pl
              This is an optional 3rd party  real  time  event  notification  server  that  also  provides  push
              notifications  for  zmNinja  as well as machine learning powered object/face-detection. Please see
              Event Notification  Server  Documentation  for  more  details  (Note  that  the  machine  learning
              components are optional, and are developed in Python3)

       Finally,  there  are  also  a  number  of ZoneMinder perl modules included. These are used by the scripts
       above, but can also be used by your own or 3rd party scripts. Full  documentation  for  most  modules  is
       available in ‘pod’ form via ‘perldoc’ but the general purpose of each module is as follows.

       ZoneMinder.pm
              This  is  a  general  ZoneMinder  container  module.  It includes the Base.pm, Config.pm Debug.pm,
              Database.pm, and SharedMem.pm modules described below. It also exports all  of  their  symbols  by
              default. If you use the other modules directly you have request which symbol tags to import.

       ZoneMinder/Base.pm
              This is the base ZoneMinder perl module. It contains only simple data such as version information.
              It is included by all other ZoneMinder perl modules

       ZoneMinder/Config.pm
              This module imports the ZoneMinder configuration from the database.

       ZoneMinder/Debug.pm
              This  module  contains  the  defined  Debug  and  Error functions etc, that are used by scripts to
              produce diagnostic information in a standard format.

       ZoneMinder/Database.pm
              This module contains database access definitions and functions. Currently not a  lot  is  in  this
              module but it is included as a placeholder for future development.

       ZoneMinder/Event.pm
              This module contains functions to load, manipulate, delete, copy, move events.

       ZoneMinder/Filter.pm
              This module contains functions to load, execute etc filters.

       ZoneMinder/SharedMem.pm
              This  module  contains  standard  shared  memory access functions. These can be used to access the
              current state of monitors etc as well as issuing commands to the monitors to switch things on  and
              off. This module effectively provides a ZoneMinder API.

       ZoneMinder/ConfigAdmin.pm
              This module is a specialised module that contains the definition, and other information, about the
              various configuration options. It is not intended for use by 3rd parties.

       ZoneMinder/Control/*.pm
              These modules contain implementations of the various PTZ protocols.

       ZoneMinder/Trigger/*.pm
              These  modules  contain  definitions  of trigger channels and connections used by the zmtrigger.pl
              script. Although they can be used ‘as is’, they are  really  intended  as  examples  that  can  be
              customised  or  specialised  for  different  interfaces.  Contributed  modules for new channels or
              connections will be welcomed and included in future versions of ZoneMinder.

   Getting Started
       After installation of Zoneminder you should now be able to load the ZoneMinder web frontend.  By  default
       this will be with the Classic skin, below is an example of the page you should now see.  [image]

   Setting Timezone
       Previous  versions  of  ZoneMinder  required the user to set up Timezone correctly in php.ini. This is no
       longer the case. Starting 1.34, ZoneMinder allows you to specify the TimeZone in the UI. Please make sure
       it is set up correctly. The Timezone can be changed by selecting Options->System->Timezone [image]

   Enabling Authentication
       We strongly recommend enabling authentication right away. There are some situations where  certain  users
       don't  enable  authentication, such as instances where the server is in a LAN not directly exposed to the
       Internet, and is only accessible via VPN etc., but in most cases, authentication should  be  enabled.  So
       let's do that right away.

       • Click on the Options link on the top bar of the web interface

       • You will now be presented with a sidebar full of options. Click on the "System" link
       [image]

       • The relevant portions to change are marked in red above

       • Enable  OPT_USE_AUTH  - this automatically switches to authentication mode with a default user (more on
         that later)

       • Select a random string for AUTH_HASH_SECRET - this is  used  to  make  the  authentication  logic  more
         secure,  so  please generate your own string and make sure it is sufficiently randomized and long. Note
         that if you plan to use APIs with ZoneMinder (needed by zmNinja/other apps), it is mandatory  that  you
         have this field populated

       • The other options highlighed above should already be set, but if not, please make sure they are

       • Note that if you are planning to use zmNinja and plan to use ZM authentication, you must also:

         • set AUTH_RELAY to hashed

         • Enable AUTH_HASH_LOGINS

       • Click  on  Save  at  the  bottom  and  that's  it! The next time you refresh that page, you will now be
         presented with a login screen. Job well done!
       [image]

       NOTE:
          The default login/password is "admin/admin"

   Understanding the Web Console
       Before we proceed, lets spend a few minutes understanding the key functions of the web console.  For  the
       sake  of illustration, we are going to use a populated zoneminder configuration with several monitors and
       events.  [image]

       This screen is called the "console" screen in ZoneMinder and shows a summary of your monitors, associated
       events and more information.

       • A: The options menu lets you configure many aspects of ZoneMinder. Refer to Options.

       • B: This brings up a color coded log window that shows various system and  component  level  logs.  This
         window is useful if you are trying to diagnose issues. Refer to Logging.

       • C:  ZoneMinder  allows  you  to  group monitors for logical separation. This option lets you create new
         groups, associate monitors to them and edit/delete existing groups.

       • D: Filters are a powerful mechanism to perform actions when  certain  conditions  are  met.  ZoneMinder
         comes  with  some  preset filters that keep a tab of disk space and others. Many users create their own
         filters for more advanced actions like sending emails when certain events  occur  and  more.  Refer  to
         Filtering Events.

       • E: The Cycle option allows you to rotate between live views of each configured monitor.

       • F:  The  Montage  option shows a collage of your monitors. You can customize them including moving them
         around.

       • G: Montage Review allows you to simultaneously view past events for different monitors. Note that  this
         is a very resource intensive page and its performance will vary based on your system capabilities.

       • H:  Audit Events Report is more of a power user feature. This option looks for recording gaps in events
         and recording issues in mp4 files.

       • I: This is the user you are currently logged in as.

       • J: ZoneMinder allows you to maintain "run states". If you  click  on  the  "Running"  text,  ZoneMinder
         brings  up a popup that allows you to define additional "states" (referred to as runstates). A runstate
         is essentially a snapshot that records the state of each monitor and  you  can  switch  between  states
         easily. For example, you might have a run state defined that switches all monitors to "monitor" mode in
         which  they  are not recording anything while another state that sets some of the monitors to "modect".
         Why would you want this? A great example is to disable recording when you are at home and  enable  when
         you are away, based on time of day or other triggers. You can switch states by selecting an appropriate
         state  manually,  or  do  it  automatically  via  cron  jobs,  for example. An example of using cron to
         automatically  switch is provided in the FAQ.  More esoteric examples of switching run states based  on
         phone location can be found here.

       Here is an example of multiple run states that I've defined. Each one of these runstates changes the mode
       of  specific monitors depending on time of day and other conditions. Use your imagination to decide which
       conditions require state changes.  [image]

       • K: This line shows you system health information

       • L: This defines how Zoneminder will record events. There are various modes. In brief Modect  ==  record
         if  a  motion  is  detected,Record  =  always  record  24x7, Mocord = always record PLUS detect motion,
         Monitor = just provide a live view but don't record anytime, Nodect = Don't  record  till  an  external
         entity via zmtrigger tells Zoneminder to (this is advanced usage).

       • M:  This  is  the  "source"  column  that tells you the type of the camera - if its an IP camera, a USB
         camera or more. In this example, they are all IP cameras. Green  means  the  monitor  is  running.  Red
         means there is something wrong with that camera.

       • N:  This  is  the  core  of ZoneMinder - recording events. It gives you a count of how many events were
         recorded over the hour, day, week, month.

       • O: These are the "Zones". Zones are areas within the camera that you  mark  as  'hotspots'  for  motion
         detection. Simply put, when you first configure your monitors (cameras), by default Zoneminder uses the
         entire  field  of  view  of  the camera to detect motion. You may not want this. You may want to create
         "zones" specifically for detecting motion and ignore others. For example, lets consider a room  with  a
         fan that spins. You surely don't want to consider the fan moving continuously a reason for triggering a
         record? Probably not - in that case, you'd leave the fan out while making your zones.

       • P: This is a "visual filter" which lets you 'filter' the console display based on text you enter. While
         this  may  not  be particularly useful for small systems, ZoneMinder is also used in mega-installations
         will well over 200+ cameras and this visual filter helps reduce the monitors  you  are  seeing  at  one
         time.

   Adding Monitors
       Now  that  we have a basic understanding of the web console, lets go about adding a new camera (monitor).
       For this example, lets assume we have an IP camera that streams RTSP at LAN IP address 192.168.1.33.

   Note
       This is meant to be a simple example. For a more detailed explanation of  other  options  available  when
       creating a monitor, please see Defining Monitors

       The  first thing we will need to know is how to access that camera's video feed. You will need to consult
       your camera's manual or check their forum. Zoneminder community users also have a frequently updated list
       right here that lists information about many cameras. If you don't find your list there and can't seem to
       find it elsewhere, feel free to register and ask in the user forums.

       The camera we are using as an example here is a Foscam 9831W which is a 1280x960 RTSP camera, and the URL
       to access it's feed is username:password@IPADDRESS:PORT/videoMain

       Let's get started:

       Click on the "Add" button below: [image]

       This brings up the new monitor window: [image]

       • We've given it a name of 'Garage', because, well, its better than  Monitor-1  and  this  is  my  Garage
         camera.

       • There  are  various  source  types. As a brief introduction you'd want to use 'Local' if your camera is
         physically attached to your ZM server (like a USB camera, for example), and one of 'Remote',  'FFMpeg',
         'Libvlc'  or 'cURL' for a remote camera (not necessarily, but usually). For this example, let's go with
         'FFMpeg'.

       NOTE:
          As a  thumb rule, if you have a camera accessible via IP and it does HTTP or RTSP, start  with  FFMpeg
          first and libvlc if it doesn't work (Defining Monitors covers other modes in more details). If you are
          wondering what 'File' does, well, ZoneMinder was built with compatibility in mind. Take a look at this
          post  to see how file can be used for leisure reading.

       • In this example, the Function is 'Modect', which means it will start recording if motion is detected on
         that camera feed. The parameters for what constitutes motion detected is specific in Defining Zones

       • In  Analysis  FPS, we've put in 5FPS here. Note that you should not put an FPS that is greater than the
         camera FPS. In my case, 5FPS is sufficient for my needs

       NOTE:
          Leave Maximum FPS and Alarm Maximum FPS empty if you are configuring an IP camera. In  older  versions
          of  ZoneMinder, you were encouraged to put a value here, but that is no longer recommended. Infact, if
          you see your feed going much  slower  than  the  feed  is  supposed  to  go,  or  you  get  a  lot  of
          buffering/display  issues,  make  sure  this is empty. If you need to control camera FPS, please do it
          directly on the camera (via its own web interface, for example)

       • We are done for the General tab. Let's move to the next tab
       [image]

       • Let's select a protocol of RTSP and a remote method of RTP/RTSP (this is an RTSP camera)

       • Note that starting ZM 1.34, GPUs are supported. In my case, I have an NVIDIA  GeForce  GTX1050i.  These
         cuda  and  cuvid  parameters  are  what  my  system supports to use the NVIDIA hardware decoder and GPU
         resources. If you don't have a GPU, or don't know how to configure your ffmpeg to support it, leave  it
         empty for now. In future, we will add a section on how to set up a GPU

       NOTE: It is entirely possible that cuda and cuvid don't work for you and you need different values. Isaac
       uses cuda in DecoderHWAccelName and leaves DecoderHWAccelDevice empty. Try that too.

   Todo
       add GPU docs

       That's pretty much it. Click on Save. We are not going to explore the other tabs in this simple guide.

       You now have a configured monitor: [image]

       And  then,  finally,  to  see if everything works, if you click on the garage monitor you just added, you
       should be able to see its live feed. If you don't, inspect your webserver logs and your  ZoneMinder  logs
       to see what is going on.

   Switching to another theme
   Todo
       Fix theme text after I clearly understand that System->CSS is doing

       When  you  first install ZoneMinder, you see is what is called a "classic" skin. Zoneminder has a host of
       configuration options that you can customize over time. This guide  is  meant  to  get  you  started  the
       easiest  possible  way,  so  we  will not go into all the details. However, it is worthwhile to note that
       Zoneminder also has a 'flat' theme that depending on your preferences may look more modern. So let's  use
       that as an example of introducing you to the Options menu

       • Click on the Options link on the top right of the web interface in the image above

       • This will bring you to the options window as shown below. Click on the "System" tab and then select the
         "flat" option for CSS_DEFAULT as shown below
       [image]

       • Click Save at the bottom

       Now, switch to the "Display" tab and also select "Flat" there like so: [image]

       Your screen will now look like this:

       Congratulations! You now have a modern looking interface.  [image]

   Conclusion
       This  was  a  quick  'Getting Started' guide where you were introduced to the very basics of how to add a
       monitor (camera). We've skipped many details to keep this concise. Please refer to Defining Monitors  for
       many other customization details.

   Defining Monitors
       To  use ZoneMinder properly you need to define at least one Monitor. Essentially, a monitor is associated
       with a camera and can continually check it for motion detection and such like.

       You can access the monitor window by clicking on the “Add New Monitor” button,  or  by  clicking  on  the
       “Source” column of a predefined monitor.  [image]

       There  are  a  small  number  of  camera  setups that ZoneMinder knows about and which can be accessed by
       clicking on the ‘Presets’ link. Selecting one of the presets will fill in the monitor configuration  with
       appropriate  values  but  you will still need to enter others and confirm the preset settings. Here is an
       example of the presets window: [image]

       The options are divided into a set of tabs to make it easier to edit. You do not have to ‘save’ to change
       to different tab so you can make all the changes you require and  then  click  ‘Save’  at  the  end.  The
       individual options are explained in a little more detail below,

   Monitor Tab
       Name   The  name  for  your  monitor. This should be made up of alphanumeric characters (a-z,A-Z,0-9) and
              hyphen (-) and underscore(_) only. Whitespace is not allowed.

       Server Multi-Server implementation allows the ability to define multiple  ZoneMinder  servers  sharing  a
              single  database. When servers are configured this setting allows you nominate the server for each
              monitor.

       Source Type
              This determines whether the camera is a local one attached to a physical video or USB port on your
              machine, a remote network camera or an image source that is represented by a  file  (for  instance
              periodically downloaded from a alternate location). Choosing one or the other affects which set of
              options are shown in the Source tab.

       Function
              This essentially defines what the monitor is doing. This can be one of the following;

                 • None  –  The  monitor  is  currently  disabled. No streams can be viewed or events generated.
                   Nothing is recorded.

                 • Monitor – The monitor is only available for live streaming. No image analysis is done  so  no
                   alarms or events will be generated, and nothing will be recorded.

                 • Modect – or MOtion DEteCTtion. All captured images will be analysed and events generated with
                   recorded video where motion is detected.

                 • Record  –  The  monitor  will  be  continuously  recorded.  Events  of a fixed-length will be
                   generated regardless of motion, analogous to a conventional  time-lapse  video  recorder.  No
                   motion detection takes place in this mode.

                 • Mocord  – The monitor will be continuously recorded, with any motion being highlighted within
                   those events.

                 • Nodect – or No DEteCTtion. This is a special mode designed to be used with external triggers.
                   In Nodect no motion detection takes place  but  events  are  recorded  if  external  triggers
                   require it.

              Generally speaking it is best to choose ‘Monitor’ as an initial setting here.

       Enabled
              The  enabled  field indicates whether the monitor should be started in an active mode or in a more
              passive state. You will nearly always want to check this box, the only exceptions being  when  you
              want the camera to be enabled or disabled by external triggers or scripts. If not enabled then the
              monitor will not create any events in response to motion or any other triggers.

       Linked Monitors
              This  field  allows  you  to  select  other  monitors on your system that act as triggers for this
              monitor. So if you have a camera covering one aspect of your property you can force all cameras to
              record while that camera detects motion or other events. You can either  directly  enter  a  comma
              separated  list  of monitor ids or click on ‘Select’ to choose a selection. Be very careful not to
              create circular dependencies with this feature however you will have infinitely persisting  alarms
              which is almost certainly not what you want! To unlink monitors you can ctrl-click.

       Maximum FPS

          WARNING:
              Unless  you  know  what  you  are  doing,  please  leave  this  field empty, especially if you are
              configuring a network camera. More  often  than  not,  putting  a  value  here  adversely  affects
              recording.

          On  some  occasions  you  may have one or more cameras capable of high capture rates but find that you
          generally do not require this performance at all times and would prefer to lighten the  load  on  your
          server. This option permits you to limit the maximum capture rate to a specified value. This may allow
          you  to  have  more  cameras  supported  on  your system by reducing the CPU load or to allocate video
          bandwidth unevenly between cameras sharing the same video device. This value is only a rough guide and
          the lower the value you set the less close the actual FPS may approach it especially on shared devices
          where it can be difficult to synchronise two or more different capture rates  precisely.  This  option
          controls the maximum FPS in the circumstance where no alarm is occurring only.

          This feature is limited and will only work under the following conditions:

          1. Local cameras

          2. Remote (IP) cameras in snapshot or jpeg mode only

          Using  this  field  for video streams from IP cameras will cause undesirable results when the value is
          equal to or less than the frame rate from the camera. Note  that  placing  a  value  higher  than  the
          camera’s  frame  rate is allowed and can help prevent cpu spikes when communication from the camera is
          lost.

       Alarm Maximum FPS

          WARNING:
              Unless you know what you are  doing,  please  leave  this  field  empty,  especially  if  you  are
              configuring  a  network  camera.  More  often  than  not,  putting  a value here adversely affects
              recording.

          If you have specified a Maximum FPS it may be that you don’t want this limitation to apply  when  your
          monitor  is recording motion or other event. This setting allows you to override the Maximum FPS value
          if this circumstance occurs. As with the Maximum FPS setting leaving this blank implies no limit so if
          you have set a maximum fps in the previous option then when  an  alarm  occurs  this  limit  would  be
          ignored  and  ZoneMinder would capture as fast as possible for the duration of the alarm, returning to
          the limited value after the alarm has concluded. Equally you could set this to the same, or higher (or
          even lower) value than Maximum FPS for more precise control over the capture rate in the event  of  an
          alarm.

          IMPORTANT:  This  field  is  subject  to the same limitations as the Maximum FPS field. Ignoring these
          limitations will produce undesriable results.

       Reference Image Blend %ge
              Each analysed image in ZoneMinder is a composite of previous images and is formed by applying  the
              current  image  as  a  certain percentage of the previous reference image. Thus, if we entered the
              value of 10 here, each image’s part in the reference image will diminish by a factor of  0.9  each
              time  round.  So  a typical reference image will be 10% the previous image, 9% the one before that
              and then 8.1%, 7.2%, 6.5% and so on of the rest of the  way.  An  image  will  effectively  vanish
              around  25  images later than when it was added. This blend value is what is specified here and if
              higher will make slower progressing events less detectable as the  reference  image  would  change
              more quickly. Similarly events will be deemed to be over much sooner as the reference image adapts
              to  the  new images more quickly. In signal processing terms the higher this value the steeper the
              event attack and decay of the  signal.  It  depends  on  your  particular  requirements  what  the
              appropriate  value  would  be for you but start with 10 here and adjust it (usually down) later if
              necessary.

       Triggers
              This small section lets you select which triggers will apply if the  run  mode  has  been  set  to
              ‘triggered’  above. The most common trigger is X10 and this will appear here if you indicated that
              your system supported it during installation. Only X10 is supported  as  a  shipped  trigger  with
              ZoneMinder  at  present but it is possible that other triggers will become available as necessary.
              You can also just use ‘cron’ jobs or other mechanisms to actually control the camera and keep them
              completely outside of the ZoneMinder settings.  The  zmtrigger.pl  script  is  also  available  to
              implement custom external triggering.

   Source Tab
   FFmpeg
          This is the recommended source type for most modern ip cameras.

       Source Path
              Use  this  field to enter the full URL of the stream or file your camera supports. This is usually
              an RTSP url. There are several methods to learn this:

                 • Check the documentation that came with your camera

                 • Look for your camera in the hardware compatibility list in the hardware compatibility wiki

                 • Try ZoneMinder’s new ONVIF probe feature

                 • Download and install the ONVIF Device Manager onto a Windows machine

                 • Use Google to find third party sites, such as ispy, which document this information

       Source Colours
              Specify the amount of colours in the captured image. 32 bit is the preferred choice  here.  Unlike
              with  local  cameras changing this has no controlling effect on the remote camera itself so ensure
              that your camera is actually capturing to this palette beforehand.

       Capture Width/Height
              Make sure you enter here the same values as they are in the remote camera’s internal setting.

       Keep aspect ratio
              As per local devices.

       Orientation
              As per local devices.

   LibVLC
          The fields for the LibVLC source type are configured the same  way  as  the  ffmpeg  source  type.  We
          recommend only using this source type if issues are experienced with the ffmpeg source type.

   cURL
   Local
       Device Path/Channel
              Enter  the  full  path  to the device file that your camera is attached to, e.g. /dev/video0. Some
              video devices, e.g. BTTV cards support multiple cameras on one device so in this  case  enter  the
              channel  number  in  the  Channel box or leave it at zero if you’re using a USB camera or one with
              just one channel. Look in Supported Hardware section, how to see  if  your  capture  card  or  USB
              webcam is supported or not, and what extra settings you may have to do, to make it work.

       Device Format
              Enter  the  video  format  of  the  video  stream.  This  is defined in various system files (e.g.
              /usr/include/linux/videodev.h) but the two most common are 0 for PAL and 1 for NTSC.

       Capture Palette
              Finally for the video part of the configuration enter the  colour  depth.  ZoneMinder  supports  a
              handful of the most common palettes, so choose one here. If in doubt try 32 bit colour first, then
              24  bit colour, then grey. If none of these work very well, and your camera is local, then YUV420P
              or one of the others probably will. There is a slight  performance  penalty  when  using  palettes
              other  than  32,  24,  or  grey palettes as an internal conversion is involved. Recent versions of
              ZoneMinder support 32bit colour. This capture palette provides a performance boost  when  used  on
              all modern Intel-based processors.

       Capture Width/Height
              The  dimensions  of the video stream your camera will supply. If your camera supports several just
              enter the one you’ll want to use for this application, you can always change it later.  However  I
              would  recommend  starting  with no larger than 320x240 or 384x288 and then perhaps increasing and
              seeing how performance is affected. This size should be adequate in most cases. Some  cameras  are
              quite  choosy  about the sizes you can use here so unusual sizes such as 197x333 should be avoided
              initially.

       Keep aspect ratio
              When typing in the dimensions of monitors you can click this checkbox to  ensure  that  the  width
              stays  in  the  correct  ratio  to  the  height,  or vice versa. It allows height to be calculated
              automatically from width (or vice versa) according to preset aspect ratio. This is preset  to  4:3
              but  can  be amended globally via the Options->Config->ZM_DEFAULT_ASPECT_RATIO setting. Aside from
              4:3 which is the usual for network and analog cameras another  common  setting  is  11:9  for  CIF
              (352x288) based sources.

       Orientation
              If  your  camera  is  mounted  upside  down or at right angles you can use this field to specify a
              rotation that is applied to the image as it is captured.  This  incurs  an  additional  processing
              overhead  so  if possible it is better to mount your camera the right way round if you can. If you
              choose one of the rotation options remember to switch the height and width  fields  so  that  they
              apply,  e.g.  if  your  camera captures at 352x288 and you choose ‘Rotate Right’ here then set the
              height to be 352 and width to be 288. You can also choose to  ‘flip’  the  image  if  your  camera
              provides mirrored input.

   Remote
       Remote Protocol
              Choices  are  currently  HTTP  and RTSP. Before RTSP became the industry standard, many ip cameras
              streamed directly from their web portal. If you have an ip camera that does not  speak  RTSP  then
              choose  HTTP here. If you camera does speak RTSP then you should change your source type to ffmpeg
              instead of selecting RTSP here. The Remote -> RTSP method is no longer being maintained and may go
              away at some point in the future.

       Remote Method
              When HTTP is the Remote Protocol, your choices are Simple and Regexp. Most should  choose  Simple.
              When  RTSP  is  the  Remote  Protocol,  your  choices  are  RTP/Unicast,  RTP/Multicast, RTP/RTSP,
              RTP,RTSP,HTTP. Try each of these to determine which works with your camera. Most cameras will  use
              either RTP/Unicast (UDP) or RTP/RTSP (TCP).

       Remote Host/Port/Path
              Use  these  fields  to  enter  the  full  URL  of  the  camera.  Basically  if  your  camera is at
              http://camserver.home.net:8192/cameras/camera1.jpg then these fields will  be  camserver.home.net,
              8192  and  /cameras/camera1.jpg  respectively.  Leave  the  port at 80 if there is no special port
              required. If you require authentication to access your camera then add this onto the host name  in
              the  form  <username>:<password>@<hostname>.com.  This will usually be 32 or 24 bit colour even if
              the image looks black and white. Look in Supported Hardware >  Network  Cameras  section,  how  to
              obtain these strings that may apply to your camera.

       Remote Image Colours
              Specify  the  amount of colours in the captured image. Unlike with local cameras changing this has
              no controlling effect on the remote camera itself so ensure that your camera is actually capturing
              to this palette beforehand.

       Capture Width/Height
              Make sure you enter here the same values as they are in the remote camera’s internal setting.

       Keep aspect ratio
              As per local devices.

       Orientation
              As per local devices.

       For an example to setup a MPEG-4 camera see: How_to_Setup_an_Axis211A_with_MPEG-4_streaming

   File
       File Path
              Enter the full path to the file to be used as the image source.

       File Colours
              Specify the amount of colours in the image. Usually 32 bit colour.

       Capture Width/Height
              As per local devices.

       Keep aspect ratio
              As per local devices.

       Orientation
              As per local devices.

   WebSite
       This Source Type allows one to configure an arbitrary website as  a  non-recordable,  fully  interactive,
       monitor  in ZoneMinder. Note that sites with self-signed certificates will not display until the end user
       first manually navigates to the site and accpets the unsigned certificate. Also note that some sites will
       set an X-Frame option in the header, which discourages their site from being displayed  within  a  frame.
       ZoneMinder  will  detect  this condition and present a warning in the log. When this occurs, the end user
       can choose to install a browser plugin or extension to workaround this issue.

       Website URL
              Enter the full http or https url to the desired website.

       Width (pixels)
              Chose a desired width  in  pixels  that  gives  an  acceptable  appearance.  This  may  take  some
              expirimentation.

       Height (pixels)
              Chose  a  desired  height  in  pixels  that  gives  an  acceptable  appearance. This may take some
              expirimentation.

       Web Site Refresh
              If the website in question has static content, optionally enter  a  time  period  in  seconds  for
              ZoneMinder to refresh the content.

   Storage Tab
       The storage section allows for each monitor to configure if and how video and audio are recorded.

       Save JPEGs
              Records video in individual JPEG frames. Storing JPEG frames requires more storage space than h264
              but it allows one to view an event anytime while it is being recorded.

              • Disabled  –  video  is  not  recorded  as  JPEG frames. If this setting is selected, then “Video
                Writer” should be enabled otherwise there is no video recording at all.

              • Frames only – video is recorded in individual JPEG frames.

              • Analysis images only (if available) – video is  recorded  in  individual  JPEG  frames  with  an
                overlay of the motion detection analysis information. Note that this overlay remains permanently
                visible in the frames.

              • Frames  +  Analysis  images  (if available) – video is recorded twice, once as normal individual
                JPEG frames and once in individual JPEG frames with analysis information overlaid.

       Video Writer
              Records video in real video format. It provides much better compression results than saving JPEGs,
              thus longer video history can be stored.

              • Disabled – video is not recorded in video format. If this setting is selected, then “Save JPEGs”
                should be enabled otherwise there is no video recording at all.

              • X264 Encode – the video or picture frames received from the camera are transcoded into h264  and
                stored as a video. This option is useful if the camera cannot natively stream h264.

              • H264 Camera Passthrough – this option assumes that the camera is already sending an h264 stream.
                Video  will  be recorded as is, without any post-processing in zoneminder. Video characteristics
                such as bitrate, encoding mode, etc. should be set directly in the camera.

       Recording Audio
              Check the box labeled “Whether to store the audio stream when saving an event.” in order  to  save
              audio (if available) when events are recorded.

   Timestamp Tab
       Timestamp Label Format
              This  relates to the timestamp that is applied to each frame. It is a ‘strftime’ style string with
              a few extra tokens. You can add %f to add  the  decimal  hundredths  of  a  second  to  the  frame
              timestamp,  so  %H:%M:%S.%f will output time like 10:45:37.45. You can also use %N for the name of
              the monitor and %Qwhich will be filled by any of the ‘show text’  detailed  in  the  zmtriggers.pl
              section.

       Timestamp Label X/Y
              The  X and Y values determine where to put the timestamp. A value of 0 for the X value will put it
              on the left side of the image and a Y value of 0 will place it at the top of the image.  To  place
              the timestamp at the bottom of the image use a value eight less than the image height.

   Buffers Tab
       Image Buffer Size
              This  option  determines  how  many  frames  are held in the ring buffer at any one time. The ring
              buffer is the storage space where the last ‘n’ images are kept, ready  to  be  resurrected  on  an
              alarm or just kept waiting to be analysed. It can be any value you like with a couple of provisos,
              (see  next  options). However it is stored in shared memory and making it too large especially for
              large images with a high colour depth can use a lot of memory. A value  of  no  more  than  50  is
              usually  ok.  If  you find that your system will not let you use the value you want it is probably
              because your system has an arbitrary limit on the size of shared memory  that  may  be  used  even
              though  you may have plenty of free memory available. This limit is usually fairly easy to change,
              see the Troubleshooting section for details.

       Warm-up Frames
              This specifies how many frames the analysis daemon should process but not examine when it  starts.
              This  allows it to generate an accurate reference image from a series of images before looking too
              carefully for any changes. I use a value of 25 here, too high and it will  take  a  long  time  to
              start, too low and you will get false alarms when the analysis daemon starts up.

       Pre/Post Event Image Buffer
              These  options  determine  how many frames from before and after an event should be preserved with
              it. This allows you to view what happened immediately prior and subsequent to the event.  A  value
              of 10 for both of these will get you started but if you get a lot of short events and would prefer
              them  to  run  together  to  form  fewer longer ones then increase the Post Event buffer size. The
              pre-event buffer is a true buffer and should not really exceed half the ring buffer size.  However
              the  post-event  buffer  is  just a count that is applied to captured frames and so can be managed
              more flexibly. You should also bear in mind the frame rate  of  the  camera  when  choosing  these
              values.  For instance a network camera capturing at 1FPS will give you 10 seconds before and after
              each event if you chose 10 here. This may well be too much and pad out events more than necessary.
              However a fast video card may capture at 25FPS and you will  want  to  ensure  that  this  setting
              enables you to view a reasonable time frame pre and post event.

       Stream Replay Image Buffer
              The  number  of  frames  buffered to allow pausing and rewinding of the stream when live viewing a
              monitor. A value of 0 disables the feature.  Frames are buffered to  ZM_PATH_SWAP.  If  this  path
              points  to  a  physical  drive,  a  lot  of  IO  will be caused during live view / montage. If you
              experience high system load in those situations, either disable the feature or use a RAM drive for
              ZM_PATH_SWAP.

       Alarm Frame Count
              This option allows you to specify how many consecutive alarm frames must  occur  before  an  alarm
              event  is  generated.  The  usual, and default, value is 1 which implies that any alarm frame will
              cause or participate in an event. You can enter any value up to 16 here to eliminate bogus  events
              caused  perhaps  by  screen  flickers  or  other transients. Values over 3 or 4 are unlikely to be
              useful however. Please  note  that  if  you  have  statistics  recording  enabled  then  currently
              statistics  are not recorded for the first ‘Alarm Frame Count’-1 frames of an event. So if you set
              this value to 5 then the first 4 frames will be missing statistics whereas the more usual value of
              1 will ensure that all alarm frames have statistics recorded.

   Control Tab
       Note: This tab and its options will only appear  if  you  have  selected  the  ZM_OPT_CONTROL  option  to
       indicate  that  your  system  contains cameras which are able to be controlled via Pan/Tilt/Zoom or other
       mechanisms. See the Camera Control section elsewhere in this  document  for  further  details  on  camera
       control protocols and methods.

       Controllable
              Check this box to indicate your camera can be controlled.

       Control Type
              Select  the control type that is appropriate for your camera. ZoneMinder ships with a small number
              of predefined control protocols which will works with some cameras without modification but  which
              may  have  to amended to function with others, Choose the edit link to create new control types or
              to edit the existing ones.

       Control Device
              This is the device that is used to control your camera. This will normally be a serial or  similar
              port. If your camera is a network camera, you will generally not need to specify a control device.

       Control Address
              This  is the address of your camera. Some control protocols require that each camera is identified
              by a particular, usually numeric, id. If your camera uses addressing then enter  the  id  of  your
              camera  here.  If your camera is a network camera then you will usually need to enter the hostname
              or IP address of it here. This is ordinarily the same as that given for the camera itself.

       Auto Stop Timeout
              Some cameras only support a continuous mode of movement. For instance you tell the camera  to  pan
              right  and then when it is aligned correctly you tell it to stop. In some cases it is difficult to
              time this precisely over a web interface so this option allows you to specify an automatic timeout
              where the command will be automatically stopped. So a value of 0.25 here can tell  the  script  to
              stop  moving  a  quarter  of  a  second  after starting. This allows a more precise method of fine
              control. If this value is left blank or at zero it will be ignored, if set then it will be used as
              the timeout however it will only be applied for the lower 25% of possible speed ranges.  In  other
              words  if  your camera has a pan speed range of 1 to 100 then selecting to move at 26 or over will
              be assumed to imply that you want a larger movement that you can control yourself and  no  timeout
              will  be  applied. Selecting motion at lower speeds will be interpreted as requiring finer control
              and the automatic timeout will be invoked.

       Track Motion
              This and the following four options are used with the experimental motion function. This will only
              work if your camera supports mapped movement modes where a point on an image can be  mapped  to  a
              control  command.  This  is generally most common on network cameras but can be replicated to some
              degree on other cameras that support relative movement modes. See the Camera Control  section  for
              more details. Check this box to enable motion tracking.

       Track Delay
              This  is  the  number  of  seconds to suspend motion detection for following any movement that the
              camera may make to track motion.

       Return Location
              If you camera supports a ‘home’ position or presets you can choose which preset the camera  should
              return to after tracking motion.

       Return Delay
              This  is  the delay, in seconds, once motion has stopped being detected, before the camera returns
              to any defined return location.

   X10 Tab
       Note: This tab and its options will only appear if you have indicated that your system supports  the  X10
       home automation protocol during initial system configuration.

       X10 Activation String
              The  contents of this field determine when a monitor starts and/or stops being active when running
              in ‘Triggered; mode and with X10 triggers. The format of this string is as follows,

                 • n : If you simply enter a number then the monitor will be activated when an X10 ON signal for
                   that unit code is detected and will be deactivated when an OFF signal is detected.

                 • !n : This inverts the previous mode, e.g. !5 means that the monitor is activated when an  OFF
                   signal for unit code 5 is detected and deactivated by an ON.

                 • n+  :  Entering a unit code followed by + means that the monitor is activated on receipt of a
                   ON signal for that unit code but will  ignore  the  OFF  signal  and  as  such  will  not  be
                   deactivated  by  this  instruction.  If  you  prepend a ‘!’ as per the previous definition it
                   similarly inverts the mode, i.e. the ON signal deactivates the monitor.

                 • n+<seconds> : As per the previous mode except that the monitor will deactivate  itself  after
                   the given number of seconds.

                 • n- : Entering a unit code followed by - means that the monitor is deactivated on receipt of a
                   OFF signal for that unit code but will ignore the ON signal and as such will not be activated
                   by this instruction. If you prepend a ‘!’ as per the previous definition it similarly inverts
                   the mode, i.e. the OFF signal activates the monitor.

                 • n-<seconds> : As per the previous mode except that the monitor will activate itself after the
                   given number of seconds.

              You  can  also  combine  several of these expressions to by separating them with a comma to create
              multiple circumstances of activation. However for now leave this blank.

       X10 Input Alarm String
              This has the same format as the previous field but instead of activating  the  monitor  with  will
              cause  a  forced  alarm  to  be generated and an event recorded if the monitor is Active. The same
              definition as above applies except that for  activated  read  alarmed  and  for  deactivated  read
              unalarmed(!). Again leave this blank for now.

       X10 Output Alarm String
              This  X10 string also has the same format as the two above options. However it works in a slightly
              different way. Instead of ZoneMinder reacting to X10 events this option  controls  how  ZoneMinder
              emits  X10  signals  when the current monitor goes into or comes out of the alarm state. Thus just
              entering a number will cause the ON signal for that unit code to be sent  when  going  into  alarm
              state  and the OFF signal when coming out of alarm state. Similarly 7+30 will send the unit code 7
              ON signal when going into alarm state and the OFF signal 30 seconds later regardless of state. The
              combination of the X10 instruction allows ZoneMinder to react intelligently to,  and  also  assume
              control  of,  other  devices when necessary. However the indiscriminate use of the Input Alarm and
              Output Alarm signals can cause some horrendous race  conditions  such  as  a  light  going  on  in
              response  to  an  alarm  which  then causes an alarm itself and so on. Thus some circumspection is
              required here. Leave this blank for now anyway.

   Misc Tab
       Event Prefix
              By default events are named ‘Event-<event id>’, however you are free to rename  them  individually
              as  you  wish.  This  option lets you modify the event prefix, the ‘Event-‘ part, to be a value of
              your choice so that events are named differently as they are generated. This allows  you  to  name
              events according to which monitor generated them.

       Section Length
              This  specifies  the  length  (in  seconds)  of  any fixed length events produced when the monitor
              function is ‘Record’ or ‘Mocord’. Otherwise it is ignored. This should not be so long that  events
              are difficult to navigate nor so short that too many events are generated. A length of between 300
              and 900 seconds I recommended.

       Frame Skip
              This setting also applies only to the ‘Record’ or ‘Mocord’ functions and specifies how many frames
              should  be  skipped  in the recorded events. The default setting of zero results in every captured
              frame being saved. Using a value of one would mean that one frame is skipped between  each  saved,
              two  means  that two frames are skipped between each saved frame etc. An alternate way of thinking
              is that one in every ‘Frame Skip + 1’ frames is saved. The point of this is to ensure  that  saved
              events  do not take up too much space unnecessarily whilst still allowing the camera to capture at
              a fairly high frame rate. The alternate approach is to limit the capture  frame  rate  which  will
              obviously affect the rate at which frames are saved.

       FPS Report Interval
              How  often  the current performance in terms of Frames Per Second is output to the system log. Not
              used in any functional way so set it to  maybe  1000  for  now.  If  you  watch  /var/log/messages
              (normally)  you  will  see  this  value  being emitted at the frequency you specify both for video
              capture and processing.

       Default Scale
              If your monitor has been defined with a particularly large or small image size then you can choose
              a default scale here with which to view the monitor so it is easier or more visible from  the  web
              interface.

       Web Colour
              Some  elements of ZoneMinder now use colours to identify monitors on certain views. You can select
              which colour is used for each monitor here. Any specification that is valid for  HTML  colours  is
              valid  here, e.g. ‘red’ or ‘#ff0000’. A small swatch next to the input box displays the colour you
              have chosen.

       Embed EXIF data into image:
              Embeds EXIF data into each jpeg frame

   Todo
       what about mp4s?

   Defining Zones
       The next important thing to do with a new monitor is set up Zones  for  it  to  use.  By  default  you’ll
       already  have  one  generated  for  you  when you created your monitor (the default zone is the full area
       captured by the monitor) but you might want to modify it or add others.

       Click on the Zones column for your monitor and you should see a small popup window appear which  contains
       an  image  from  your camera overlain with a stippled pattern representing your zone. In the default case
       this will cover the whole image. The colour of the zones appearing here is determined by what  type  they
       are.  The  default  zone  is  Active  and so will be red, Inclusive zones are orange, exclusive zones are
       purple, preclusive zones are blue and inactive zones are white.

       Beneath the zones image will be a table containing a listing  of  your  zones.  Clicking  on  either  the
       relevant  bit  of  the image or on the Id or Name in the table will bring up another window where you can
       edit the particulars for your Zones. For more information on defining or editing  a  zone,  see  Defining
       Zones.

       Zone  configuration and tuning are important when running in the motion detection modes to avoid storing,
       sorting through, or being alerted on uninteresting video data.  Configuring a zone involves setting  some
       basic  parameters,  as  well  as  choosing  an  alarm  check method and tuning their associated detection
       parameters.

       The Zone view is split into two main areas, on the left is the options are area and on the right  is  the
       zone  drawing  area.  A  default or new zone will cover the whole drawing area and will overlay any other
       zones you already have on there. Unlike the previous zones image, the current  zone  is  coloured  green,
       other zones will be orange regardless of type. The smaller the zone, the less processing time it takes to
       examine it.

   Basic parameters
       Name   Each  Zone  can  be named for reference purposes.  It is used for logging and debugging.  Choose a
              name that helps you identify your zones.

       Type   This is one of the more important concepts in ZoneMinder and there are six to choose from.

              • Active Triggers an alarm when motion is detected within it.  This is the zone  type  you’ll  use
                most  often,  and  which will be set for your default zone.  Only Active and Exclusive zones can
                trigger an alarm.

              • Inclusive This zone type can be used for any zones that you want to trigger an alarm only if  at
                least  one  other  Active  zone has already triggered one. This might be for example to cover an
                area of the image like a plant or tree which moves a lot and which would trigger lots of alarms.
                Perhaps this is behind an area you’d like to monitor though, in this case you’d create an active
                zone covering the non-moving parts and an inclusive zone covering the  tree  perhaps  with  less
                sensitive  detection  settings also. If something triggered an alarm in the Active zone and also
                in the Inclusive zone they would both be registered and the resulting alarm would be  that  much
                bigger than if you had blanked it out altogether.

              • Exclusive Triggers an alarm when motion is detected within it, as long as no alarms have already
                been  triggered in an Active zone.  This is the most specialized of the zone types. For instance
                in the camera covering my garden I keep watch for a hedgehog that visits most nights and  scoffs
                the  food out of my cats bowls. By creating a sensitive Exclusive zone in that area I can ensure
                that a hedgehog alarm will only trigger if there is activity in that small  area.  If  something
                much bigger occurs, like someone walking by it will trigger a regular alarm and not one from the
                Exclusive  zone. Thus I can ensure I get alarms for big events and also special small events but
                not the noise in between.

              • Preclusive This zone type is relatively recent. It is called a Preclusive zone because if it  is
                triggered  it  actually  precludes  an  alarm being generated for that image frame. So motion or
                other changes that occur in a Preclusive zone will have the effect of  ensuring  that  no  alarm
                occurs  at  all.  The  application  for  this zone type is primarily as a shortcut for detecting
                general large-scale lighting or other changes. Generally this may be achieved  by  limiting  the
                maximum  number  of  alarm pixels or other measure in an Active zone. However in some cases that
                zone may cover an area where the area of variable illumination occurs in different places as the
                sun and/or shadows move  and  it  thus  may  be  difficult  to  come  up  with  general  values.
                Additionally,  if  the  sun comes out rapidly then although the initial change may be ignored in
                this way as the reference image catches up an alarm may ultimately be  triggered  as  the  image
                becomes  less  different.  Using  one  or  more  Preclusive  zones  offers a different approach.
                Preclusive zones are designed to be fairly small, even just a few pixels across, with quite  low
                alarm  thresholds.  They  should  be situated in areas of the image that are less likely to have
                motion occur such as high on a wall or in a corner. Should a general illumination  change  occur
                they  would  be triggered at least as early as any Active zones and prevent any other zones from
                generating an alarm. Obviously careful placement is required to ensure that they do  not  cancel
                any  genuine  alarms  or  that they are not so close together that any motion just hops from one
                Preclusive zone to another.  Preclusive zones may also be used  to  reduce  processing  time  by
                situating  one over an Active zone.  The Preclusive zone is processed first; if it is small, and
                is triggered, the rest of the zone/image will not be processed. See  Extend  Alarm  Frame  Count
                below for a way to hold the preclusive zone active for an extended period.

              • Inactive  Suppresses the detection of motion within it.  This can be layered on top of any other
                zone type, preventing motion within the Inactive zone from being effective for  any  other  zone
                type.   Use inactive zones to cover areas in which nothing notable will ever happen or where you
                get false alarms that don’t relate to what you are trying to monitor.   Inactive  zones  may  be
                overlaid  on  other  zones  to  blank  out areas, and are processed first (with the exception of
                Privacy zones, see below).  As a general practice, you should try and make zones abut each other
                instead of overlapping to avoid repeated duplicate processing of the same area.

              • Privacy Blackens the pixels within it. This can be used if you want to hide some regions in  the
                image  if  the situation does not allow another solution. This zone type is different to all the
                others in that it gets processed as soon as possible during capture (even before  the  timestamp
                gets into the image) and not in the analyzing process. So if you add, change or delete a Privacy
                zone, you don’t see the changes in the image until the capture process gets restarted. This will
                be done automatically, but needs a few seconds.

       Preset The  preset  chooser  sets sensible default values based on computational needs (fast v. best) and
              sensitivity (low, medium, high.)  It is not required that you select a preset, and you  can  alter
              any  of  the  parameters  after choosing a preset.  For a small number of monitors with ZoneMinder
              running on modern equipment, Best, high sensitivity can be chosen as a good starting point.

              It is important to understand that the available presets are intended merely as a starting  point.
              Since  every  camera’s  view  is  unique,  they are not guaranteed to work properly in every case.
              Presets tend to work acceptably for indoor cameras, where the objects of interest  are  relatively
              close  and there typically are few or no unwanted objects moving within the cameras view. Presets,
              on the other hand, tend to not work acceptably for outdoor cameras, where the  field  of  view  is
              typically  much  wider,  objects  of  interest are farther away, and changing weather patterns can
              cause false triggers. For outdoor cameras in particular, you will almost certainly  have  to  tune
              your  motion  detection zone to get desired results. Please refer to this guide to learn how to do
              this.

       Units

              • Pixels - Selecting this option will allow many of the following values to be entered (or viewed)
                in units of pixels.

              • Percentage -  Selecting this option will allow may of the following values  to  be  entered  (or
                viewed)  as a percentage.  The sense of the percentage values refers to the area of the zone and
                not the image as a whole. This makes trying to work out necessary sizes rather easier.

       Region points [image]

       The sample region shown to the right shows a region defined by 6 control points.  The shape of the region
       causes the check methods to ignore the sidewalk and  areas  of  the  porch  wall  that  receive  changing
       sunlight; two conditions that are not of interest in this zone.
          A  region  is a part of the captured image that is of interest for this zone.  By default, a region is
          configured to cover the whole captured image.  Depending on the selected type of this zone, the  shape
          of  the  region  can  be  adjusted  to accommodate multiple effects.  This can be done by dragging the
          control points in the reference image around, or by altering the coordinates  found  in  the  controls
          below  the  reference  image.   Clicking  on  a  control  point  in the reference image highlights the
          coordinates in the table below.  Clicking the + button in a point row adds  a  control  point  between
          this  point  and  the  next;  clicking  the  -  button  removes this control point.  It is possible to
          accidentally place a control point outside of the valid coordinates of the image.  This  will  prevent
          the  monitor  from  working properly.  You can make zones almost any shape you like; except that zones
          may not self-intersect (i.e. edges crossing over each other).

       Alarm Colour
              These parameters can be used to individually colorize the zone overlay pattern.   Alarms  in  this
              zone  will  be  highlighted  in  the  alarm  colour.  This option is irrelevant for Preclusive and
              Inactive zones and will be disabled.

       Alarm Check Methods
              There are 3 Alarm Check Methods.  They are sequential, and are layered:   In  AlarmedPixels  mode,
              only the AlarmedPixel analysis is performed.  In FilteredPixels mode, the AlarmedPixel analysis is
              performed  first,  followed  by  the  FilteredPixel  analysis.   In the Blobs mode, all 3 analysis
              methods are performed in order.  An alarm is only triggered if all of the enabled  analysis  modes
              are  triggered.  For performance reasons, as soon as the criteria for one of the analysis modes is
              not met, the alarm checking for the frame is complete.  Since the subsequent  modes  each  require
              progressively more computations, it is a good idea to tune the parameters in each of the activated
              layers.

              For  reference  purposes,  the  Zone Area box shows the area of the entire region of interest.  In
              percent mode, this is 100.  In Pixels mode, this is the pixel count of the region.  All 3  Min/Max
              Area  parameter  groups  are  based  on the Zone Area as the maximum sensible value, and all 3 are
              interpreted in the units specified in the Units input.

       AlarmedPixels
              Alarmed pixels is the first layer of analysis, and is always enabled.  Its  recommended  that  you
              start  with  this  method  and  move  on  to  the subsequent methods once the effects of the basic
              parameters are understood.  In the AlarmedPixels mode, 2 parameter categories  are  available  for
              tuning: Min/Max Pixel Threshold, and Min/Max Alarmed Area.

       Min/Max Pixel Threshold (0-255)
              In  the  AlarmedPixel  layer  of  analysis,  each individual pixel of the image is compared to the
              current reference image.  Pixels that are  different  from  the  reference  image  are  considered
              alarmed  pixels.   However,  small aberrations in lighting or auto exposure camera adjustments may
              cause the explicit value of a pixel to vary by small amounts from image to image.  This  parameter
              allows  you  to  set  the limits of what will be considered a changed pixel.  For example, if your
              camera points to a blank white wall, and you raise a black colored item into view, then the change
              in any one pixel will be great, indeed, extreme.  If however, you raise a white  piece  of  paper,
              then the change in an individual pixel will be less.

              The  minimum  pixel  threshold  setting should be high enough to cause minor lighting, imaging, or
              compression changes to be ignored.  Setting the minimum value too high, may allow a white  cat  to
              walk  undetected  across  the view of the white wall.  A good starting point for the minimum pixel
              threshold is 40, meaning that the difference in pixel value from must be greater than 40.  A  good
              default  for  the  maximum pixel threshold is 0 (indicating that all differences above the minimum
              threshold are considered a change.)

       Min/Max Alarmed Area
              The count of alarmed pixels (or percentage of alarmed pixels relative to the  pixel  area  of  the
              region  if  in  percent  mode) is used in this first layer of analysis to determine if an alarm is
              triggered.  If the count or percentage is above the  minimum  alarmed  area,  but  less  than  the
              maximum  alarmed area, an alarm is triggered.  These settings depend on the size of the object you
              are trying to capture: a value too low may cause false alarms, while a value too  high  might  not
              detect  small  objects.   A  good  starting  point  for  both the minimum and maximum are 0 and 0,
              indicating that any number of alarmed pixels (or any percentage) greater than 0  will  trigger  an
              alarm.   The  frame  scores  from  logged  events  can  then  be used to bring the minimum up to a
              reasonable value.  An alternative starting point for the minimum alarmed area (in percent) is  25%
              of  the  area  that an object of interest takes up in the region.  For example, if you approximate
              that a subject moving through the frame takes up 30% of the frame, then a  good  starting  minimum
              area is about 7.5%.

       FilteredPixels
              Selecting  the  FilteredPixels  Alarm  Check  Method  adds  an additional layer of analysis to the
              AlarmedPixels check along with 2 additional parameter categories for tuning.  This layer works  by
              analyzing  the  alarmed  pixels identified in the first layer.  Alarmed pixels are disregarded, in
              this and future layers if enabled, if they are not in groups  of  a  minimum  small  square  size.
              Primarily,  this  filtering  removes  isolated alarmed pixels that may be artifacts of the camera,
              lens, or compression.

       Filter Width/Height (pixels)
              This parameter is always specified in Pixels, even when Percentages are the  selected  units.   It
              specifies the size of the group of pixels surrounding a given pixel that must be in alarmed pixels
              for  the pixel itself to be considered an alarmed pixel.  The width and height should always be an
              odd number.  3 x 3 is the default value, and 5 x 5 is also suggested as  a  sensible  alternative.
              Avoid using large numbers for the width and height of the filter area.  When using the Blobs Alarm
              Check  Method, FilteredPixels can be effectively disabled by setting either the width or height to
              a value less than 1.

       Min/Max Filtered Area
              Applying the filtering analysis results in an area that is less than or equal to the alarmed area.
              Thus the minimum and maximum filtered area parameters for alarm should be equal to  or  less  than
              the  corresponding  alarm  area  parameters,  or the FilteredPixels analysis will never trigger an
              alarm.  In particular, it is useful to raise the minimum alarmed area parameter until false events
              from image artifacts disappear, and setting a minimum filtered area  parameter  less  the  minimum
              alarmed area parameter by enough to capture small events of interest.

       Blobs [image]

       This  image  shows  an  image with 1 identified blob.  The blob is outlined in the Alarm Colour specified
       above.

       When two or more Filtered areas touch or share a boundary, it is sensible to evaluate the regions as  one
       contiguous  area  instead of separate entities.  A Blob is a contiguous area made up of multiple filtered
       areas.  Whereas FilteredPixes is useful for excluding parts of the image that are not part of the  actual
       scene,  Blob  filtering  is  better  suited  to  disregarding  areas  of the actual scene that are not of
       interest.
          Selecting the Blobs Alarm Check Method opens up all of the available parameters.  Enabling Blobs  adds
          one  more  layer  of  analysis  to the AlarmedPixel and FilteredPixel checks in the determination of a
          valid alarm along along with 2 additional parameter categories for tuning: the size of the blobs,  and
          the  number  of  blobs.   A  Blob is not necessarily the whole object that may be of interest.  In the
          example image, the subject is moving, but only a portion of him is marked as a blob.  This is  because
          as  the  subject  moves,  many pixels of the image do not change in value beyond the set threshold.  A
          pixel that is representing the subject’s shoulder in one frame may be representing  his  back  in  the
          next, however, the value of the pixel remains nearly the same.

       Min/Max Blob Area
              The  blob  area  parameters  control  the  smallest  and  largest  contiguous areas that are to be
              considered a blob.  A good value for the maximum area is the default of  0.  (There  is  no  upper
              bound for the size of a contiguous area that will still be considered a blob.)

       Min/Max Blobs
              Normally, you would want any positive number of blobs to trigger an event, so the default value of
              1  should  suffice.   In  some  circumstances, it may benefit to have only one blob NOT trigger an
              event, in which case, setting this value to 2 or higher may serve some special  purpose.   A  good
              value  for the maximum blobs is the default of 0. (There is no upper bound for the number of blobs
              that will trigger an event.  Use the maximum blobs parameter can be used to tune out  events  that
              show a high number of blobs.

       Overload Frame Ignore Count
              This  setting  specifies  the  number  of  frames to NOT raise an alarm after an overload. In this
              context, overload is defined as a detected change too big to raise  an  alarm.  Depending  on  the
              alarm  check  method  that  could  be * Number of alarmed pixels > Max Alarmed Area or * Number of
              filtered pixels > Max Filtered Area or * Number of Blobs > Max Blobs The  idea  is  that  after  a
              change  like  a  light  going  on that is considered too big to count as an alarm, it could take a
              couple of frames for things to settle down again.

       Extend Alarm Frame Count
              This field applies to Preclusive Zones only. Placing a value in this field  holds  the  Preclusive
              zone  active for the specified number of frames after the initial triggering event. This is useful
              in cases where a sudden change in light level triggers the Preclusive zone, but the zone needs  to
              be held active for a few frames as the camera itself adjusts to that change in light level.

   Other information
       Refer to this user contributed Zone guide for additional information will illustrations if you are new to
       zones and need more help.

   Viewing Monitors
       ZoneMinder  allows  you  to  view  a  live  feed of your configured monitors. One can access this view by
       clicking on the “Name” column of any of the monitors [image]

       Clicking on the name produces a view similar to this: [image]

       The image should be self-explanatory but if  it  looks  like  garbage  it  is  possible  that  the  video
       configuration  is  wrong  so  look in your system error log and check for or report anything unusual. The
       centre of the window will have a tiny frame that just contains a status; this will be ‘Idle’, ‘Alarm’  or
       ‘Alert’  depending  on  the  function of the Monitor and what’s going on in the field of view. Idle means
       nothing is happening, Alarm means there is an alarm in  progress  and  Alert  means  that  an  alarm  has
       happened  and  the  monitor  is  ‘cooling  down’, if another alarm is generated in this time it will just
       become part of the same event. These indicators are colour coded in green, red and amber.

       By default if you have minimised this window or opened other windows in front it will pop up to the front
       if it goes to Alarm state. This behaviour can be turned off  in  ‘options’  if  required.  You  can  also
       specify  a sound file in the configuration, which will be played when an alarm occurs to alert you to the
       fact if you are not in front of your computer. This should be a short sound of only a couple  of  seconds
       ideally.  Note that as the status is refreshed every few seconds it is possible for this not to alert you
       to every event that takes place, so you shouldn’t rely on it for this purpose if you  expect  very  brief
       events.  Alternatively  you can decrease the refresh interval for this window in the configuration though
       having too frequent refreshing may impact on performance.

       Below the status is a list of recent events that have occurred, by default this is a listing of just  the
       last  10 but clicking on ‘All’ will give you a full list and ‘Archive’ will take you to the event archive
       for this monitor, more on this later. Clicking on any  of  the  column  headings  will  sort  the  events
       appropriately.

       From here you can also delete events if you wish. The events themselves are listed with the event id, and
       event  name  (which  you can change), the time that the event occurred, the length of the event including
       any preamble and postamble frames, the number of  frames  comprising  the  event  with  the  number  that
       actually  contain an alarm in brackets and finally a score. This column lists the average score per alarm
       frame as well as the maximum score that any alarm frame had.

       The score is an arbitrary value that essentially represents the percentage of pixels in the zone that are
       in blobs divided by the square root of the number of blobs and then divided by the size of the zone. This
       gives a nominal maximum of 100 for a zone and the totals for each zone are added together,  Active  zones
       scores  are added unchanged, Inclusive zones are halved first and Exclusive zones are doubled. In reality
       values are likely to be much less than 100 but it does give a simple indication of how  major  the  event
       was.

   Filtering Events
       Filters  allow  you  to  define  complex conditions with associated actions in ZoneMinder. Examples could
       include:

       • Send an email each time a new event occurs for a specific monitor

       • Delete events that are more than 10 days old

       And many more.

       The filter window can be accessed by tapping on the top level filter menu

       You can use the filter window to create your own filters or to modify existing ones. You  can  even  save
       your  favourite  filters  to re-use at a future date. Filtering itself is fairly simple; you first choose
       how many expressions you’d like your filter to contain. Changing this value  will  cause  the  window  to
       redraw  with  a corresponding row for each expression. You then select what you want to filter on and how
       the expressions relate by choosing whether they are ‘and’ or ‘or’ relationships. For filters comprised of
       many expressions you will also get the option to bracket parts of the filter to ensure you can express it
       as desired. Then if you like choose how you want your results sorted and whether you want  to  limit  the
       amount of events displayed.

       Here is what the filter window looks like [image]

       • A:  This  is  a dropdown list where you can select pre-defined filters. You will notice that ZoneMinder
         comes with a PurgeWhenFull filter that is configured to delete events if you reach 95% of disk space.

       • B: If you are creating a new filter, you can type in a name for your filter here

       • C: This is where you specify conditions that need to match before the filter is executed. You  use  the
         “+” and “-” buttons to add/delete conditions

       • D: This allows you to perform sorting and limiting operations on the output before you take an action

       • E: This is where you specify what needs to happen when the conditions match:

                • Archive  all  matches:  sets  the  archive  field to 1 in the Database for the matched events.
                  Think of ‘archiving’ as grouping them under a special category - you can view archived  events
                  later and also make sure archived events don’t get deleted, for example

   Todo
       For the “create video” filter, put in more details on how it works, any dependencies etc.

         • Update  used  disk  space: calculates how much disk space is currently taken by the event and updates
           the db record.

         • Create video for all matches: creates a video file of all the events that match

         •

           Create video for all matches: ffmpeg will be used to create a video file (mp4) out of all the stored
           jpgs if using jpeg storage.

                  • Execute command on all matches: Allows you to execute any arbitrary command on  the  matched
                    events.  You  can  use  replacement  tokens  as subsequent arguents to the command, the last
                    argument will be the absolute path to the  event,  preceded  by  replacement  arguents.  eg:
                    /usr/bin/script.sh  %MN%  will  execute  as  /usr/bin/script.sh  MonitorName /path/to/event.
                    Please note that urls may contain characters like & that need quoting. So you  may  need  to
                    put quotes around them like /usr/bin/scrupt.sh “%MN%”.

                  • Delete all matches: Deletes all the matched events.

                  • Email  details  of  all matches: Sends an email to the configured address with details about
                    the event.

         • Copy all matches: copies the event files to another location, specified in the Copy To dropdown.  The
           other location must be setup in the Storage Tab under options.

         • Message details of all matches: Uses an email to SMS gateway to send an SMS message for each match.

         • Move all matches: copies the event files to another location, specified in the Move To dropdown.  The
           other location must be setup in the Storage Tab under options. The files  will  be  delete  from  the
           original location.

         • Run  filter  in background:  When checked, ZoneMinder will make sure the filter is checked regularly.
           For example, if you want to be notified of new events by email, you should make sure this is checked.
           Filters that are configured to run in the background have a “*” next to it.

         • Run filter concurrently: Allows this filter to run in its own thread thereby  letting  other  filters
           run in parallel.

       • F:  Use  ‘List  Matches’  to  ‘test’  your  matching conditions. This will just match and show you what
         filters match. Use ‘Execute’ to actually execute the action after matching your conditions. Use  ‘Save’
         to save the filter for future use and ‘Reset’ to clear your settings

       NOTE:
          More details on filter conditions:
              There  are  several  different  elements to an event that you can filter on, some of which require
              further explanation. These are as follows, * ‘Date/Time’ which must evaluate to a date and a  time
              together,  *  ‘Date’  and ‘Time’ which are variants which may only contain the relevant subsets of
              this, * ‘Weekday’ which as expected is a day of the week.

              All of the preceding elements take a very flexible free format of dates and time based on the  PHP
              strtotime function (https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.strtotime.php). This allows values such
              as ‘last Wednesday’ etc to be entered. We recommend acquainting yourself with this function to see
              what  the  allowed formats are. However automated filters are run in perl and so are parsed by the
              Date::Manip package. Not all date formats are available in both so if you are saved your filter to
              do automatic deletions or other tasks you should make sure that the date and time format  you  use
              is  compatible  with  both  methods.  The safest type of format to use is ‘-3 day’ or similar with
              easily parseable numbers and units are in English.

              The other things you can filter on are all fairly self explanatory, except perhaps for  ‘Archived’
              which  you  can  use  to  include  or  exclude Archived events. In general you’ll probably do most
              filtering on un-archived events. There are also two elements, Disk Blocks and Disk  Percent  which
              don’t  directly  relate to the events themselves but to the disk partition on which the events are
              stored. These allow you to specify an amount of disk usage either in blocks or  in  percentage  as
              returned by the ‘df’ command. They relate to the amount of disk space used and not the amount left
              free.  Once  your  filter is specified, clicking ‘submit’ will filter the events according to your
              specification. As the disk based elements are not event related directly if you  create  a  filter
              and  include  the term ‘DiskPercent > 95’ then if your current disk usage is over that amount when
              you submit the filter then all events will be listed whereas if it is less then none at all  will.
              As  such  the disk related terms will tend to be used mostly for automatic filters (see below). If
              you have created a filter you want to keep, you can name it and save it by clicking ‘Save’.

              If you do this then the subsequent dialog will also allow you specify whether you want this filter
              automatically applied in order to delete events or upload events via ftp  to  another  server  and
              mail notifications of events to one or more email accounts. Emails and messages (essentially small
              emails  intended for mobile phones or pagers) have a format defined in the Options screen, and may
              include a variety of tokens that can be substituted for various details of the event  that  caused
              them.  This  includes  links  to  the  event view or the filter as well as the option of attaching
              images or videos to the email itself. Be aware that tokens that represent links may require you to
              log in to access the actual page, and sometimes may function differently when  viewed  outside  of
              the general ZoneMinder context. The tokens you can use are as follows.

          • %EI%       Id of the event

          • %EN%       Name of the event

          • %EC%       Cause of the event

          • %ED%       Event description

          • %ET%       Time of the event

          • %EL%       Length of the event

          • %EF%       Number of frames in the event

          • %EFA%      Number of alarm frames in the event

          • %EST%      Total score of the event

          • %ESA%      Average score of the event

          • %ESM%      Maximum score of the event

          • %EP%       Path to the event

          • %EPS%      Path to the event stream

          • %EPF1%     Path to the frame view for the first alarmed event image

          • %EPFM%     Path to the frame view for the (first) event image with the highest score

          • %EPFMOD%   Path to image containing object detection, in frame view

          • %EPFMODG%  Path to image containing object detection animated gif version, in frame view

          • %EPI%      Path to the event images

          • %EPI1%     Path to the first alarmed event image, suitable for use in img tags

          • %EPIM%     Path to the (first) event image with the highest score, suitable for use in img tags

          • %EPIMOD%   Path to image containing object detection, suitable for use in img tags

          • %EPIMODG%   Path  to image containing object detection animated gif version, suitable for use in img
            tags

          • %EI1%      Attach first alarmed event image

          • %EI1A%     Attach first alarmed event analysis image

          • %EIM%      Attach (first) event image with the highest score

          • %EIMA%     Attach (first) event analysis image with the highest score

          • %EIMOD%    Attach image containing object detection

          • %EIMODG%   Attach image containing object detection animated gif version

          • %EV%       Attach event mpeg video

          • %EVM%      Attach event mpeg video in phone format

          • %MN%       Name of the monitor

          • %MET%      Total number of events for the monitor

          • %MEH%      Number of events for the monitor in the last hour

          • %MED%      Number of events for the monitor in the last day

          • %MEW%      Number of events for the monitor in the last week

          • %MEM%      Number of events for the monitor in the last month

          • %MEA%      Number of archived events for the monitor

          • %MP%       Path to the monitor window

          • %MPS%      Path to the monitor stream

          • %MPI%      Path to the monitor recent image

          • %FN%       Name of the current filter that matched

          • %FP%       Path to the current filter that matched

          • %ZP%       Path to your ZoneMinder console
              Finally you can also specify a script which is run on each matched event. This  script  should  be
              readable  and  executable by your web server user. It will get run once per event and the relative
              path to the directory containing the event  in  question.  Normally  this  will  be  of  the  form
              <MonitorName>/<EventId>  so  from  this path you can derive both the monitor name and event id and
              perform any action you wish. Note that arbitrary commands are not allowed to be specified  in  the
              filter,  for  security  the only thing it may contain is the full path to an executable. What that
              contains is entirely up to you however.

              Filtering is a powerful mechanism you can use to eliminate  events  that  fit  a  certain  pattern
              however  in many cases modifying the zone settings will better address this. Where it really comes
              into its own is generally in applying time filters, so for  instance  events  that  happen  during
              weekdays  or  at certain times of the day are highlighted, uploaded or deleted. Additionally using
              disk related terms in your filters means you can automatically  create  filters  that  delete  the
              oldest  events  when your disk gets full. Be warned however that if you use this strategy then you
              should limit the returned results to the amount of events you want deleted in each pass until  the
              disk  usage  is  at  an  acceptable level. If you do not do this then the first pass when the disk
              usage is high will match, and then delete, all events unless you have used other  criteria  inside
              of  limits.  ZoneMinder  ships  with  a  sample  filter  already  installed,  though disabled. The
              PurgeWhenFull filter can be used to delete the oldest events when your disk starts filling up.  To
              use  it you should select and load it in the filter interface, modify it to your requirements, and
              then save it making you sure you check the ‘Delete all matches’ option. This will then run in  the
              background and ensure that your disk does not fill up with events.

   Saving filters
       When saving filters, if you want the filter to run in the background make sure you select the “Run filter
       in  background”  option.  When  checked,  ZoneMinder  will make sure the filter is checked regularly. For
       example, if you want to be notified of new events by email, you should make sure this is checked. Filters
       that are configured to run in the background have a “*” next to it.

   How filters actually work
       It is useful to know how filters actually work behind the scenes in ZoneMinder, in  the  event  you  find
       your filter not functioning as intended:

       • Each  filter  set  to  run  in  the background will be run in it’s own process called zmfilter.pl which
         retrieves filters from the Filters database table

       • zmfilter.pl  runs  every  FILTER_EXECUTE_INTERVAL  seconds  (default  is  20s,  can   be   changed   in
         Options->System)

       • after each interval the filter will query the database and apply the action to each matching event.

       • zmfilter.pl  also  reloads  the filter every FILTER_RELOAD_DELAY seconds (default is 300s/5mins, can be
         changed in Options->System)

       • In previous versions of ZoneMinder filter changes would not take immediate effect, but now the  web  ui
         will start/stop/restart filters as appropriate upon editing a filter.

   Relative items in date strings
       Relative  items  adjust a date (or the current date if none) forward or backward. The effects of relative
       items accumulate. Here are some examples:

          * 1 year
          * 1 year ago
          * 3 years
          * 2 days

       The unit of time displacement may be selected by the string ‘year’ or ‘month’ for moving by  whole  years
       or  months.  These are fuzzy units, as years and months are not all of equal duration. More precise units
       are ‘fortnight’ which is worth 14 days, ‘week’ worth 7 days,  ‘day’  worth  24  hours,  ‘hour’  worth  60
       minutes,  ‘minute’  or  ‘min’  worth 60 seconds, and ‘second’ or ‘sec’ worth one second. An ‘s’ suffix on
       these units is accepted and ignored.

       The unit of time may be preceded by a multiplier, given as an optionally signed number. Unsigned  numbers
       are taken as positively signed. No number at all implies 1 for a multiplier. Following a relative item by
       the string ‘ago’ is equivalent to preceding the unit by a multiplier with value -1.

       The  string  ‘tomorrow’  is  worth one day in the future (equivalent to ‘day’), the string ‘yesterday’ is
       worth one day in the past (equivalent to ‘day ago’).

       The strings ‘now’ or ‘today’ are relative items corresponding to  zero-valued  time  displacement,  these
       strings come from the fact a zero-valued time displacement represents the current time when not otherwise
       changed  by  previous  items.  They  may be used to stress other items, like in ‘12:00 today’. The string
       ‘this’ also has the meaning of a zero-valued time displacement, but is preferred  in  date  strings  like
       ‘this thursday’.

       When  a  relative  item  causes  the  resulting  date to cross a boundary where the clocks were adjusted,
       typically for daylight saving time, the resulting date and time are adjusted accordingly.

       The fuzz in units can cause problems with relative  items.  For  example,  ‘2003-07-31  -1  month’  might
       evaluate  to  2003-07-01,  because  2003-06-31  is  an invalid date. To determine the previous month more
       reliably, you can ask for the month before the 15th of the current month. For example:

          $ date -R

          Thu, 31 Jul 2003 13:02:39 -0700

          $ date --date='-1 month' +'Last month was %B?'

          Last month was July?

          $ date --date="$(date +%Y-%m-15) -1 month" +'Last month was %B!'

          Last month was June!

       As this applies to ZoneMinder filters, you might want to search  for events in a period of time, or maybe
       for example create a purge filter that removes events older than 30 days.  For the later you  would  want
       at least two lines in your filter. The first line should be:
          [<Archive Status> <equal to> <Unarchived Only>]

       as you don’t want to delete your archived events.

       Your second line to find events older than 30 days would be:
          [and <Date><less than> -30 days]

       You  use “less than” to indicate that you want to match events before the specified date, and you specify
       “-30 days” to indicate a date 30 days before the time the filter is run. Of course you could use 30  days
       ago as well(?).

       You  should  always  test  your  filters  before  enabling  any  actions  based on them to make sure they
       consistently return the results you want. You can use the submit button to see what events  are  returned
       by your query.

   Caveat with Relative items
       One thing to remember if you specify relative dates like “now” or “1 minute ago”, etc, they are converted
       to  a specific date and time by Zoneminder’s filtering process (zmfilter.pl) when the filters are loaded.
       They are _NOT_ recomputed each time the filter  runs.  Filters  are  re-loaded  depending  on  the  value
       specified by FILTER_RELOAD_DELAY variable in  the Zoneminder Web Console->Options->System

       This may cause confusion in the following cases, for example: Let’s say a user specifies that he wants to
       be  notified  of  events  via  email  the  moment  the  event “DateTime” is “less than” “now” as a filter
       criteria. When the filter first gets loaded by zmfilter.pl, this will translate to  “Match  events  where
       Start  Time < “ + localtime() where local time is the time that is resolved when this filter gets loaded.
       Now till the time the filter gets reloaded after FILTER_RELOAD_DELAY seconds (which is usually set to 300
       seconds, or 5 minutes), that time does not get recomputed, so the filter will not process any new  events
       that occur after that computed date till another 5 minutes, which is probably not what you want.

   Troubleshooting tips
       If your filter is not working, here are some useful tips:

       • Look at Info and Debug logs in Zoneminder

       • Run sudo zmfilter.pl -f <yourfiltername> from command line and see the log output

       • Check  how  long  your  action  is  taking - zmfilter.pl will wait for the action to complete before it
         checks again

       • If you are using relative times like ‘now’ or ‘1 year ago’ etc. remember that  zmfilter  converts  that
         relative  time  to  an  absolute  date  only  when  it  reloads  filters,  which  is  dictated  by  the
         FILTER_RELOAD_DELAY duration. So, for example, if you are wondering  why  your  events  are  not  being
         detected before intervals of 5 minutes and you have used such a relative condition, this is why

       • In  the  event  that  you see your new filter is working great when you try it out from the Web Console
         (using the Submit or Execute button) but does not seem to work when its running in background mode, you
         might have just chanced upon a compatibility issue between how Perl and PHP translate free form text to
         dates/times. When you test it via the “Submit” or “Execute” button, you are invoking a PHP function for
         time conversion. When the filter runs in background mode, zmfilter.pl calls a perl equivalent function.
         In some cases, depending on the version of Perl and PHP you have, the results may  vary.  If  you  face
         this  situation, the best thing to do is to run sudo zmfilter.pl -f <yourfiltername> from a terminal to
         make sure the filter actually works in Perl as well.

   Viewing Events
       From the monitor or filtered events listing you can now click on an event to view it in more detail.

       This is an example view that shows events for a specific monitor: [image]

       If you have streaming capability you will see a series of images that make up the event. Under  that  you
       should  also  see  a  progress bar. Depending on your configuration this will either be static or will be
       filled in to indicate how far through the event you are. By default this functionality is turned off  for
       low  bandwidth  settings  as  the  image  delivery tends to not be able to keep up with real-time and the
       progress bar cannot take this into account. Regardless of whether the progress bar updates, you can click
       on it to navigate to particular points in the events.

       You will also see a link to allow you to view the still images themselves. If you  don’t  have  streaming
       then  you  will be taken directly to this page. The images themselves are thumbnail size and depending on
       the configuration and bandwidth you have chosen will either be the full images scaled in your browser  of
       actual  scaled  images.  If  it  is  the latter, if you have low bandwidth for example, it may take a few
       seconds to generate the images. If thumbnail images are required to be generated, they will be  kept  and
       not  re-generated  in  future.  Once  the images appear you can mouse over them to get the image sequence
       number and the image score.

       Here is an example of viewing an event stream: [image]

       The image above shows a typical window for an event that was recorded as an MP4 video

   Options
       The various options you can specify are displayed in a tabbed dialog with each group of options displayed
       under a different heading. Each option is displayed with its name, a short description  and  the  current
       value.  You  can  also click on the ‘?’ link following each description to get a fuller explanation about
       each option. This is the same as you would get from zmconfig.pl. A number of option groups have a  master
       option near the top which enables or disables the whole group so you should be aware of the state of this
       before modifying options and expecting them to make any difference.

       If  you have changed the value of an option you should then ‘save’ it. A number of the option groups will
       then prompt you to let you know that the option(s) you have changed will require a system  restart.  This
       is  not done automatically in case you will be changing many values in the same session, however once you
       have made all of your changes you should restart ZoneMinder as soon as possible. The reason for  this  is
       that  web and some scripts will pick up the new changes immediately but some of the daemons will still be
       using the old values and this can lead to data inconsistency or loss.

       NOTE:
          If you are looking for Options->Paths documentation, it was moved to  a  configuration  file  starting
          ZoneMinder 1.32. See here.

   Options - Display
       This  option  screen  allows  user  to  select  the skin for ZoneMinder. Currently available styles  are:
       [image]

   Options - System
       This screen allows the admin to configure various core operations of the system.

       A partial screenshot is shown below: [image]

       SKIN_DEFAULT - ZoneMinder allows the use of many different web interfaces. This option allows you to  set
       the default skin used by the website. Users can change their skin later, this merely sets the default.

       CSS_DEFAULT - ZoneMinder allows the use of many different web interfaces, and some skins allow the use of
       different  set  of  CSS files to control the appearance. This option allows you to set the default set of
       css files used by the website. Users can change their css later, this merely sets the default.

       LANG_DEFAULT - ZoneMinder allows the web interface to use languages other than English if the appropriate
       language file has been created and is present. This option allows you to change the default language that
       is used from the shipped language, British English, to another language.

       OPT_USE_AUTH - ZoneMinder can run in two modes. The simplest is an entirely  unauthenticated  mode  where
       anyone can access ZoneMinder and perform all tasks. This is most suitable for installations where the web
       server  access  is  limited  in  other  ways.  The  other mode enables user accounts with varying sets of
       permissions. Users must login or authenticate to access ZoneMinder  and  are  limited  by  their  defined
       permissions. Authenticated mode alone should not be relied up for securing Internet connected ZoneMinder.

       AUTH_TYPE  - ZoneMinder can use two methods to authenticate users when running in authenticated mode. The
       first is a builtin method where ZoneMinder provides facilities for users to log in and maintains track of
       their  identity.  The  second  method  allows  interworking  with  other  methods  such  as  http   basic
       authentication  which  passes  an  independently  authenticated  ‘remote’  user  via  http.  In this case
       ZoneMinder would use the supplied  user  without  additional  authentication  provided  such  a  user  is
       configured in ZoneMinder.

       CASE_INSENSITIVE_USERNAMES - This option makes usernames case insensitive when authenticating.

       AUTH_RELAY  -  When  ZoneMinder is running in authenticated mode it can pass user details between the web
       pages and the back end processes. There are two methods for doing this. This  first  is  to  use  a  time
       limited hashed string which contains no direct username or password details, the second method is to pass
       the username and passwords around in plaintext. This method is not recommend except where you do not have
       the  md5  libraries  available  on  your system or you have a completely isolated system with no external
       access. You can also switch off authentication relaying if your system is isolated in other ways.

       AUTH_HASH_SECRET - When ZoneMinder is running in hashed authenticated mode it is  necessary  to  generate
       hashed strings containing encrypted sensitive information such as usernames and passwords. Although these
       strings are reasonably secure the addition of a random secret increases security substantially. Note that
       if you are using the new token based APIs, then this field is mandatory with ZM 1.34 and above.

       AUTH_HASH_IPS  -  When  ZoneMinder  is running in hashed authenticated mode it can optionally include the
       requesting IP address in the resultant hash. This adds an extra level of security as only  requests  from
       that  address  may use that authentication key. However in some circumstances, such as access over mobile
       networks, the requesting address can change for each request which will cause most requests to fail. This
       option allows you to control whether IP addresses are included in the authentication hash on your system.
       If you experience intermitent problems with authentication, switching this option off  may  help.  It  is
       recommended  you keep this off if you use mobile apps like zmNinja over mobile carrier networks - several
       APNs change the IP very frequently which may result in authentication failures.

       AUTH_HASH_TTL - Time before ZM auth will  expire  (does  not  apply  to  API  tokens).  The  default  has
       traditionally been 2 hours. A new hash will automatically be regenerated at half this value.

       AUTH_HASH_LOGINS  -  The normal process for logging into ZoneMinder is via the login screen with username
       and password. In some circumstances it may be desirable to allow access directly to one  or  more  pages,
       for instance from a third party application. If this option is enabled then adding an ‘auth’ parameter to
       any  request  will  include  a  shortcut  login  bypassing the login screen, if not already logged in. As
       authentication hashes are time  and,  optionally,  IP  limited,  this  can  allow  short-term  access  to
       ZoneMinder  screens  from other web pages etc. In order to use this, the calling application will have to
       generate the authentication hash itself and ensure it is valid. If you use this option you should  ensure
       that you have modified the ZM_AUTH_HASH_SECRET to something unique to your system.

       ENABLE_CSRF_MAGIC  -  CSRF stands for Cross-Site Request Forgery which, under specific circumstances, can
       allow an attacker to perform any task  your  ZoneMinder  user  account  has  permission  to  perform.  To
       accomplish  this,  the  attacker must write a very specific web page and get you to navigate to it, while
       you are logged into the ZoneMinder web console at the same time. Enabling ZM_ENABLE_CSRF_MAGIC will  help
       mitigate  these  kinds of attacks. If you are using zmNinja and face access issues, you might try turning
       this off.

       OPT_USE_API - A global setting to enable/disable ZoneMinder APIs. If  you  are  using  mobile  apps  like
       zmNinja, this needs to be enabled

       NOTE:
          If  you  are  using  zmNinja  along with authentication, please make sure AUTH_HASH_LOGINS is enabled,
          OPT_USE_API  is  elabled,  AUTH_RELAY  is  set  to  hashed,  AUTH_HASH_IPS  is   off   and   a   valid
          AUTH_HASHED_SECRET is specified.

       OPT_USE_LEGACY_AUTH  -  Starting  version  1.34.0, ZoneMinder uses a more secure Authentication mechanism
       using JWT tokens. Older versions used a less secure MD5 based auth hash. It is recommended you turn  this
       off  after  you are sure you don’t need it. If you are using a 3rd party app that relies on the older API
       auth mechanisms, you will have to update that app if you turn this off. Note that zmNinja 1.3.057 onwards
       supports the new token system.

       OPT_USE_EVENT_NOTIFICATION - zmeventnotification is a 3rd party event notification server that is used to
       get notifications for alarms detected by ZoneMinder in real time. zmNinja requires this server  for  push
       notifications  to  mobile  phones. This option only enables the server if it is already installed. Please
       visit the Event Notification Server project site for installation instructions.

       OPT_USE_GOOG_RECAPTCHA - This option allows you to include a google reCaptcha validation at  login.  This
       means  in  addition  to providing a valid username and password, you will also have to pass the reCaptcha
       test. Please note that enabling this option results in the zoneminder login page reaching out  to  google
       servers for captcha validation. Also please note that enabling this option may break 3rd party clients if
       they  rely  on  web  based  logins (Note that zmNinja now uses the API based token method and will not be
       affected if reCAPTCHA is enabled). If you enable this, you also need to specify your site and secret  key
       (please refer to context help in the ZoneMinder system screen).

       SYSTEM_SHUTDOWN  -  this  option  puts  a  poweroff icon in the header of the ZM UI for users with System
       privilege accessi. This icon will allow the user to shutdown the full system via the ZM  UI.  The  system
       will need to have sudo installed and the following added to /etc/sudoers:

          www-data ALL=NOPASSWD: /sbin/shutdown

       to perform the shutdown or reboot

       OPT_FAST_DELETE  - Normally an event created as the result of an alarm consists of entries in one or more
       database tables plus the various files associated with it. When deleting events in  the  browser  it  can
       take  a  long  time  to remove all of this if youxr are trying to do a lot of events at once. NOTE: It is
       recommended that you keep this option OFF, unless you are running on an old or low-powered system.

       FILTER_RELOAD_DELAY - ZoneMinder allows you to save filters to the database which allow events that match
       certain criteria to be emailed, deleted or uploaded to a remote machine etc. The  zmfilter  daemon  loads
       these and does the actual operation. This option determines how often in seconds the filters are reloaded
       from  the database to get the latest versions or new filters. If you don’t change filters very often this
       value can be set to a large value. As of 1.34.0 filters should be automatically reloaded  when  saving  a
       filter so this setting should have little effect.

       FILTER_EXECUTE_INTERVAL  -  ZoneMinder allows you to save filters to the database which allow events that
       match certain criteria to be emailed, deleted or uploaded to a remote machine etc.  The  zmfilter  daemon
       loads  these  and does the actual operation. This option determines how often the filters are executed on
       the saved event in the database. If you want a rapid response to new events  this  should  be  a  smaller
       value, however this may increase the overall load on the system and affect performance of other elements.

       MAX_RESTART_DELAY - The zmdc (zm daemon control) process controls when processeses are started or stopped
       and  will  attempt  to  restart  any  that  fail. If a daemon fails frequently then a delay is introduced
       between each restart attempt. If the daemon stills fails then this delay is increased  to  prevent  extra
       load being placed on the system by continual restarts. This option controls what this maximum delay is.

       STATUS_UPDATE_INTERVAL  -  The  zmstats  daemon  performs various db queries related to collecting system
       statistics that may take a long time in the background. This option decides  how  often  this  update  is
       scheduled.

       WATCH_CHECK_INTERVAL  - The zmwatch daemon checks the image capture performance of the capture daemons to
       ensure that they have not locked up (rarely a sync error  may  occur  which  blocks  indefinitely).  This
       option determines how often the daemons are checked.

       WATCH_MAX_DELAY  -  The  zmwatch  daemon  checks  the image capture performance of the capture daemons to
       ensure that they have not locked up (rarely a sync error  may  occur  which  blocks  indefinitely).  This
       option  determines the maximum delay to allow since the last captured frame. The daemon will be restarted
       if it has not captured any images after this period though the actual restart may take slightly longer in
       conjunction with the check interval value above.  Please note that some cameras can take up to 30 seconds
       to get a valid image, so this setting should be larger than that.

       RUN_AUDIT - The zmaudit daemon exists to check that the saved information in  the  database  and  on  the
       filesystem  match  and  are  consistent  with  each  other.  If an error occurs or if you are using ‘fast
       deletes’ it may be that database records are deleted but files remain. In this case, and similar, zmaudit
       will remove redundant information to synchronise the  two  data  stores.  This  option  controls  whether
       zmaudit  is run in the background and performs these checks and fixes continuously. It is recommended you
       keep this OFF in most systems and run it manually if needed after a system crash.

       AUDIT_CHECK_INTERVAL - The zmaudit daemon exists to check that the saved information in the database  and
       on  the filesystem match and are consistent with each other. If an error occurs or if you are using ‘fast
       deletes’ it may be that database records are deleted but files remain. In this case, and similar, zmaudit
       will remove redundant information to synchronise the two data stores. The default check interval  of  900
       seconds  (15  minutes)  is  fine  for  most systems however if you have a very large number of events the
       process of scanning the database and filesystem may take a long time and impact performance. In this case
       you may prefer to make this interval much larger to  reduce  the  impact  on  your  system.  This  option
       determines how often these checks are performed.

       AUDIT_MIN_AGE  - The zmaudit daemon exists to check that the saved information in the database and on the
       filesystem match and are consistent with each other. Event files or db records that are younger than this
       setting will not be deleted and a warning will be given

       OPT_CONTROL - ZoneMinder includes limited support for controllable cameras. A number of sample  protocols
       are  included  and  others  can  easily be added. If you wish to control your cameras via ZoneMinder then
       select this option otherwise if you only have static cameras or use other control methods then leave this
       option off.

       OPT_TRIGGERS - ZoneMinder can interact with external systems which prompt or cancel alarms. This is  done
       via  the zmtrigger.pl script. This option indicates whether you want to use these external triggers. Most
       people will say no here.

       CHECK_FOR_UPDATES - To save checking manually  for  each  new  version  ZoneMinder  can  check  with  the
       zoneminder.com  website to determine the most recent release. These checks are infrequent, about once per
       week, and no personal or system information is transmitted other than your current version number. If you
       do not wish these checks to take place or your ZoneMinder system has no internet access  you  can  switch
       these check off with this configuration variable.

       TELEMETRY_DATA - Enable collection of usage information of the local system and send it to the ZoneMinder
       development  team.  This  data will be used to determine things like who and where our customers are, how
       big their systems are, the underlying hardware and operating system, etc. This is being done for the sole
       purpose of creating a better product for our target audience. This script is intended  to  be  completely
       transparent  to the end user, and can be disabled from the web console under Options. For more details on
       what information we collect, please refer to Zoneminder’s privacy statement (available in the  contextual
       help of TELEMETRY_DATA on your installation).

       UPDATE_CHECK_PROXY  -  If  you use a proxy to access the internet then ZoneMinder needs to know so it can
       access zoneminder.com to check for updates. If you do use a proxy enter the full proxy url  here  in  the
       form of http://<proxy host>:<proxy port>/.

       SHM_KEY  - ZoneMinder uses shared memory to speed up communication between modules. To identify the right
       area to use shared memory keys are used. This option controls what the base key  is,  each  monitor  will
       have  it’s Id or’ed with this to get the actual key used. You will not normally need to change this value
       unless it clashes with another instance of ZoneMinder on the same machine. Only the first four hex digits
       are used, the lower four will be masked out and ignored.

       COOKIE_LIFETIME - This will affect how long a session will be valid for since the last  request.  Keeping
       this  short  helps prevent session hijacking. Keeping it long allows you to stay logged in longer without
       refreshing the view. We recommend you keep this to the default of 3600 if you are not sure.

   Options - Config
       The config screen allows the admin to change various configuration parameters related to image  capturing
       and storage.

       A partial screenshot is shown below: [image]

       TIMESTAMP_ON_CAPTURE  -  ZoneMinder  can  add a timestamp to images in two ways. The default method, when
       this option is set, is that each image is timestamped immediately when captured and so the image held  in
       memory  is marked right away. The second method does not timestamp the images until they are either saved
       as part of an event or accessed over the web. The timestamp used in both methods will  contain  the  same
       time  as  this  is  preserved along with the image. The first method ensures that an image is timestamped
       regardless of any other circumstances but will result in all images being timestamped  even  those  never
       saved or viewed. The second method necessitates that saved images are copied before being saved otherwise
       two  timestamps  perhaps at different scales may be applied. This has the (perhaps) desirable side effect
       that the timestamp is always applied at the same resolution so an image that  has  scaling  applied  will
       still have a legible and correctly scaled timestamp.

       TIMESTAMP_CODE_CHAR  -  There  are  a  few  codes  one can use to tell ZoneMinder to insert data into the
       timestamp of each image. Traditionally, the percent (%) character has been used to identify  these  codes
       since  the current character codes do not conflict with the strftime codes, which can also be used in the
       timestamp. While this works well for Linux, this does not work well for BSD operating  systems.  Changing
       the  default character to something else, such as an exclamation point (!), resolves the issue. Note this
       only affects the timestamp codes built into ZoneMinder. It has no effect on the family of strftime  codes
       one can use.

       CPU_EXTENSIONS  -  When advanced processor extensions such as SSE2 or SSSE3 are available, ZoneMinder can
       use them, which should increase performance and reduce system load. Enabling this  option  on  processors
       that  do  not  support the advanced processors extensions used by ZoneMinder is harmless and will have no
       effect.

       FAST_IMAGE_BLENDS - To detect alarms ZoneMinder needs  to  blend  the  captured  image  with  the  stored
       reference image to update it for comparison with the next image. The reference blend percentage specified
       for  the  monitor controls how much the new image affects the reference image. There are two methods that
       are available for this. If this option is set then fast calculation which does not use any multiplication
       or division is used. This calculation is extremely fast, however it limits the possible blend percentages
       to 50%, 25%, 12.5%, 6.25%, 3.25% and 1.5%. Any other blend percentage will  be  rounded  to  the  nearest
       possible  one.  The  alternative is to switch this option off and use standard blending instead, which is
       slower.

       OPT_ADAPTIVE_SKIP - In previous versions of ZoneMinder the analysis daemon would attempt to keep up  with
       the  capture  daemon  by  processing  the last captured frame on each pass. This would sometimes have the
       undesirable side-effect of missing a chunk of the initial activity that  caused  the  alarm  because  the
       pre-alarm  frames would all have to be written to disk and the database before processing the next frame,
       leading to some delay between the first and second event frames. Setting  this  option  enables  a  newer
       adaptive  algorithm  where  the  analysis daemon attempts to process as many captured frames as possible,
       only skipping frames when in danger of the capture daemon overwriting yet to be  processed  frames.  This
       skip  is  variable  depending on the size of the ring buffer and the amount of space left in it. Enabling
       this option will give you much better coverage of the beginning of alarms whilst biasing out any  skipped
       frames towards the middle or end of the event. However you should be aware that this will have the effect
       of  making  the analysis daemon run somewhat behind the capture daemon during events and for particularly
       fast rates of capture it is possible for the adaptive algorithm to be overwhelmed and not  have  time  to
       react to a rapid build up of pending frames and thus for a buffer overrun condition to occur.

       MAX_SUSPEND_TIME  -  ZoneMinder  allows  monitors  to have motion detection to be suspended, for instance
       while panning a camera. Ordinarily this relies on the operator resuming motion  detection  afterwards  as
       failure  to  do so can leave a monitor in a permanently suspended state. This setting allows you to set a
       maximum time which a camera may be suspended for before it automatically resumes motion  detection.  This
       time can be extended by subsequent suspend indications after the first so continuous camera movement will
       also occur while the monitor is suspended.

       STRICT_VIDEO_CONFIG  -  With  some  video  devices  errors  can  be reported in setting the various video
       attributes when in fact the operation was successful. Switching this option off will  still  allow  these
       errors  to  be reported but will not cause them to kill the video capture daemon. Note however that doing
       this will cause all errors to be ignored including those which are genuine and which may cause the  video
       capture to not function correctly. Use this option with caution.

       LD_PRELOAD  -  Some  older  cameras  require  the use of the v4l1 compat library. This setting allows the
       setting of the path to the library, so that it can be loaded by zmdc.pl before launching zmc.

       V4L_MULTI_BUFFER - Performance when using Video 4 Linux devices is usually best if multiple  buffers  are
       used  allowing  the  next  image  to  be  captured while the previous one is being processed. If you have
       multiple devices on a card sharing one input that requires switching then  this  approach  can  sometimes
       cause  frames from one source to be mixed up with frames from another. Switching this option off prevents
       multi buffering resulting in slower but more stable image capture. This option is ignored  for  non-local
       cameras or if only one input is present on a capture chip. This option addresses a similar problem to the
       ZM_CAPTURES_PER_FRAME  option  and  you  should normally change the value of only one of the options at a
       time.  If you have different capture cards that need different values  you  can  ovveride  them  in  each
       individual monitor on the source page.

       CAPTURES_PER_FRAME  -  If  you  are  using cameras attached to a video capture card which forces multiple
       inputs to share one capture chip, it  can  sometimes  produce  images  with  interlaced  frames  reversed
       resulting  in  poor  image quality and a distinctive comb edge appearance. Increasing this setting allows
       you to force additional image captures before one is selected as the  captured  frame.  This  allows  the
       capture hardware to ‘settle down’ and produce better quality images at the price of lesser capture rates.
       This  option  has  no  effect on (a) network cameras, or (b) where multiple inputs do not share a capture
       chip. This option addresses a similar problem to the ZM_V4L_MULTI_BUFFER option and you  should  normally
       change  the  value  of  only one of the options at a time.  If you have different capture cards that need
       different values you can ovveride them in each individual monitor on the source page.

       FORCED_ALARM_SCORE - The ‘zmu’ utility can be used to force an alarm on a monitor rather than rely on the
       motion detection algorithms. This option determines what score to give these alarms to  distinguish  them
       from regular ones. It must be 255 or less.

       BULK_FRAME_INTERVAL  -  Traditionally  ZoneMinder writes an entry into the Frames database table for each
       frame that is captured and saved. This works well in  motion  detection  scenarios  but  when  in  a  DVR
       situation (‘Record’ or ‘Mocord’ mode) this results in a huge number of frame writes and a lot of database
       and  disk bandwidth for very little additional information. Setting this to a non-zero value will enabled
       ZoneMinder to group these non-alarm frames into one ‘bulk’ frame entry which saves a lot of bandwidth and
       space. The only disadvantage of this is that timing information for individual  frames  is  lost  but  in
       constant  frame  rate  situations this is usually not significant. This setting is ignored in Modect mode
       and individual frames are still written if an alarm occurs in Mocord mode also.

       EVENT_CLOSE_MODE - When a monitor is running in a continuous recording mode (Record or Mocord) events are
       usually closed after a fixed period of time (the section length). However in Mocord mode it  is  possible
       that  motion  detection  may  occur  near the end of a section. This option controls what happens when an
       alarm occurs in Mocord mode. The ‘time’ setting means that the event will be closed at  the  end  of  the
       section  regardless  of alarm activity. The ‘idle’ setting means that the event will be closed at the end
       of the section if there is no alarm activity occurring at the time otherwise it will be closed  once  the
       alarm  is  over  meaning  the  event  may end up being longer than the normal section length. The ‘alarm’
       setting means that if an alarm occurs during the event, the event will be closed once the alarm  is  over
       regardless of when this occurs. This has the effect of limiting the number of alarms to one per event and
       the events will be shorter than the section length if an alarm has occurred.

       WEIGHTED_ALARM_CENTRES  - ZoneMinder will always calculate the centre point of an alarm in a zone to give
       some indication of where on the screen it is. This can  be  used  by  the  experimental  motion  tracking
       feature  or  your own custom extensions. In the alarmed or filtered pixels mode this is a simple midpoint
       between the extents of the detected pxiesl. However in the blob method this  can  instead  be  calculated
       using  weighted  pixel  locations  to  give  more accurate positioning for irregularly shaped blobs. This
       method, while more precise is also slower and so is turned off by default.

       EVENT_IMAGE_DIGITS - As event images are captured they are stored to  the  filesystem  with  a  numerical
       index.  By  default  this  index has three digits so the numbers start 001, 002 etc. This works works for
       most scenarios as events with more than 999 frames are rarely captured. However  if  you  have  extremely
       long events and use external applications then you may wish to increase this to ensure correct sorting of
       images  in  listings  etc.  Warning,  increasing  this  value on a live system may render existing events
       unviewable as the event will have been saved with the previous scheme. Decreasing this value should  have
       no ill effects.

       DEFAULT_ASPECT_RATIO - When specifying the dimensions of monitors you can click a checkbox to ensure that
       the  width  stays  in the correct ratio to the height, or vice versa. This setting allows you to indicate
       what the ratio of these settings should be. This should be specified in the format <width  value>:<height
       value>  and the default of 4:3 normally be acceptable but 11:9 is another common setting. If the checkbox
       is not clicked when specifying monitor dimensions this setting has no effect.

       USER_SELF_EDIT - Ordinarily only users with system edit privilege  are  able  to  change  users  details.
       Switching this option on allows ordinary users to change their passwords and their language settings

   Options - API
       NOTE:
          The ZoneMinder web interface does not use APIs and therefore, the tokens discussed here don’t apply to
          the ZoneMinder UI. These only appy to apps that use the ZoneMinder API, like zmNinja.

       The API option screen allows you enable/disable APIs on a per user basis. Furthermore, it also allows you
       to  “revoke”  tokens allotted to users. Starting ZoneMinder 1.34, the API ecosystem was overhauled and we
       now support JWT tokens with a concept of refresh tokens and access tokens. This allows for authentication
       without  the  need  for  sending  passwords  with  each  authentication  request.  For  a  more  detailed
       understanding  of  how  this  works,  please  refer to API. Over time, more control will be added to this
       screen.  [image]

       The “Revoke All Tokens” button can be used to globally invalidate access tokens for all users. If  tokens
       are  revoked,  the  user(s)  will  need to re-authenticate with login and password.  As of today, refresh
       tokens last for 24 hours and access tokens for 1 hour.

   Options - Servers
   Todo
       needs to be refreshed
       [image]

       Servers tab is used for setting up multiple ZoneMinder servers sharing the  same  database  and  using  a
       shared file share for all event data. To add a new server use the Add Server button. All that is required
       is a Name for the Server and Hostname.

       To delete a server mark that server and click the Delete button.

       Please  note that all servers must have a functional web UI as the live view must come from the monitor’s
       host server.

       On each server, you will have to edit /etc/zm/zm.conf and set either ZM_SERVER_NAME=

   Options - Storage
       [image]

       Storage tab is used to setup storage areas for recorded Events. To add a new area use the Add New Storage
       button.

       By default storage on local drive is automatically set up on installion. When no area is specified events
       will   be   stored   to   a   default   built-in   location,   which   for   example   on    Ubuntu    is
       /var/cache/zoneminder/events.

       Name: Storage names - can be anything

       Path: String path to storage location for example /media/Videos

       Url:            Used            for            S3            communication            -            format
       s3fs://ACCESS_KEY_ID:SECRET_ACCESS_KEY@s3.ca-central-1.amazonaws.com/bucket-name/events

       Supported storage types:

              • Local - Local/mounted or network storage in local network

              • s3fs - S3 mounted drive

       Some users may require more advanced storage such as S3 provided by amazon or others.

   S3 storage setup
       You must use s3fs to mount the S3 bucket in your fs tree.  Telling ZoneMinder that  the  location  is  S3
       will  let  it  use  more  efficient  code to send and delete the event data.  The Do Deletes option tells
       ZoneMinder whether to actually perform delete operations when deleting events.   S3fs  systems  often  do
       deletes in a cron job or other background task and doing the deletes can overload an S3 system.

       Refer to this guide for installation and configuration of s3fs - https://github.com/s3fs-fuse/s3fs-fuse

       Adding credentials to passwd_file

       Create credentials file echo ACCESS_KEY_ID:SECRET_ACCESS_KEY > /etc/passwd-s3fs

       Set file permissions chmod 600 /etc/passwd-s3fs

       S3 mounting with fstab
              s3fs#bucket_name                                   /media/S3                                  fuse
              _netdev,allow_other,uid=33,url=https://s3.ca-central-1.amazonaws.com,passwd_file=/etc/passwd-s3fs,umask=022
              0 0

       Setting up storage.

              1. Click on Add new Storage

              2. Set path to /media/S3

              3. Add Url s3fs://username:password@s3.ca-central-1.amazonaws.com/bucket-name/events

              4. Set type to s3fs

              5. Save settings and monitor logs for errors

   Options - Web
       This screen lets you customize several aspects of the web interface of ZoneMinder. A  partial  screenshot
       is shown below: [image]

       WEB_TITLE  -  The  actual  text that is shown on the login screen. It is possible that it also appears in
       other areas.

       WEB_TITLE_PREFIX - If you have more than one installation of ZoneMinder it  can  be  helpful  to  display
       different  titles for each one. Changing this option allows you to customise the window titles to include
       further information to aid identification.

       HOME_URL - the link to navigate to, when a user clicks on the top left title.

       HOME_CONTENT - The actual text that is shown on the top left corner. You can choose to leave it empty and
       put in a logo in a custom CSS as well.

       WEB_CONSOLE_BANNER - Allows the administrator to place an arbitrary text message near the top of the  web
       console.  This  is useful for the developers to display a message which indicates the running instance of
       ZoneMinder is a development snapshot, but it can also be used for any other purpose as well.

       WEB_EVENT_DISK_SPACE - Adds another column to the listing of events showing the disk space  used  by  the
       event.  This  will  impart  a  small overhead as it will call du on the event directory. In practice this
       overhead is fairly small but may be noticeable on IO-constrained systems.

       WEB_RESIZE_CONSOLE - Traditionally the main ZoneMinder web console window has resized itself to shrink to
       a size small enough to list only the monitors that are actually present. This is  intended  to  make  the
       window  more  unobtrusize  but  may not be to everyones tastes, especially if opened in a tab in browsers
       which support this kind if layout. Switch this option off to have the console window  size  left  to  the
       users preference.

       WEB_ID_ON_CONSOLE - Some find it useful to have the monitor id always visible on the console. This option
       will  add  a column listing it. Note that if it is disabled, you can always hover over the monitor to see
       the id as well.

       WEB_POPUP_ON_ALARM - When viewing a live monitor stream you can specify whether you want  the  window  to
       pop  to  the front if an alarm occurs when the window is minimised or behind another window. This is most
       useful if your monitors are over doors for example when they can pop up if someone comes to the doorway.

       WEB_SOUND_ON_ALARM - When viewing a live monitor stream you can specify whether you want  the  window  to
       play a sound to alert you if an alarm occurs.

       WEB_ALARM_SOUND  - You can specify a sound file to play if an alarm occurs whilst you are watching a live
       monitor stream. So long as your browser understands the format it does not  need  to  be  any  particular
       type. This file should be placed in the sounds directory defined earlier.

       WEB_COMPACT_MONTAGE  -  The  montage  view shows the output of all of your active monitors in one window.
       This include a small menu and status information for each one. This can increase the web traffic and make
       the window larger than may be desired. Setting this option on removes all this extraneous information and
       just displays the images.

       WEB_EVENT_SORT_FIELD - Events in lists can be initially ordered in any way you want. This option controls
       what field is used to sort them. You can modify this ordering from filters or by clicking on headings  in
       the  lists  themselves.  Bear  in  mind  however that the ‘Prev’ and ‘Next’ links, when scrolling through
       events, relate to the ordering in the lists and so not always to time based ordering.

       WEB_EVENT_SORT_ORDER - Events in lists can be initially ordered in any way you want. This option controls
       what order (ascending or descending) is used to sort them. You can modify this ordering from  filters  or
       by  clicking  on headings in the lists themselves. Bear in mind however that the ‘Prev’ and ‘Next’ links,
       when scrolling through events, relate to the ordering in the lists  and  so  not  always  to  time  based
       ordering.

       WEB_EVENTS_PER_PAGE  -  In  the  event list view you can either list all events or just a page at a time.
       This option controls how many events are listed per page in paged mode and how often to repeat the column
       headers in non-paged mode.

       WEB_LIST_THUMBS - Ordinarily the event lists just display text details of the events to  save  space  and
       time.  By  switching  this option on you can also display small thumbnails to help you identify events of
       interest. The size of these thumbnails is controlled by the following two options.

       WEB_LIST_THUMB_WIDTH - This options controls the width of the thumbnail images that appear in  the  event
       lists.  It  should  be fairly small to fit in with the rest of the table. If you prefer you can specify a
       height instead in the next option but you should only use one of the width or height and the other option
       should be set to zero. If both width and height are specified then width will be used and height ignored.

       WEB_LIST_THUMB_HEIGHT - This options controls the height of the thumbnail images that appear in the event
       lists. It should be fairly small to fit in with the rest of the table. If you prefer you  can  specify  a
       width  instead  in  the  previous option but you should only use one of the width or height and the other
       option should be set to zero. If both width and height are specified then width will be used  and  height
       ignored.

       WEB_USE_OBJECT_TAGS  - There are two methods of including media content in web pages. The most common way
       is use the EMBED tag which is able to give some indication of the type of content. However this is not  a
       standard  part of HTML. The official method is to use OBJECT tags which are able to give more information
       allowing the correct media viewers etc to be loaded. However these are less widely supported and  content
       may  be  specifically  tailored  to  a  particular platform or player. This option controls whether media
       content is enclosed in EMBED tags only or whether, where  appropriate,  it  is  additionally  wrapped  in
       OBJECT tags. Currently OBJECT tags are only used in a limited number of circumstances but they may become
       more  widespread  in  the  future.  It  is  suggested  that you leave this option on unless you encounter
       problems playing some content.

       WEB_XFRAME_WARN - When creating a Web Site monitor, if the target web site  has  X-Frame-Options  set  to
       sameorigin  in  the  header,  the  site  will not display in ZoneMinder. This is a design feature in most
       modern browsers. When this condition occurs, ZoneMinder will write a warning to  the  log  file.  To  get
       around  this,  one can install a browser plugin or extension to ignore X-Frame headers, and then the page
       will display properly. Once the plugin or extension has ben installed, the end user may  choose  to  turn
       this warning off

       WEB_FILTER_SOURCE  -  This option only affects monitors with a source type of Ffmpeg, Libvlc, or WebSite.
       This setting controls what information is displayed in the Source column on the console. Selecting ‘None’
       will not filter anything. The entire source  string  will  be  displayed,  which  may  contain  sensitive
       information.  Selecting  ‘NoCredentials’ will strip out usernames and passwords from the string. If there
       are any port numbers in the string and they are common (80, 554, etc) then those will be removed as well.
       Selecting ‘Hostname’ will filter out all information except for the  hostname  or  ip  address.  When  in
       doubt,  stay  with the default ‘Hostname’. This feature uses the php function ‘url_parts’ to identify the
       various pieces of the url. If the url in question is unusual or not standard in some way, then  filtering
       may not produce the desired results.

   Options - Images
       This  screen  lets  you  control  various  image quality settings for live and recorded events. A partial
       screenshot is shown below: [image]

       COLOUR_JPEG_FILES - Cameras that capture in greyscale can write their captured images to jpeg files  with
       a corresponding greyscale colour space. This saves a small amount of disk space over colour ones. However
       some  tools  such  as ffmpeg either fail to work with this colour space or have to convert it beforehand.
       Setting this option to yes uses up a little more space but makes creation of MPEG files much faster.

       ADD_JPEG_COMMENTS - JPEG files may have a number of extra fields added to the file  header.  The  comment
       field  may  have  any  kind  of text added. This options allows you to have the same text that is used to
       annotate the image additionally included as a file header comment. If you archive event images  to  other
       locations  this  may  help  you locate images for particular events or times if you use software that can
       read comment headers.

       JPEG_FILE_QUALITY - When ZoneMinder detects an event it will save the images associated with  that  event
       to  files.  These files are in the JPEG format and can be viewed or streamed later. This option specifies
       what image quality should be used to save these files. A higher number  means  better  quality  but  less
       compression so will take up more disk space and take longer to view over a slow connection. By contrast a
       low  number  means smaller, quicker to view, files but at the price of lower quality images. This setting
       applies to all images written except if the capture image has caused an alarm and the alarm file  quality
       option is set at a higher value when that is used instead.

       JPEG_ALARM_FILE_QUALITY  - This value is equivalent to the regular jpeg file quality setting above except
       that it only applies to images saved while in an alarm state and then only if this  value  is  set  to  a
       higher  quality  setting than the ordinary file setting. If set to a lower value then it is ignored. Thus
       leaving it at the default of 0 effectively means to use the regular file quality setting  for  all  saved
       images. This is to prevent accidentally saving important images at a worse quality setting.

       JPEG_STREAM_QUALITY  -  When viewing a ‘live’ stream for a monitor ZoneMinder will grab an image from the
       buffer and encode it into JPEG format before sending it. This option specifies what image quality  should
       be  used  to  encode these images. A higher number means better quality but less compression so will take
       longer to view over a slow connection. By contrast a low number means quicker to view images but  at  the
       price  of  lower  quality images. This option does not apply when viewing events or still images as these
       are usually just read from disk and so will be encoded at the quality specified by the previous options.

       MPEG_TIMED_FRAMES - When using streamed MPEG based video, either for  live  monitor  streams  or  events,
       ZoneMinder  can  send  the  streams  in  two ways. If this option is selected then the timestamp for each
       frame, taken from it’s capture time, is included in the stream. This means  that  where  the  frame  rate
       varies,  for  instance around an alarm, the stream will still maintain it’s ‘real’ timing. If this option
       is not selected then an approximate frame rate is calculated and that is used to schedule frames instead.
       This option should be selected unless you encounter problems with your preferred streaming method.

       MPEG_LIVE_FORMAT - When using MPEG mode ZoneMinder can  output  live  video.  However  what  formats  are
       handled  by the browser varies greatly between machines. This option allows you to specify a video format
       using a file extension format, so you would just enter the extension of the file type you would like  and
       the rest is determined from that. The default of ‘asf’ works well under Windows with Windows Media Player
       but  I’m  currently  not sure what, if anything, works on a Linux platform. If you find out please let me
       know! If this option is left blank then live streams will revert to being in motion jpeg format.

       MPEG_REPLAY_FORMAT - When using MPEG mode ZoneMinder can replay events in encoded video  format.  However
       what  formats  are  handled  by  the  browser  varies greatly between machines. This option allows you to
       specify a video format using a file extension format, so you would just enter the extension of  the  file
       type  you  would like and the rest is determined from that. The default of ‘asf’ works well under Windows
       with Windows Media Player and ‘mpg’, or ‘avi’ etc should work under Linux. If  you  know  any  more  then
       please  let  me  know! If this option is left blank then live streams will revert to being in motion jpeg
       format.

       RAND_STREAM - Some browsers can cache the streams used by ZoneMinder. In order to prevent this a harmless
       random string can be appended to the url to make each invocation of the stream appear unique.

       OPT_CAMBOZOLA - Cambozola is a handy low fat cheese flavoured Java applet that ZoneMinder  uses  to  view
       image  streams  on browsers such as Internet Explorer that don’t natively support this format. If you use
       this browser it is highly recommended to install this from this link  however  if  it  is  not  installed
       still  images at a lower refresh rate can still be viewed. Note that practically, if you are not using an
       old version of IE, you will likely not need this.

       PATH_CAMBOZOLA - Leave this as ‘cambozola.jar’ if cambozola is installed in the  same  directory  as  the
       ZoneMinder web client files.

       RELOAD_CAMBOZOLA  -  Cambozola  allows  for  the  viewing of streaming MJPEG however it caches the entire
       stream into cache space on the computer, setting this to a number > 0  will  cause  it  to  automatically
       reload after that many seconds to avoid filling up a hard drive.

       OPT_FFMPEG  -  ZoneMinder  can optionally encode a series of video images into an MPEG encoded movie file
       for viewing, downloading or storage. This option allows you to specify whether you have the ffmpeg  tools
       installed.  Note  that  creating  MPEG  files  can be fairly CPU and disk intensive and is not a required
       option as events can still be reviewed as video streams without it.

       PATH_FFMPEG - This path should point to where ffmpeg has been installed.

       FFMPEG_INPUT_OPTIONS - Ffmpeg can take many options on the command line to control the quality  of  video
       produced.  This option allows you to specify your own set that apply to the input to ffmpeg (options that
       are given before the -i option). Check the ffmpeg documentation for a full list of options which  may  be
       used here.

       FFMPEG_OUTPUT_OPTIONS  - Ffmpeg can take many options on the command line to control the quality of video
       produced. This option allows you to specify your own set that apply to the output  from  ffmpeg  (options
       that  are given after the -i option). Check the ffmpeg documentation for a full list of options which may
       be used here. The most common one will often be to force an output frame  rate  supported  by  the  video
       encoder.

       FFMPEG_FORMATS  - Ffmpeg can generate video in many different formats. This option allows you to list the
       ones you want to be able to select. As new formats are supported by ffmpeg you can add them here  and  be
       able  to use them immediately. Adding a ‘*’ after a format indicates that this will be the default format
       used for web video, adding ‘**’ defines the default format for phone video.

       FFMPEG_OPEN_TIMEOUT - When Ffmpeg is opening a stream, it can take a long time  before  failing;  certain
       circumstances  even seem to be able to lock indefinitely. This option allows you to set a maximum time in
       seconds to pass before closing the stream and trying to reopen it again.

   Options - Logging
       ZoneMinder has a powerful logging system. Understanding how to configure  logging  will  help  you  track
       issues better. The logging options are accessed via Options->Logging. Let’s follow along with an example.
       But before that, here is a basic construct of how logging works:

       • Every  component  of ZoneMinder can generate different types of logs. Typically, ERR refers to an error
         condition that you should look at (in some cases, they are transient during startup/shutdown  in  which
         case  they  are  usually  benign).  INF  logs are informational, WAR are warning logs that might have a
         potential to cause issues, whilst DBG are debug logs that are useful when you need to debug a problems

       • You can decide where these logs are written. Typically ZoneMinder writes logs to  multiple  sources:  *
         Syslog * Database * individual files belonging to each component inside the logging folder configured

       Consider  for  example,  that  you  are  trying  to figure out why your “zmc 11” (i.e. Monitor 11) is not
       working. Obviously, you need to enable debug logs if you are not able to figure out what is going on with
       standard info logs. But you wouldn’t want to write debug logs to the Database. Maybe, you also don’t want
       it polluting your syslog and only want to write  debug  logs  to  the  debug  file  of  _that_  component
       (/var/log/zm/zmc_m11.log for example). That is where customizing your logging is useful.

   Logging example
       [image]

       In the example above, I’ve configured my logging as follows:

       • I only want to log INFO level logs to Syslog

       • I want DEBUG logs to only go to the conmponent file

       • When  it  comes to my WEBLOG (what I see in the ZM Log window) and Database log, I only want FATAL logs
         (you may want to set this to WAR or INF)

       • I don’t want to save FFMPEG logs (this was a new feature added). FFMPEG generates a log of logs on  its
         own that you should only enable if you are trying to figure out video playback related issues

       • I have enabled LOG_DEBUG (unless you enable this, DEBUG logs won’t be logged)

       • The  LOG_DEBUG_TARGET  is  useful  if  you don’t want to enable DEBUG logs for every component. In this
         case, I’m only interested in debugging the ZM Event Server and Monitor 11. Nothing else will have debug
         logs enabled.

       • I prefer to keep the LOG_DEBUG_FILE to empty. This creates nicely separate files in my log folder  with
         component names

       The other logging parameters are left to their defaults, like so: [image]

   A more comprehensive explanation of the various log options
       LOG_LEVEL_SYSLOG - ZoneMinder logging is now more integrated between components and allows you to specify
       the  destination  for logging output and the individual levels for each. This option lets you control the
       level of logging output that goes to the system log. ZoneMinder binaries have always logged to the system
       log but now scripts and web logging is also included. To  preserve  the  previous  behaviour  you  should
       ensure  this value is set to Info or Warning. This option controls the maximum level of logging that will
       be written, so Info includes Warnings and Errors etc. To disable entirely, set this option to  None.  You
       should use caution when setting this option to Debug as it can severely affect system performance. If you
       want debug you will also need to set a level and component below

       LOG_LEVEL_FILE  -  ZoneMinder logging is now more integrated between components and allows you to specify
       the destination for logging output and the individual levels for each. This option lets you  control  the
       level  of  logging  output  that goes to individual log files written by specific components. This is how
       logging worked previously and although useful for tracking down issues in  specific  components  it  also
       resulted  in  many disparate log files. To preserve this behaviour you should ensure this value is set to
       Info or Warning. This option controls the maximum level of logging that will be written, so Info includes
       Warnings and Errors etc. To disable entirely, set this option  to  None.  You  should  use  caution  when
       setting  this  option  to  Debug as it can severely affect system performance though file output has less
       impact than the other options. If you want debug you will also need to set a level and component below

       LOG_LEVEL_WEBLOG - ZoneMinder logging is now more integrated between components and allows you to specify
       the destination for logging output and the individual levels for each. This option lets you  control  the
       level  of  logging  output  from  the  web interface that goes to the httpd error log. Note that only web
       logging from PHP and JavaScript files  is  included  and  so  this  option  is  really  only  useful  for
       investigating  specific  issues  with those components. This option controls the maximum level of logging
       that will be written, so Info includes Warnings and Errors etc. To disable entirely, set this  option  to
       None.  You  should  use  caution  when  setting  this  option  to  Debug as it can severely affect system
       performance. If you want debug you will also need to set a level and component below

       LOG_LEVEL_DATABASE - ZoneMinder logging is now more integrated  between  components  and  allows  you  to
       specify  the  destination  for  logging  output  and the individual levels for each. This option lets you
       control the level of logging output that is written to the database. This is a new option which can  make
       viewing logging output easier and more intuitive and also makes it easier to get an overall impression of
       how  the  system  is  performing. If you have a large or very busy system then it is possible that use of
       this  option  may  slow  your  system  down  if  the  table  becomes  very  large.  Ensure  you  use  the
       LOG_DATABASE_LIMIT  option to keep the table to a manageable size. This option controls the maximum level
       of logging that will be written, so Info includes Warnings and Errors etc. To disable entirely, set  this
       option to None. You should use caution when setting this option to Debug as it can severely affect system
       performance. If you want debug you will also need to set a level and component below

       LOG_DATABASE_LIMIT  -  If  you are using database logging then it is possible to quickly build up a large
       number of entries in the Logs table. This option allows you to specify how  many  of  these  entries  are
       kept.  If  you  set  this  option to a number greater than zero then that number is used to determine the
       maximum number of rows, less than or equal to zero indicates no limit and is  not  recommended.  You  can
       also set this value to time values such as ‘<n> day’ which will limit the log entries to those newer than
       that  time.  You  can  specify  ‘hour’, ‘day’, ‘week’, ‘month’ and ‘year’, note that the values should be
       singular (no ‘s’ at the end). The Logs table is pruned periodically so it is possible for more  than  the
       expected number of rows to be present briefly in the meantime.

       LOG_DEBUG”  -  ZoneMinder  components  usually  support  debug  logging available to help with diagnosing
       problems. Binary components have several levels of debug whereas more other  components  have  only  one.
       Normally  this  is  disabled  to  minimise performance penalties and avoid filling logs too quickly. This
       option lets you switch on other options that allow you to configure additional debug  information  to  be
       output. Components will pick up this instruction when they are restarted.

       LOG_DEBUG_TARGET  -  There  are three scopes of debug available. Leaving this option blank means that all
       components will use extra debug (not recommended). Setting this option to ‘_<component>’, e.g. _zmc, will
       limit extra debug to  that  component  only.  Setting  this  option  to  ‘_<component>_<identity>’,  e.g.
       ‘_zmc_m1’  will  limit  extra  debug  to that instance of the component only. This is ordinarily what you
       probably want to do. To debug scripts use their names without the .pl extension, e.g. ‘_zmvideo’  and  to
       debug  issues with the web interface use ‘_web’. You can specify multiple targets by separating them with
       ‘|’ characters.

       LOG_DEBUG_LEVEL - There are 9 levels of debug available, with higher numbers being more debug and level 0
       being no debug. However not all levels are used by all components. Also if there is debug at a high level
       it is usually likely to be output at such a volume that it may obstruct normal operation. For this reason
       you should set the level carefully and cautiously until the degree of debug you wish to see  is  present.
       Scripts and the web interface only have one level so this is an on/off type option for them.

       LOG_DEBUG_FILE  -  This  option allows you to specify a different target for debug output. All components
       have a default log file which will norally be in /tmp or /var/log and this is where debug will be written
       to if this value is empty. Adding a path here will temporarily redirect debug, and other logging  output,
       to  this  file.  This option is a simple filename and you are debugging several components then they will
       all try and write to the same file with undesirable consequences. Appending a ‘+’ to  the  filename  will
       cause  the  file  to be created with a ‘.<pid>’ suffix containing your process id. In this way debug from
       each run of a component is kept separate. This is  the  recommended  setting  as  it  will  also  prevent
       subsequent  runs  from  overwriting  the same log. You should ensure that permissions are set up to allow
       writing to the file and directory specified here.

       LOG_CHECK_PERIOD - When ZoneMinder is logging events to the database it can retrospectively  examine  the
       number  of  warnings  and  errors that have occurred to calculate an overall state of system health. This
       option allows you to indicate what period of historical events are used in this calculation.  This  value
       is expressed in seconds and is ignored if LOG_LEVEL_DATABASE is set to None.

       LOG_ALERT_WAR_COUNT  -  When  ZoneMinder is logging events to the database it can retrospectively examine
       the number of warnings and errors that have occurred to calculate an overall state of system health. This
       option allows you to specify how many warnings must have occurred  within  the  defined  time  period  to
       generate  an overall system alert state. A value of zero means warnings are not considered. This value is
       ignored if LOG_LEVEL_DATABASE is set to None.

       LOG_ALERT_ERR_COUNT - When ZoneMinder is logging events to the database it  can  retrospectively  examine
       the number of warnings and errors that have occurred to calculate an overall state of system health. This
       option  allows  you  to  specify  how  many  errors  must have occurred within the defined time period to
       generate an overall system alert state. A value of zero means errors are not considered.  This  value  is
       ignored if LOG_LEVEL_DATABASE is set to None.

       LOG_ALERT_FAT_COUNT  -  When  ZoneMinder is logging events to the database it can retrospectively examine
       the number of warnings and errors that have occurred to calculate an overall state of system health. This
       option allows you to specify how many fatal errors (including  panics)  must  have  occurred  within  the
       defined time period to generate an overall system alert state. A value of zero means fatal errors are not
       considered. This value is ignored if LOG_LEVEL_DATABASE is set to None.

       LOG_ALARM_WAR_COUNT  -  When  ZoneMinder is logging events to the database it can retrospectively examine
       the number of warnings and errors that have occurred to calculate an overall state of system health. This
       option allows you to specify how many warnings must have occurred  within  the  defined  time  period  to
       generate  an overall system alarm state. A value of zero means warnings are not considered. This value is
       ignored if LOG_LEVEL_DATABASE is set to None.

       LOG_ALARM_ERR_COUNT - When ZoneMinder is logging events to the database it  can  retrospectively  examine
       the number of warnings and errors that have occurred to calculate an overall state of system health. This
       option  allows  you  to  specify  how  many  errors  must have occurred within the defined time period to
       generate an overall system alarm state. A value of zero means errors are not considered.  This  value  is
       ignored if LOG_LEVEL_DATABASE is set to None.

       LOG_ALARM_FAT_COUNT  -  When  ZoneMinder is logging events to the database it can retrospectively examine
       the number of warnings and errors that have occurred to calculate an overall state of system health. This
       option allows you to specify how many fatal errors (including  panics)  must  have  occurred  within  the
       defined time period to generate an overall system alarm state. A value of zero means fatal errors are not
       considered. This value is ignored if LOG_LEVEL_DATABASE is set to None.

       RECORD_EVENT_STATS  -  This  version of ZoneMinder records detailed information about events in the Stats
       table. This can help in profiling what the optimum settings are  for  Zones  though  this  is  tricky  at
       present.  However  in  future  releases  this will be done more easily and intuitively, especially with a
       large sample of events. The default option of ‘yes’ allows  this  information  to  be  collected  now  in
       readiness  for  this  but if you are concerned about performance you can switch this off in which case no
       Stats information will be saved.

       RECORD_DIAG_IMAGES - In addition to recording event statistics  you  can  also  record  the  intermediate
       diagnostic images that display the results of the various checks and processing that occur when trying to
       determine  if  an alarm event has taken place. There are several of these images generated for each frame
       and zone for each alarm or alert frame so this can have a massive impact on performance. Only switch this
       setting on for debug or analysis purposes and remember to switch it off again once no longer required.

       RECORD_DIAG_IMAGES_FIFO - Adds fifo options for diagnostic images for much lower impact diagnostics mode.
       Diagnostic images are only written when there is a client (like a web browser)  listening  for  them.  If
       there  is  no  active  client  connected,  FIFO  images  are  skipped.  Note that this feature also needs
       RECORD_DIAG_IMAGES to be on.  Note: Your monitor needs to be in some recording mode (modect/mocord/etc.)

       In addition to creating diagnostic images, this feature also adds a json stream for the detection data so
       you can see in real time the pixels or blobs detected for the motion. This  allows  for  easy  real  time
       stream of both delta and reference images (as video streams) along with the detection numbers.

       Once  you  turn  on RECORD_DIAG_IMAGES and the new RECORD_DIAG_IMAGES_FIFO in the logging options you can
       then use 3 new remote stream urls:

       • The  delta  images  as  an  MJPEG  stream  (great  to  see   where   it   is   seeing   the   motion!):
         https://portal/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=jpeg&bitrate=2&buffer=0&source=fifo&format=delta&monitor=1&maxfps=5&<auth>
         (change  monitor,  portal  to  your  values.  <auth>  could be &user=user&pass=pass or &auth=authval or
         &token=access_token)

       • The           reference           images           as            an            MJPEG            stream:
         https://portal/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=jpeg&bitrate=2&buffer=0&source=fifo&format=reference&monitor=1&maxfps=5&<auth>
         (change  monitor,  portal  to  your  values.  <auth>  could be &user=user&pass=pass or &auth=authval or
         &token=access_token)

       • text                            json                            raw                             stream:
         https://portal/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?&buffer=0&source=fifo&format=raw&monitor=1&<auth>   (change  monitor,
         portal to your values, <auth> could be &user=user&pass=pass or &auth=authval or &token=access_token)

       This will output a text stream on the browser like:

          {"zone":5,"type":"ALRM","pixels":778661,"avg_diff":50}
          {"zone":5,"type":"FILT","pixels":762704}
          {"zone":5,"type":"RBLB","pixels":728102,"blobs":5}
          {"zone":5,"type":"FBLB","pixels":728021,"blobs":2}
          {"zone":6,"type":"ALRM","pixels":130844,"avg_diff":44}
          {"zone":6,"type":"FILT","pixels":128608}

       There are four types of events right now: Alarm (ALRM), Filter (FILT), Raw Blob (RBLB) and Filtered Blobs
       (FBLB) that correspond to those stages of analysis. It will show the number  of  pixels  detected  (along
       with average pixel difference against the threshold) and number of blobs at each stage.

       For example, here is a delta image stream from one of my monitors showing in live mode:

       https://myserver/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=jpeg&bitrate=2&buffer=0&source=fifo&format=delta&monitor=8&maxfps=5&user=admin&pass=mypass
       [image]

       DUMP_CORES  - When an unrecoverable error occurs in a ZoneMinder binary process is has traditionally been
       trapped and the details written to logs to aid in remote analysis. However in some cases it is easier  to
       diagnose  the  error  if  a core file, which is a memory dump of the process at the time of the error, is
       created. This can be interactively analysed in the debugger and may reveal  more  or  better  information
       than  that available from the logs. This option is recommended for advanced users only otherwise leave at
       the default. Note using this option to trigger core files will mean that there will be no  indication  in
       the  binary logs that a process has died, they will just stop, however the zmdc log will still contain an
       entry. Also note that you may have to explicitly enable core file creation on your system via the ‘ulimit
       -c’ command or other means otherwise no file will be created regardless of the value of this option.

   Options - Network
       [image]

       HTTP_VERSION - ZoneMinder can communicate with network cameras using either of the HTTP/1.1  or  HTTP/1.0
       standard.  A  server  will  normally  fall back to the version it supports with no problem so this should
       usually by left at the default. However it can be changed to HTTP/1.0 if necessary to resolve  particular
       issues.

       HTTP_UA  - When ZoneMinder communicates with remote cameras it will identify itself using this string and
       it’s version number. This is normally sufficient,  however  if  a  particular  cameras  expects  only  to
       communicate  with  certain browsers then this can be changed to a different string identifying ZoneMinder
       as Internet Explorer or Netscape etc.

       HTTP_TIMEOUT - When retrieving remote images ZoneMinder will wait for this length of time before deciding
       that an image is not going to arrive and taking steps to retry. This timeout is in milliseconds (1000 per
       second) and will apply to each part of an image if it is not sent in one whole chunk.

       MIN_STREAMING_PORT - ZoneMinder supports a concept called multi-port streaming. The core concept is  that
       modern  browsers  like Chrome limit the number of simultaneous connections allowed from a specific domain
       (host name+port). In the case of Chrome this  value  is  6,  which  means  you  can’t  see  more  than  6
       simultaneous  streams  from  your  server  at one time. However, if the streams originated from different
       ports (or sub domains), this limitation would not apply. When you enable this option  with  a  value  (in
       this  case,  30000),  the  streams  from  the  monitors  will  originate  from 30000 plus the monitor ID,
       effectively overcoming this limitation. Note  that  this  also  needs  additional  setup  your  webserver
       configuration  before  this  can  start  to work. Please refer to this article on how to setup multi port
       streaming on Apache.

       MIN_RTP_PORT - When ZoneMinder communicates with MPEG4 capable cameras using RTP with the unicast  method
       it  must  open  ports  for the camera to connect back to for control and streaming purposes. This setting
       specifies the minimum port number that ZoneMinder will use. Ordinarily two adjacent ports  are  used  for
       each camera, one for control packets and one for data packets. This port should be set to an even number,
       you  may also need to open up a hole in your firewall to allow cameras to connect back if you wish to use
       unicasting.

       MAX_RTP_PORT - When ZoneMinder communicates with MPEG4 capable cameras using RTP with the unicast  method
       it  must  open  ports  for the camera to connect back to for control and streaming purposes. This setting
       specifies the maximum port number that ZoneMinder will use. Ordinarily two adjacent ports  are  used  for
       each camera, one for control packets and one for data packets. This port should be set to an even number,
       you  may also need to open up a hole in your firewall to allow cameras to connect back if you wish to use
       unicasting. You should also ensure that you have opened up at least two ports for each monitor that  will
       be connecting to unicasting network cameras.

   Options - Email
       [image]

       OPT_EMAIL  -  In  ZoneMinder  you can create event filters that specify whether events that match certain
       criteria should have their details emailed to you at a designated email address. This will allow  you  to
       be  notified  of  events  as soon as they occur and also to quickly view the events directly. This option
       specifies whether this functionality should be available. The email created with this option can  be  any
       size and is intended to be sent to a regular email reader rather than a mobile device.

       EMAIL_ADDRESS  -  This  option  is  used  to  define  the  email  address  that any events that match the
       appropriate filters will be sent to.

       EMAIL_SUBJECT - This option is used to define the subject of the email that is sent for any  events  that
       match the appropriate filters.

       EMAIL_BODY  -  This  option  is  used to define the content of the email that is sent for any events that
       match the appropriate filters.

   Todo
       check if any other tags have been added
                                 ┌─────────┬───────────────────────────────────────┐
                                 │ Token   │ Description                           │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EI%    │ Id of the event                       │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EN%    │ Name of the event                     │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EC%    │ Cause of the event                    │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %ED%    │ Event description                     │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %ET%    │ Time of the event                     │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EL%    │ Length of the event                   │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EF%    │ Number of frames in the event         │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EFA%   │ Number of alarm frames in the event   │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EST%   │ Total score of the event              │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %ESA%   │ Average score of the event            │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %ESM%   │ Maximum score of the event            │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EP%    │ Path to the event                     │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EPS%   │ Path to the event stream              │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EPI%   │ Path to the event images              │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EPI1%  │ Path to the first alarmed event image │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EPIM%  │ Path to the (first) event image  with │
                                 │         │ the highest score                     │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EI1%   │ Attach first alarmed event image      │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EIM%   │ Attach  (first)  event image with the │
                                 │         │ highest score                         │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EIMOD% │ Attach  image  of  object   detected. │
                                 │         │ Requires  event  notfn.  server setup │
                                 │         │ and machine learning hooks            │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %EV%    │ Attach event mpeg video               │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %MN%    │ Name of the monitor                   │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %MET%   │ Total  number  of  events   for   the │
                                 │         │ monitor                               │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %MEH%   │ Number  of  events for the monitor in │
                                 │         │ the last hour                         │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %MED%   │ Number of events for the  monitor  in │
                                 │         │ the last day                          │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %MEW%   │ Number  of  events for the monitor in │
                                 │         │ the last week                         │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %MEM%   │ Number of events for the  monitor  in │
                                 │         │ the last month                        │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %MEA%   │ Number  of  archived  events  for the │
                                 │         │ monitor                               │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %MP%    │ Path to the monitor window            │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %MPS%   │ Path to the monitor stream            │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %MPI%   │ Path to the monitor recent image      │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %FN%    │ Name  of  the  current  filter   that │
                                 │         │ matched                               │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %FP%    │ Path   to  the  current  filter  that │
                                 │         │ matched                               │
                                 ├─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                                 │ %ZP%    │ Path to your ZoneMinder console       │
                                 └─────────┴───────────────────────────────────────┘

       OPT_MESSAGE - In ZoneMinder you can create event filters that specify whether events that  match  certain
       criteria  should  have  their  details sent to you at a designated short message email address. This will
       allow you to be  notified  of  events  as  soon  as  they  occur.  This  option  specifies  whether  this
       functionality  should  be available. The email created by this option will be brief and is intended to be
       sent to an SMS gateway or a minimal mail reader such as a mobile device or phone rather  than  a  regular
       email reader.

       MESSAGE_ADDRESS  -  This  option  is  used to define the short message email address that any events that
       match the appropriate filters will be sent to.

       MESSAGE_SUBJECT - This option is used to define the subject of the message that is sent  for  any  events
       that match the appropriate filters.

       MESSAGE_BODY  - This option is used to define the content of the message that is sent for any events that
       match the appropriate filters.

       NEW_MAIL_MODULES - Traditionally ZoneMinder has used the MIME::Entity perl module to construct  and  send
       notification  emails  and messages. Some people have reported problems with this module not being present
       at all or flexible enough for their needs. If you are one of those  people  this  option  allows  you  to
       select  a  new mailing method using MIME::Lite and Net::SMTP instead. This method was contributed by Ross
       Melin and should work for everyone but has not been extensively tested so currently is  not  selected  by
       default.

       EMAIL_HOST  - If you have chosen SMTP as the method by which to send notification emails or messages then
       this option allows you to choose which SMTP server to use to send them. The default of localhost may work
       if you have the sendmail, exim or a similar daemon running however you may wish to enter your ISP’s  SMTP
       mail server here.

       FROM_EMAIL  -  The emails or messages that will be sent to you informing you of events can appear to come
       from a designated email address to help you with  mail  filtering  etc.  An  address  of  something  like
       ZoneMinder@your.domain is recommended.

       URL  -  The emails or messages that will be sent to you informing you of events can include a link to the
       events themselves for easy viewing. If you intend to use this feature then set this option to the url  of
       your    installation    as    it    would    appear    from    where    you   read   your   email,   e.g.
       http://host.your.domain/zm/index.php.

       SSMTP_MAIL - SSMTP is a lightweight and efficient method to send email.  The  SSMTP  application  is  not
       installed  by default. NEW_MAIL_MODULES must also be enabled. Please visit the ZoneMinder SSMTP Wiki page
       for setup and configuration help.

       SSMTP_PATH - The path to the SSMTP application. If path is not defined. Zoneminder will try to  determine
       the path via shell command. Example path: /usr/sbin/ssmtp.

   Options - Upload
       A partial screenshot of the upload options is shown below: [image]

       OPT_UPLOAD  -  In  ZoneMinder you can create event filters that specify whether events that match certain
       criteria should be uploaded to a  remote  server  for  archiving.  This  option  specifies  whether  this
       functionality should be available.

       UPLOAD_ARCH_FORMAT  -  Uploaded events may be stored in either .tar or .zip format, this option specifies
       which. Note that to use this you will need to have the  Archive::Tar  and/or  Archive::Zip  perl  modules
       installed.

       UPLOAD_ARCH_COMPRESS  -  When  the  archive  files are created they can be compressed. However in general
       since the images are compressed already this saves only a minimal amount of space versus  utilising  more
       CPU  in their creation. Only enable if you have CPU to waste and are limited in disk space on your remote
       server or bandwidth.

       UPLOAD_ARCH_ANALYSE - When the archive files are created they can contain either just the captured frames
       or both the captured frames and, for frames that caused an alarm, the analysed  image  with  the  changed
       area  highlighted.  This  option  controls files are included. Only include analysed frames if you have a
       high bandwidth connection to the remote server or if you need help in figuring out what caused  an  alarm
       in the first place as archives with these files in can be considerably larger.

       UPLOAD_PROTOCOL  -  ZoneMinder can upload events to a remote server using either FTP or SFTP. Regular FTP
       is widely supported but not necessarily very secure whereas SFTP (Secure FTP) runs over an ssh connection
       and so is encrypted and uses regular ssh ports. Note  that  to  use  this  you  will  need  to  have  the
       appropriate perl module, either Net::FTP or Net::SFTP installed depending on your choice.

       UPLOAD_HOST - You can use filters to instruct ZoneMinder to upload events to a remote server. This option
       indicates the name, or ip address, of the server to use.

       UPLOAD_PORT  - You can use filters to instruct ZoneMinder to upload events to a remote server. If you are
       using the SFTP protocol then this option allows you to specify a particular port to use  for  connection.
       If this option is left blank then the default, port 22, is used. This option is ignored for FTP uploads.

       UPLOAD_USER - You can use filters to instruct ZoneMinder to upload events to a remote server. This option
       indicates the username that ZoneMinder should use to log in for transfer.

       UPLOAD_PASS - You can use filters to instruct ZoneMinder to upload events to a remote server. This option
       indicates  the  password  that ZoneMinder should use to log in for transfer. If you are using certificate
       based logins for SFTP servers you can leave this option blank.

       UPLOAD_LOC_DIR - You can use filters to instruct ZoneMinder to upload events to  a  remote  server.  This
       option  indicates  the  local  directory that ZoneMinder should use for temporary upload files. These are
       files that are created from events, uploaded and then deleted.

       UPLOAD_REM_DIR - You can use filters to instruct ZoneMinder to upload events to  a  remote  server.  This
       option indicates the remote directory that ZoneMinder should use to upload event files to.

       UPLOAD_TIMEOUT  -  You  can  use filters to instruct ZoneMinder to upload events to a remote server. This
       option indicates the maximum inactivity timeout (in seconds) that should be tolerated  before  ZoneMinder
       determines that the transfer has failed and closes down the connection.

       UPLOAD_STRICT  -  You can require SFTP uploads to verify the host key of the remote server for protection
       against man-in-the-middle attacks. You will need to add the server’s key to the known_hosts file. On most
       systems, this will be ~/.ssh/known_hosts, where ~ is  the  home  directory  of  the  web  server  running
       ZoneMinder.

       UPLOAD_FTP_PASSIVE  - You can use filters to instruct ZoneMinder to upload events to a remote ftp server.
       This option indicates that ftp transfers should be done in passive mode. This uses  a  single  connection
       for  all  ftp  activity  and, whilst slower than active transfers, is more robust and likely to work from
       behind filewalls. This option is ignored for SFTP transfers.

       UPLOAD_DEBUG - You can use filters to instruct ZoneMinder to upload events to a remote server. If you are
       having (or expecting) troubles with uploading events  then  setting  this  to  ‘yes’  permits  additional
       information to be generated by the underlying transfer modules and included in the logs.

   Options - X10
       [image]

       OPT_X10  -  If  you  have an X10 Home Automation setup in your home you can use ZoneMinder to initiate or
       react to X10 signals if your computer has the appropriate interface  controller.  This  option  indicates
       whether X10 options will be available in the browser client.

       X10_DEVICE  -  If  you  have an X10 controller device (e.g. XM10U) connected to your computer this option
       details which port it is connected on, the default of /dev/ttyS0 maps to serial or com port 1.

       X10_HOUSE_CODE - X10 devices are grouped together by identifying them as all belonging to one House Code.
       This option details what that is. It should be a single letter between A and P.

       X10_DB_RELOAD_INTERVAL - The zmx10 daemon periodically checks the database to find out  what  X10  events
       trigger,  or  result  from,  alarms.  This option determines how frequently this check occurs, unless you
       change this area frequently this can be a fairly large value.

   Options - High, Medium and Low B/W
       There are a number of options that are grouped into bandwidth categories, this allows  you  to  configure
       the  ZoneMinder  client to work optimally over the various access methods you might to access the client.
       You may want to use different modes depending on your network to preserve bandwidth.

       A partial screenshot is shown below: [image]

       The following options are available in H, M and L options. These 3 groups control what happens  when  the
       client  is  running  in ‘high’, ‘medium’ and ‘low’ bandwidth mode respectively. In most cases the default
       values will be suitable as a starting point.

       High - You should set these options for when accessing the ZoneMinder client over a local network or high
       speed link.

       Medium -  You should set these options for when accessing the ZoneMinder client over a  slower  cable  or
       DSL link.

       Slow - You should set these options for when accessing Zoneminder client over a slow network link.

       WEB_H_REFRESH_MAIN,  WEB_M_REFRESH_MAIN,  WEB_L_REFRESH_MAIN  -  How  often (in seconds) the main console
       window should refresh itself. The main console window lists a general status and the event totals for all
       monitors. This is not a trivial task and should not be repeated too  frequently  or  it  may  affect  the
       performance of the rest of the system.

       WEB_H_REFRESH_CYCLE,  WEB_M_REFRESH_CYCLE,  WEB_L_REFRESH_CYCLE  - How often (in seconds) the cycle watch
       window swaps to the next monitor. The cycle watch window is a  method  of  continuously  cycling  between
       images from all of your monitors. This option determines how often to refresh with a new image.

       WEB_H_REFRESH_IMAGE,  WEB_M_REFRESH_IMAGE, WEB_L_REFRESH_IMAGE - How often (in seconds) the watched image
       is refreshed (if not streaming). The live images from a monitor can  be  viewed  in  either  streamed  or
       stills  mode. This option determines how often a stills image is refreshed, it has no effect if streaming
       is selected.

       WEB_H_REFRESH_STATUS, WEB_M_REFRESH_STATUS, WEB_L_REFRESH_STATUS - How  often  (in  seconds)  the  status
       refreshes itself in the watch window. The monitor window is actually made from several frames. The one in
       the  middle  merely  contains  a  monitor  status which needs to refresh fairly frequently to give a true
       indication. This option determines that frequency.

       WEB_H_REFRESH_EVENTS, WEB_M_REFRESH_EVENTS, WEB_L_REFRESH_EVENTS -  How  often  (in  seconds)  the  event
       listing  is  refreshed  in the watch window. The monitor window is actually made from several frames. The
       lower framme contains a listing of the last few events for easy access. This option determines how  often
       this is refreshed.

       WEB_H_CAN_STREAM,  WEB_M_CAN_STREAM,  WEB_L_CAN_STREAM  -  If you know that your browser can handle image
       streams of the type ‘multipart/x-mixed-replace’ but ZoneMinder does not detect this correctly you can set
       this option to ensure that the stream is delivered with or without  the  use  of  the  Cambozola  plugin.
       Selecting ‘yes’ will tell ZoneMinder that your browser can handle the streams nativ

       WEB_H_STREAM_METHOD,  WEB_M_STREAM_METHOD,  WEB_H_STREAM_METHOD  -  ZoneMinder  can  be configured to use
       either mpeg encoded video or a series or still jpeg  images  when  sending  video  streams.  This  option
       defines  which  is  used.  If  you  choose  mpeg  you should ensure that you have the appropriate plugins
       available on your browser whereas choosing jpeg will work natively on Mozilla and  related  browsers  and
       with a Java applet on Internet Explorer

       WEB_H_DEFAULT_SCALE,  WEB_M_DEFAULT_SCALE,  WEB_L_DEFAULT_SCALE - Normally ZoneMinder will display ‘live’
       or ‘event’ streams in their native size. However if you have monitors with large  dimensions  or  a  slow
       link  you  may  prefer  to  reduce  this  size, alternatively for small monitors you can enlarge it. This
       options lets you specify what the default scaling factor will be. It is expressed as a percentage so  100
       is normal size, 200 is double size etc.

       WEB_H_DEFAULT_RATE,  WEB_M_DEFAULT_RATE,  WEB_L_DEFAULT_RATE  -  Normally ZoneMinder will display ‘event’
       streams at their native rate, i.e. as close to real-time as possible. However if you have long events  it
       is  often  convenient  to  replay them at a faster rate for review. This option lets you specify what the
       default replay rate will be. It is expressed as a percentage so 100 is normal rate, 200 is  double  speed
       etc.

       WEB_H_VIDEO_BITRATE,  WEB_M_VIDEO_BITRATE,  WEB_L_VIDEO_BITRATE - When encoding real video via the ffmpeg
       library a bit rate can be specified which roughly corresponds to the available  bandwidth  used  for  the
       stream.  This  setting  effectively  corresponds  to  a ‘quality’ setting for the video. A low value will
       result in a blocky image whereas a high value will produce a clearer view. Note that  this  setting  does
       not  control  the  frame  rate of the video however the quality of the video produced is affected both by
       this setting and the frame rate that the video is produced at. A higher frame rate at  a  particular  bit
       rate result in individual frames being at a lower quality.

       WEB_H_VIDEO_MAXFPS,  WEB_M_VIDEO_MAXFPS,  WEB_L_VIDEO_MAXFPS - When using streamed video the main control
       is the bitrate which determines how much data can be transmitted. However a lower bitrate at  high  frame
       rates  results in a lower quality image. This option allows you to limit the maximum frame rate to ensure
       that video quality is maintained. An additional advantage is that encoding video at high frame rates is a
       processor intensive task when for the most  part  a  very  high  frame  rate  offers  little  perceptible
       improvement over one that has a more manageable resource requirement. Note, this option is implemented as
       a  cap beyond which binary reduction takes place. So if you have a device capturing at 15fps and set this
       option to 10fps then the video is not produced at 10fps, but rather at 7.5fps (15 divided by  2)  as  the
       final frame rate must be the original divided by a power of 2.

       WEB_H_SCALE_THUMBS,  WEB_M_SCALE_THUMBS, WEB_L_SCALE_THUMBS - If unset, this option sends the whole image
       to the browser which resizes it in the window. If set the image is  scaled  down  on  the  server  before
       sending  a reduced size image to the browser to conserve bandwidth at the cost of cpu on the server. Note
       that ZM can only perform the resizing if the appropriate PHP graphics functionality is installed. This is
       usually available in the php-gd package.

       WEB_H_EVENTS_VIEW, WEB_M_EVENTS_VIEW, WEB_L_EVENTS_VIEW - Stored events can be viewed in either an events
       list format or in a timeline based one. This option sets the default view that will be used. Choosing one
       view here does not prevent the other view being used as it will always be selectable from whichever  view
       is currently being used.

       WEB_H_SHOW_PROGRESS,  WEB_M_SHOW_PROGRESS,  WEB_L_SHOW_PROGRESS - When viewing events an event navigation
       panel and progress bar is shown below the event itself. This allows you to jump to specific points in the
       event, but can can also dynamically update to display the current progress of the  event  replay  itself.
       This  progress  is  calculated  from  the  actual event duration and is not directly linked to the replay
       itself, so on limited bandwidth connections may be out of step with the replay. This option allows you to
       turn off the progress display, whilst still keeping the navigation aspect, where  bandwidth  prevents  it
       functioning effectively.

       WEB_H_AJAX_TIMEOUT,  WEB_M_AJAX_TIMEOUT,  WEB_L_AJAX_TIMEOUT  -  The  newer versions of the live feed and
       event views use Ajax to request information from the server and  populate  the  views  dynamically.  This
       option  allows  you to specify a timeout if required after which requests are abandoned. A timeout may be
       necessary if requests would overwise hang such as on a slow connection. This would tend to consume a  lot
       of  browser  memory  and  make  the interface unresponsive. Ordinarily no requests should timeout so this
       setting should be set to  a  value  greater  than  the  slowest  expected  response.  This  value  is  in
       milliseconds but if set to zero then no timeout will be used.

   Options - Users
       [image]

       In  this  section  you  will  see  a list of the current users defined on the system. You can also add or
       delete users from here. It is recommended you do not delete  the  admin  user  unless  you  have  created
       another  fully  privileged user to take over the same role. Each user is defined with a name and password
       (which is hidden) as well as an enabled setting which you can use to temporarily enable or disable users,
       for example a guest user for limited time access. As well as that there is a language setting that allows
       you to define user specific languages. Setting a language here that is different than the system language
       will mean that when that user logs in they will have the web interface presented in  their  own  language
       rather than the system default, if it is available.

       This  screen allows you to configure various permissions on a per user basis. The permissions as of today
       are defined as follows:

       • Streams - None: the user has no access to view live streams from the defined monitors - View: the  user
         has access to only view live streams from the defined monitors - Edit: the user has access to edit live
         streams from the defined monitors

       • Events  -  These  permissions  relate  to  the  ability  to  view events from the defined monitors. The
         permission levels are the same as the Streams permissions, except that they apply to recorded events

       • Control - These permissions relate to the  ability  to  control  Pan/Tilt/Zoom  (PTZ)  of  the  defined
         monitors. The permission levels are the same as the Streams permissions, except that they apply to PTZ

       • Monitors  -  specifies  whether  a  user  can  see  the  current  monitor settings and change them. The
         permissions levels are the same as the Streams permissions, except that they apply to monitor settings

       • Groups - specifies whether a user can see monitor groups and change them. The  permissions  levels  are
         the same as the Streams permissions, except that they apply to groups

       • System  -  Determines whether a user can view or modify the system settings as a whole, such as options
         and users or controlling the running of the system as a whole. The permissions levels are the  same  as
         the Streams permissions, except that they apply to groups.

         NOTE:
            if  you  are  using zmNinja, users are required to have ‘View’ access to system because multi-server
            information is only available as part of this permission

       • Bandwidth - Specifies the maximum bandwidth that this user can configure (Low, Medium or High)

       • API enabled - Specifies if the ZoneMinder API is enabled for this user (needs to  be  on,  if  you  are
         using a mobile app such as zmNinja)

       Finally, you can specify a list of monitors this user is allowed to access using the ‘Restriced Monitors’
       list.  You  can select multiple monitors by shift+click(or command+click) on multiple monitors. If a user
       with ‘Monitors’ edit privileges is limited to specific monitors here they will not  be  able  to  add  or
       delete  monitors  but  only  change  the  details  of  those  they have access to. If a user has ‘System’
       privileges then the ‘Monitors Ids’ setting is ignored and has no effect.

       Here is an example of a restricted user, for example: [image]

       This user “home” is enabled, can view live streams and events, but only from “DoorBell” and “DeckCamera”.
       This user also cannot control PTZ.

   Camera Control
       ZoneMinder provides the  facility  to  control  cameras  from  the  web  interface  and  to  some  extent
       automatically.  Pan/Tilt/Zoom  (PTZ)  cameras have a wide range of capabilities and use a large number of
       different protocols making any kind of generic control solution potentially very  difficult.  To  address
       this ZoneMinder uses two key approaches to get around this problem.

       Definition of Capabilities
              For  each  camera  model you use, an entry in the camera capabilities table must be created. These
              indicate what functions the camera supports and ensure that  the  interface  presents  only  those
              capabilities  that  the camera supports. There are a very large number of capabilities that may be
              supported and it is very important that the entries in this table reflect the actual abilities  of
              the  camera.  A small number of example capabilities are included in ZoneMinder, these can be used
              ‘as is’ or modified.

       Control Scripts
              ZoneMinder itself does not generally provide the ability to send commands to  cameras  or  receive
              responses.  What  it does is mediate motion requests from the web interface into a standard set of
              commands which are passed to a script defined in  the  control  capability.  Example  scripts  are
              provided in ZoneMinder which support a number of serial or network protocols but it is likely that
              for  many  cameras new scripts will have to be created. These can be modelled on the example ones,
              or if control commands already exist from other applications, then the script can just  act  as  a
              ‘glue’ layer between ZoneMinder and those commands.

       It  should  be  emphasised  that the control and capability elements of ZoneMinder are not intended to be
       able to support every camera out of the box. Some degree of development is likely to be required for many
       cameras.

   Controlling Monitors
       If you have defined your system as having controllable monitors and you are looking at a monitor that  is
       configured  for  control, then clicking on the ‘Control’ link along the top of the window will change the
       short event listing area to a control area. The capabilities you have defined earlier  determine  exactly
       what  is  displayed  in  this  window.  Generally you will have a Pan/Tilt control area along with one or
       subsidiary areas such as zoom or focus control to the side. If you have preset support then these will be
       near the bottom of the window. The normal method of  controlling  the  monitor  is  by  clicking  on  the
       appropriate  graphics  which  then  send  a command via the control script to the camera itself. This may
       sometimes take a noticeable delay before the camera responds.

       It is usually the case that the control arrows are sensitive to where you click on them. If  you  have  a
       camera that allows different speeds to be used for panning or zooming etc then clicking near the point of
       the  arrow will invoke the faster speed whilst clicking near the base of the arrow will be slower. If you
       have defined continuous motion then ongoing activities can be stopped by clicking on the area between the
       arrows, which will either be a graphic in the case of pan/tilt controls or a word in the case of zoom and
       focus controls etc.

       Certain control capabilities such as mapped motion allow direct control by clicking on the  image  itself
       when  used in browsers which support streamed images directly. Used in this way you can just click on the
       area of the image that interests you and the camera will centre on that spot. You  can  also  use  direct
       image  control  for relative motion when the area of the image you click on defines the direction and the
       distance away from the centre of the image determines the speed.  As  it  is  not  always  very  easy  to
       estimate  direction  near  the centre of the image, the active area does not start until a short distance
       away from the centre, resulting in a ‘dead’ zone in the middle of the image.

   Control Flow
       Having a basic understanding of how camera control works in ZoneMinder will go a long  way  in  debugging
       issues  in  the  future.  It  is  important  to  note  that many of the ‘camera control’ scripts are user
       contributed and it is entirely possible that they break in a future version upgrade.

       • ZoneMinder relies on ‘control protocols’ for specific camera  models.  These  ‘control’  protocols  are
         nothing  but  perl  packages  located in /usr/share/perl5/ZoneMinder/Control/ (in Ubuntu distributions)
         that are invoked by ZoneMinder when you invoke a PTZ operation

       • When you associate a ‘protocol’ for PTZ for a camera, you are effectively letting ZoneMinder know where
         to locate the perl file that will eventually control the camera movement

       • Let’s for example, assume that you are configuring a  Foscam  9831W  camera  and  have  associated  the
         ‘9831w’  protocol to that camara. This basically means when you move the camera via ZoneMinder, it will
         pass on the movements to FI9831w.pm in /usr/share/perl5/ZoneMinder/Control/

       • ZoneMinder also maintains protocol configuration parameters in a table called Controls in the DB.  This
         table is used to store parameters like whether the camera supports continuous move, zoom etc.

       • The Controls table is used by ZoneMinder to build its PTZ web interface. For example, an FI9831W camera
         does  not  support  Zoom  –>  so  when you open the PTZ interface of ZoneMinder via the Web Console and
         navigate to the FI9831W camera, the Zoom option will not be shown. It knows not to  show  this  because
         the  Control  table  entry  for  FI9831W  specifies  it does not support Zoom. Note that you edit these
         parameters via Source->Control->Control Type->Edit in the web console

       • If you ever look at any of the control protocol files, you will notice it has functions like  moveRelUp
         or  moveConLeft  etc.  -> these are the functions that eventually get invoked to move the camera around
         and it is expected that contributors who implement missing camera profiles fill in these functions with
         the appropriate camera specific commands. This way, the core ZoneMinder code does  not  need  to  worry
         about camera specific commands. All it needs to know is the features of a camera and accordinfly invoke
         abstract  commands  in  the  protocol  perl file and it is the responsibility of the perl file for that
         camera to implement the specifics. So, if you are facing problems with PTZ not working, these  protocol
         files are what you should be debugging.

   Control Capabilities
       If  you  have a camera that supports PTZ controls and wish to use it with ZoneMinder then the first thing
       you need to do is ensure that it has an accurate entry in the capabilities table. To do this you need  to
       go  to  the  Control  tab of the Monitor configuration dialog and select ‘Edit’ where it is listed by the
       Control Type selection box. This will bring up a new window  which  lists,  with  a  brief  summary,  the
       existing  capabilities.  To edit an existing capability to modify select the Id or Name of the capability
       in question, or click on the Add button to add a new control capability. Either of these approaches  will
       create  a  new  window, in familiar style, with tabs along the top and forms fields below. In the case of
       the capabilities table there are a large number of settings and tabs, the  mean  and  use  of  these  are
       briefly explained below.

   Main Tab
       Name   This  is the name of the control capability, it will usually make sense to name capabilities after
              the camera model or protocol being used.

       Type   Whether the capability uses a local (usually serial) or network control protocol.

       Command
              This is the full path to a script or application that will map  the  standard  set  of  ZoneMinder
              control  commands  to  equivalent control protocol command. This may be one of the shipped example
              zmcontrol-*.pl scripts or something else entirely.

       Can Wake
              This is the first of the actual  capability  definitions.  Checking  this  box  indicates  that  a
              protocol command exists to wake up the camera from a sleeping state.

       Can Sleep
              The camera can be put to sleep.

       Can Reset
              The camera can be reset to a previously defined state.

   Move Tab
       Can Move
              The camera is able move, i.e. pan or tilt.

       Can Move Diagonally
              The camera can move diagonally. Some devices can move only vertically or horizontally at a time.

       Can Move Mapped
              The camera is able internally map a point on an image to a precise degree of motion to centre that
              point in the image.

       Can Move Absolute
              The camera can move to an absolute location.

       Can Move Relative
              The camera can more to a relative location, e.g. 7 point left or up.

       Can Move Continuous
              The  camera can move continuously in a defined direction until told to stop or the movement limits
              are reached, e.g. left.

   Pan Tab
       Can Pan
              The camera can pan, or move horizontally.

       Min/Max Pan Range
              If the camera supports absolute motion this is the minimum and maximum pan co-ordinates  that  may
              be specified, e.g. -100 to 100.

       Min/Man Pan Step
              If  the  camera  supports relative motion, this is the minimum and maximum amount of movement that
              can be specified.

       Has Pan Speed
              The camera supports specification of pan speeds.

       Min/Max Pan Speed
              The minimum and maximum pan speed supported.

       Has Turbo Pan
              The camera supports an additional turbo pan speed.

       Turbo Pan Speed
              The actual turbo pan speed.

   Tilt Tab
       Definition of Tilt capabilities, fields as for ‘Pan’ tab.

   Zoom Tab
       Can Zoom
              The camera can zoom.

       Can Zoom Absolute
              The camera can zoom to an absolute position.

       Can Zoom Relative
              The camera can zoom to a relative position.

       Can Zoom Continuous
              The camera can zoom continuously in or out until told to stop or the zoom limits are reached.

       Min/Max Zoom Range
              If the camera supports absolute zoom this is the minimum and maximum  zoom  amounts  that  may  be
              specified.

       Min/Man Zoom Step
              If  the  camera supports relative zoom, this is the minimum and maximum amount of zoom change that
              can be specified.

       Has Zoom Speed
              The camera supports specification of zoom speed.

       Min/Max Zoom Speed
              The minimum and maximum zoom speed supported.

   Focus Tab
       Definition of Focus capabilities, fields as for ‘Zoom’ tab, but with the following additional capability.

       Can Auto Focus
              The camera can focus automatically.

   White Tab
       Definition of White Balance capabilities, fields as for ‘Focus’ tab.

   Iris Tab
       Definition of Iris Control capabilities, fields as for ‘Focus’ tab.

   Presets Tab
       Has Presets
              The camera supports preset positions.

       Num Presets
              How many presets the camera supports. If the camera supports a huge  number  of  presets  then  it
              makes sense to specify a more reasonable number here, 20 or less is recommended.

       Has Home Preset
              The camera has a defined ‘home’ position, usually in the mid point of its range.

       Can Set Presets
              The camera supports setting preset locations via its control protocol.

   Control Scripts
       The  second  key  element  to controlling cameras with ZoneMinder is ensuring that an appropriate control
       script or application is present. A small number of sample scripts are included with ZoneMinder  and  can
       be used directly or as the basis for development. Control scripts are run atomically, that is to say that
       one  requested  action  from  the  web  interface  results  in  one  execution of the script and no state
       information is maintained. If your protocol requires state information to be preserved  then  you  should
       ensure  that  your  scripts  do  this  as ZoneMinder has no concept of the state of the camera in control
       terms.

       If you are writing a new control script then you need to ensure that  it  supports  the  parameters  that
       ZoneMinder  will  pass  to it. If you already have scripts or applications that control your cameras, the
       ZoneMinder control script will just act as glue to convert the parameters passed into a  form  that  your
       existing  application  understands.  If  you are writing a script to support a new protocol then you will
       need to convert the parameters passed into the script  to  equivalent  protocol  commands.  If  you  have
       carefully defined your control capabilities above then you should only expect commands that correspond to
       those capabilities.

       The standard set of parameters passed to control scripts is defined below,
          –device=<device>  :  This  is  the  control device from the monitor definition. Absent if no device is
          specified.  — address=<address> : This is the control address from the monitor definition.  This  will
          usually  be  a  hostname  or  ip  address  for network cameras or a simple numeric camera id for other
          cameras.
          –autostop=<timeout> : This indicates whether an automatic timeout should be applied to ‘’’stop’’’  the
          given  command. It will only be included for ‘’’continuous’’’ commands, as listed below, and will be a
          timeout in decimal seconds, probably fractional.  — command=<command> :  This  specifies  the  command
          that the script should execute. Valid commands are given below.
          –xcoord=<x>,  –ycoord=<y> : This specifies the x and/or y coordinates for commands which require them.
          These will normally be absolute or mapped commands.   —  width=<width>’’,  ‘’–height=<height>  :  This
          specifies  the width and height of the current image, for mapped motion commands where the coordinates
          values passed must have a context.
          –speed=<speed>  :  This  specifies  the  speed  that  the  command  should  use,  if  appropriate.   —
          panspeed=<speed>’’,  ‘’–tiltspeed=<speed>  :  This  indicates  the  specific  pan  and tilt speeds for
          diagonal movements which may allow a different motion rate for horizontal and vertical components.
          –step=<step> : This specifies the amount of motion  that  the  command  should  use,  if  appropriate.
          Normally used for relative commands only.  — panstep=<step>’’, ‘’–tiltstep=<step> : This indicates the
          specific  pan  and  tilt steps for diagonal movements which may allow a different amount of motion for
          horizontal and vertical components.
          –preset=<preset> : This specifies the particular preset that relevant commands should operate on.

       The command option listed above may take one of the following commands as a parameter.

       wake   Wake the camera.

       sleep  Send the camera to sleep.

       reset  Reset the camera.

       move_map
              Move mapped to a specified location on the image.

       move_pseudo_map
              As move_map above. Pseudo-mapped motion can be used  when  mapped  motion  is  not  supported  but
              relative motion is in which case mapped motion can be roughly approximated by careful calibration.

       move_abs_<direction>
              Move  to  a specified absolute location. The direction element gives a hint to the direction to go
              but can be omitted. If present it  will  be  one  of  “up”,  “down”,  “left”,  “right”,  “upleft”,
              “upright”, “downleft” or “downright”.

       move_rel_<direction>
              Move a specified amount in the given direction.

       move_con_<direction>
              Move continuously in the given direction until told to stop.

       move_stop
              Stop any motion which may be in progress.

       zoom_abs_<direction>
              Zoom to a specified absolute zoom position. The direction element gives a hint to the direction to
              go but can be omitted. If present it will be one of “tele” or “wide”.

       zoom_rel_<direction>
              Zoom a specified amount in the given direction.

       zoom_con_<direction>
              Zoom continuously in the given direction until told to stop.

       zoom_stop
              Stop any zooming which may be in progress.

       focus_auto
              Set focusing to be automatic.

       focus_man
              Set focusing to be manual.

       focus_abs_<direction>
              Focus  to a specified absolute focus position. The direction element gives a hint to the direction
              to go but can be omitted. If present it will be one of “near” or “far”.

       focus_rel_<direction>
              Focus a specified amount in the given direction.

       focus_con_<direction>
              Focus continuously in the given direction until told to stop.

       focus_stop
              Stop any focusing which may be in progress.

       white_<subcommand>
              As per the focus commands, except that direction may be “in” or “out”.

       iris_<subcommand>
              As per the focus commands, except that direction may be “open” or “close”.

       preset_set
              Set the given preset to the current location.

       preset_goto
              Move to the given preset.

       preset_home
              Move to the “home” preset.

   Mobile Devices
       Here are some options for using ZoneMinder on Mobile devices:

   Third party mobile clientszmNinja (source code, needs APIs to be installed to work)

                • Available in App Store, Play Store and for Desktops - website

   Using the existing web console
       • You can directly use the ZoneMinder interface by launching a browser and going to the ZoneMinder server
         just like you do on the Desktop

   Discontinued clients
       The following are a list of clients that do not work and have not been updated:

       • eyeZM

       • zmView

   Logging
       NOTE:
          Understanding how logging works in ZoneMinder is key to being able to  isolate/pinpoint  issues  well.
          Please refer to Options - Logging to read about how to customize logging.

       Most  components  of  ZoneMinder  can emit informational, warning, error and debug messages in a standard
       format. These messages can be logged in one or more  locations.  By  default  all  messages  produced  by
       scripts  are  logged  in  <script  name>.log  files  which  are  placed  in  the directory defined by the
       ZM_PATH_LOGS configuration variable. This is initially defined as /var/log/zm (on debian  based  systems)
       though    it   can   be   overridden   to   a   custom   path   (the   path   is   usually   defined   in
       /etc/zm/conf.d/01-system-paths.conf, but to override it, you should create  your  own  config  file,  not
       overwrite  this  file).  So for example, the zmdc.pl script will output messages to /var/log/zmdc.log, an
       example of these messages is:

          10/24/2019 08:01:19.291513 zmdc[6414].INF [ZMServer:408] [Starting pending process, zma -m 2]
          10/24/2019 08:01:19.296575 zmdc[6414].INF [ZMServer:408] ['zma -m 2' starting at 19/10/24 08:01:19, pid = 15740]
          10/24/2019 08:01:19.296927 zmdc[15740].INF [ZMServer:408] ['zma -m 2' started at 19/10/24 08:01:19]

       where the first part refers to the date and time of the entry, the  next  section  is  the  name  (or  an
       abbreviated  version) of the script, followed by the process id in square brackets, a severity code (INF,
       WAR, ERR or DBG) and the debug text. If you change the location of the log directory, ensure it refers to
       an existing directory which the web user has permissions to write  to.  Also  ensure  that  no  logs  are
       present  in  that  directory  the  web  user does not have permission to open. This can happen if you run
       commands or scripts as the root  user  for  testing  at  some  point.  If  this  occurs  then  subsequent
       non-privileged runs will fails due to being unable to open the log files.

       As  well  as  specific  script  logging above, information, warning and error messages are logged via the
       system syslog service. This is a standard component on Linux systems and allows logging of all  sorts  of
       messages  in  a  standard  way and using a standard format. On most systems, unless otherwise configured,
       messages produced by ZoneMinder will go  to  the  /var/log/messages  or  /var/log/syslog  file.  On  some
       distributions  they  may end up in another file, but usually still in /var/log. Messages in this file are
       similar to those in the script log files but differ slightly. For example the above event in  the  system
       log file looks like:

          Jan  3 13:46:00 shuttle52 zmpkg[11148]: INF [Command: start]

       where you can see that the date is formatted differently (and only to 1 second precision) and there is an
       additional  field  for the hostname (as syslog can operate over a network). As well as ZoneMinder entries
       in this file you may also see entries from various other system components. You should ensure  that  your
       syslogd daemon is running for syslog messages to be correctly handled.

   Customizing logging properly in ZoneMinder
   Other Notes
       A  number  of  users  have asked how to suppress or redirect ZoneMinder messages that are written to this
       file. This most often occurs due to not wanting other system messages to be overwhelmed and  obscured  by
       the  ZoneMinder  produced  ones  (which  can  be  quite  frequent by default). In order to control syslog
       messages you need to locate and edit the syslog.conf file on your system. This will often be in the  /etc
       directory.  This  file  allows configuration of syslog so that certain classes and categories of messages
       are routed to different files or highlighted to a console, or just ignored. Full details of the format of
       this file is outside the scope of this document (typing ‘man syslog.conf’ will give you more information)
       but the most often requested changes are easy to implement.

       The syslog service uses the concept  of  priorities  and  facilities  where  the  former  refers  to  the
       importance  of  the  message  and  the latter refers to that part of the system from which it originated.
       Standard priorities include ‘info’, ‘warning’, ‘err’ and ‘debug’ and  ZoneMinder  uses  these  priorities
       when  generating  the  corresponding  class  of  message.  Standard facilities include ‘mail’, ‘cron’ and
       ‘security’ etc but as well this, there are eight ‘local’ facilities that can be used by machine  specific
       message generators. ZoneMinder produces it’s messages via the ‘local1’ facility.

       So  armed  with  the  knowledge  of  the  priority and facility of a message, the syslog.conf file can be
       amended to handle messages however you like.

       So to ensure that all ZoneMinder messages go to a specific log file you can add the following  line  near
       the top of your syslog.conf file:

          # Save ZoneMinder messages to zm.log
          local1.*                        /var/log/zm/zm.log

       which   will   ensure   that   all  messages  produced  with  the  local1  facility  are  routed  to  fhe
       /var/log/zm/zm.log file. However this does not necessarily prevent them  also  going  into  the  standard
       system log. To do this you will need to modify the line that determines which messages are logged to this
       file. This may look something like:

          # Log anything (except mail) of level info or higher.
          # Don't log private authentication messages!
          *.info;mail.none;news.none;authpriv.none;cron.none      /var/log/messages

       by  default.  To  remove  ZoneMinder  messages altogether from this file you can modify this line to look
       like:

          *.info;local1.!*;mail.none;news.none;authpriv.none;cron.none     /var/log/messages

       which instructs syslog to ignore any messages from  the  local1  facility.  If  however  you  still  want
       warnings and errors to occur in the system log file, you could change it to:

          *.info;local1.!*;local1.warning;mail.none;news.none;authpriv.none;cron.none     /var/log/messages

       which  follows the ignore instruction with a further one to indicate that any messages with a facility of
       local1 and a priority of warning or above should still go into the file.

       These recipes are just examples of how you can modify the logging to suit your system, there are a lot of
       other modifications you could make. If you do make any changes  to  syslog.conf  you  should  ensure  you
       restart  the  syslogd  process  or  send  it  a  HUP  signal to force it to reread its configuration file
       otherwise your changes will be ignored.

       The discussion of logging above began by describing how scripts produce error and debug messages. The way
       that the binaries work is slightly different. Binaries generate information, warning and  error  messages
       using  syslog  in exactly the same way as scripts and these messages will be handled identically. However
       debug output is somewhat different. For the scripts, if you want to enable debug you will  need  to  edit
       the script file itself and change the DBG_LEVEL constant to have a value of 1. This will then cause debug
       messages  to  be  written to the <script>.log file as well as the more important messages. Debug messages
       however are not routed via syslog. Scripts currently only have one level of debug so this will cause  any
       and  all  debug  messages  to be generated. Binaries work slightly differently and while you can edit the
       call to zmDbgInit that is present in every binary’s ‘main’ function to update the initial  value  of  the
       debug level, there are easier ways.

       The  simplest  way  of  collecting  debug output is to click on the Options link from the main ZoneMinder
       console view and then go to the Debug tab. There you will find a number of debug options. The first thing
       you should do is ensure that the ZM_EXTRA_DEBUG setting is switched on. This enables debug generally. The
       next thing you need to do is select the debug target, level  and  destination  file  using  the  relevant
       options.  Click  on  the  ‘?’  by each option for more information about valid settings. You will need to
       restart ZoneMinder as a whole or at least the component in question for logging to take effect. When  you
       have  finished  debugging  you should ensure you switch debug off by unchecking the ZM_EXTRA_DEBUG option
       and restarting ZoneMinder. You can leave the other options as you like as they are ignored if the  master
       debug option is off.

       Once  you  have  debug  being  logged  you  can  modify the level by sending USR1 and USR2 signals to the
       relevant binary (or binaries) to increase or decrease the level of debug  being  emitted  with  immediate
       effect. This modification will not persist if the binary gets restarted however.

       If  you  wish to run a binary directly from the command line to test specific functionality or scenarios,
       you can set the ZM_DBG_LEVEL and ZM_DBG_LOG environment variables to set the level and log  file  of  the
       debug  you  wish  to  see, and the ZM_DBG_PRINT environment variable to 1 to output the debug directly to
       your terminal.

       All ZoneMinder logs can now be rotated by logrotate. A sample logrotate config file is shown below:

          /var/log/zm/*.log {
              missingok
              notifempty
              sharedscripts
              postrotate
                  /usr/local/bin/zmpkg.pl logrot 2> /dev/null > /dev/null || true
              endscript
          }

   Configuration Files
       This section describes configuration files that ZoneMinder uses beyond the various Web UI options.

   System Path Configurations
       At  one  point  of  time,  ZoneMinder  stored  various  system  path  configurations  under  the  Web  UI
       (Options->Paths).  This  was  removed  a  few  versions  ago and now resides in a configuration file. The
       motivation for this change can be read in this discussion.

       Typically, path configurations now reside in /etc/zm.

       Here is an example of the file hierarchy:

          /etc/zm
          ├── conf.d
          │   ├── 01-system-paths.conf
          │   ├── 02-multiserver.conf
          |   ├── 03-custom.conf #optional
          │   └── README
          ├── objectconfig.ini # optional
          ├── zm.conf
          └── zmeventnotification.ini #optional

       The roles of the files are as follows:

       • zm.conf contains various base configuration entries. You should  not  edit  this  file  as  it  may  be
         overwritten on an upgrade.

       • zmeventnotification.ini is only present if you have installed the ZoneMinder Event Notification Server.

       • objectconfig.ini  is  only  present  if  you  have  installed  the machine learning hooks for the Event
         Notification Server.

       • conf.d contains additional configuration items as follows:

         • 01-system-paths.conf contains all the paths that were once part of Options->Paths in the Web UI.  You
           should not edit this file as it may be overwritten on an upgrade

         • 02-multiserver.conf  file  consists  of  custom  variables  if  you  are  deploying  ZoneMinder  in a
           multi-server configuration (see /installationguide/multiserver)

         • 03-custom.conf is an  custom config file that I created to override specific variables  in  the  path
           files.  This  is the recommended way to customize entries. Anything that you want to change should be
           in a new file inside conf.d. Note that ZoneMinder will sort all  the  files  alphabetically  and  run
           their  contents  in  ascending  order. So it doesn’t really matter what you name them, as long as you
           make sure your changes are not overwritten by another file in the sorting sequence. It  is  therefore
           good  practice  to  prefix  your  file  names by nn- where nn is a monotonically increasing numerical
           sequence 01- 02- 03- and so forth, so you know the order they will be processed.

   Timezone Configuration
       Earlier versions of ZoneMinder relied on php.ini to set Date/Time Zone. This is no longer the  case.  You
       can (and must) set the Timezone via the Web UI, starting ZoneMinder version 1.34. See here.

   Database Specific Configuration
   Todo
       do we really need to have this section? Not sure if its generic and not specific to ZM

       While   the   ZoneMinder   specific  database  config  entries  reside  in  /etc/zm/zm.conf  and  related
       customizations discussed above, general database configuration items can be  tweaked  in  /etc/mysql  (or
       whichever path your DB server is installed)

API

       This document will provide an overview of ZoneMinder’s API.

   Overview
       In  an effort to further ‘open up’ ZoneMinder, an API was needed.  This will allow quick integration with
       and development of ZoneMinder.

       The API is built in CakePHP and lives under the /api  directory.   It  provides  a  RESTful  service  and
       supports  CRUD  (create,  retrieve,  update,  delete)  functions  for Monitors, Events, Frames, Zones and
       Config.

   API Wrappers
       • pyzm is a python wrapper for the ZoneMinder APIs. It supports both the legacy and new token based  API,
         as  well  as  ZM logs/ZM shared memory support. See its project site for more details. Documentation is
         here.

   API evolution
       The ZoneMinder API has evolved over time. Broadly speaking the iterations were as follows:

       • Prior to version 1.29, there really was no API layer. Users had to use  the  same  URLs  that  the  web
         console used to ‘mimic’ operations, or use an XML skin

       • Starting  version 1.29, a v1.0 CakePHP based API was released which continues to evolve over time. From
         a security perspective, it still tied into ZM auth and required client  cookies  for  many  operations.
         Primarily, two authentication modes were offered:

         • You use cookies to maintain session state (ZM_SESS_ID)

         • You use an authentication hash to validate yourself, which included encoding personal information and
           time stamps which at times caused timing validation issues, especially for mobile consumers

       • Starting version 1.34, ZoneMinder has introduced a new “token” based system which is based JWT. We have
         given  it a ‘2.0’ version ID. These tokens don’t encode any personal data and can be statelessly passed
         around per request. It introduces concepts like access tokens, refresh tokens and per  user  level  API
         revocation to manage security better. The internal components of ZoneMinder all support this new scheme
         now  and  if  you  are  using the APIs we strongly recommend you migrate to 1.34 and use this new token
         system (as a side note, 1.34 also moves from MYSQL PASSWORD to Bcrypt for passwords, which  is  also  a
         good reason why you should migate).

       • Note that as of 1.34, both versions of API access will work (tokens and the older auth hash mechanism),
         however we no longer use sessions by default.  You will have to add a stateful=1 query parameter during
         login  to  tell  ZM  to  set  a  COOKIE and store the required info in the session. This option is only
         available if OPT_USE_LEGACY_API_AUTH is set to ON.

       NOTE:
          For the rest of the document, we will specifically highlight v2.0 only features. If you  don’t  see  a
          special mention, assume it applies for both API versions.

   Enabling API
       ZoneMinder  comes  with APIs enabled. To check if APIs are enabled, visit Options->System. If OPT_USE_API
       is enabled, your APIs are active.  For v2.0 APIs, you have an additional option right below it:

          • OPT_USE_LEGACY_API_AUTH which is enabled by default. When enabled,  the  login.json  API  (discussed
            later) will return both the old style (auth=) and new style (token=) credentials. The reason this is
            enabled  by  default  is  because  any  existing  apps that use the API would break if they were not
            updated to use v2.0. (Note that zmNinja 1.3.057 and beyond will support tokens)

   Enabling secret key
       • It is important that you create a “Secret Key”. This needs to be a set of  hard  to  guess  characters,
         that  only  you know. ZoneMinder does not create a key for you. It is your responsibility to create it.
         If you haven’t created  one  already,  please  do  so  by  going  to  Options->Systems  and  populating
         AUTH_HASH_SECRET. Don’t forget to save.

       • If  you  plan on using V2.0 token based security, it is mandatory to populate this secret key, as it is
         used to sign the token. If you don’t, token  authentication  will  fail.  V1.0  did  not  mandate  this
         requirement.

   Getting an API key
       To get an API key:

          curl -XPOST -d "user=yourusername&pass=yourpassword" https://yourserver/zm/api/host/login.json

       If you want to use a stateful connection, so you don’t have to pass auth credentials with each query, you
       can use the following:

          curl -XPOST -c cookies.txt -d "user=yourusername&pass=yourpassword&stateful=1" https://yourserver/zm/api/host/login.json

       This returns a payload like this for API v1.0:

          {
              "credentials": "auth=05f3a50e8f7<deleted>063",
              "append_password": 0,
              "version": "1.33.9",
              "apiversion": "1.0"
          }

       Or for API 2.0:

          {
              "access_token": "eyJ0eXAiOiJK<deleted>HE",
              "access_token_expires": 3600,
              "refresh_token": "eyJ0eXAiOi<deleted>mPs",
              "refresh_token_expires": 86400,
              "credentials": "auth=05f3a50e8f7<deleted>063",  # only if OPT_USE_LEGACY_API_AUTH is enabled
              "append_password": 0, # only if OPT_USE_LEGACY_API_AUTH is enabled
              "version": "1.33.9",
              "apiversion": "2.0"
          }

   Using these keys with subsequent requests
       Once you have the keys (a.k.a credentials (v1.0, v2.0) or token (v2.0)) you should now supply that key to
       subsequent API calls like this:

          # v1.0 or 2.0 based API access (will only work if AUTH_HASH_LOGINS is enabled

          # RECOMMENDED: v2.0 token based
            curl -XGET  https://yourserver/zm/api/monitors.json?token=<access_token>

          # or, for legacy mode:

          curl -XGET  https://yourserver/zm/api/monitors.json?auth=<hex digits from 'credentials'>

          # or, if you specified -c cookies.txt in the original login request

          curl -b cookies.txt -XGET   https://yourserver/zm/api/monitors.json

       NOTE:
          If  you  are  using an HTTP GET request, the token/auth needs to be passed as a query parameter in the
          URL. If you are using an HTTP POST (like when you use the API to modify a monitor, for  example),  you
          can  choose to pass the token as a data payload instead. The API layer discards data payloads for HTTP
          GET. Finally, If you don’t pass keys, you could  also  use  cookies  (not  recommended  as  a  general
          approach).

   Key lifetime (v1.0)
       If  you are using the old credentials mechanism present in v1.0, then the credentials will time out based
       on PHP session timeout (if you are using cookies), or the value of AUTH_HASH_TTL (if you are using  auth=
       and  have  enabled AUTH_HASH_LOGINS) which defaults to 2 hours.  Note that there is no way to look at the
       hash and decipher how much time is remaining. So it is your responsibility to record the time you got the
       hash and assume it was generated at the time you got it and re-login before that time expires.

   Key lifetime (v2.0)
       In version 2.0, it is easy to know when a key will expire before you use it. You can find that  out  from
       the  access_token_expires  and  refresh_token_expires  values  (in  seconds) after you decode the JWT key
       (there are JWT decode libraries for every language you want). You should  refresh  the  keys  before  the
       timeout occurs, or you will not be able to use the APIs.

   Understanding access/refresh tokens (v2.0)
       If you are using V2.0, then you need to know how to use these tokens effectively:

       • Access tokens are short lived. ZoneMinder issues access tokens that live for 3600 seconds (1 hour).

       • Access tokens should be used for all subsequent API accesses.

       • Refresh tokens should ONLY be used to generate new access tokens. For example, if an access token lives
         for  1 hour, before the hour completes, invoke the login.json API above with the refresh token to get a
         new access token. ZoneMinder issues refresh tokens that live for 24 hours.

       • To generate a new refresh token before 24 hours are up, you will need  to  pass  your  user  login  and
         password to login.json

       To Summarize:

       • Pass your username and password to login.json only once in 24 hours to renew your tokens

       • Pass  your  “refresh  token”  to  login.json  once  in two hours (or whatever you have set the value of
         AUTH_HASH_TTL to) to renew your access token

       • Use your access token for all API invocations.

       In fact, V2.0 will reject your request (if it is not to login.json) if it  comes  with  a  refresh  token
       instead of an access token to discourage usage of this token when it should not be used.

       This  minimizes  the  amount  of sensitive data that is sent over the wire and the lifetime durations are
       made so that if they get compromised, you can regenerate or invalidate them (more on this later)

   Understanding key security
       • Version 1.0 uses an MD5 hash to generate the credentials. The hash is computed over your secret key (if
         available), username, password and some time parameters (along with remote IP if enabled). This is  not
         a  secure/recommended  hashing mechanism. If your auth hash is compromised, an attacker will be able to
         use your hash till it expires. To avoid this, you could disable the user  in  ZoneMinder.  Furthermore,
         enabling  remote IP (AUTH_HASH_REMOTE_IP) requires that you issue future requests from the same IP that
         generated the tokens. While this may be considered an additional layer for  security,  this  can  cause
         issues with mobile devices.

       • Version 2.0 uses a different approach. The hash is a simple base64 encoded form of “claims”, but signed
         with your secret key. Consider for example, the following access key:

          eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJpc3MiOiJab25lTWluZGVyIiwiaWF0IjoxNTU3OTQwNzUyLCJleHAiOjE1NTc5NDQzNTIsInVzZXIiOiJhZG1pbiIsInR5cGUiOiJhY2Nlc3MifQ.-5VOcpw3cFHiSTN5zfGDSrrPyVya1M8_2Anh5u6eNlI

       If you were to use any JWT token verifier it can easily decode that token and will show:

          {
          "iss": "ZoneMinder",
          "iat": 1557940752,
          "exp": 1557944352,
          "user": "admin",
          "type": "access"
          }
          Invalid Signature

       Don’t  be  surprised. JWT tokens, by default, are not meant to be encrypted. It is just an assertion of a
       claim. It states that the issuer of this  token  was  ZoneMinder,  It  was  issued  at  (iat)  Wednesday,
       2019-05-15 17:19:12 UTC and will expire on (exp) Wednesday, 2019-05-15 18:19:12 UTC. This token claims to
       be  owned  by  an  admin  and  is  an  access token. If your token were to be stolen, this information is
       available to the person who stole it. Note that there are no sensitive details  like  passwords  in  this
       claim.

       However,  that person will not have your secret key as part of this token and therefore, will NOT be able
       to create a new JWT token to get, say, a refresh token. They will however, be able  to  use  your  access
       token to access resources just like the auth hash above, till the access token expires (2 hrs). To revoke
       this token, you don’t need to disable the user. Go to Options->API and tap on “Revoke All Access Tokens”.
       This will invalidate the token immediately (this option will invalidate all tokens for all users, and new
       ones will need to be generated).

       Over time, we will provide you with more fine grained access to these options.

       Summarizing good practices:

       • Use HTTPS, not HTTP

       • If  possible, use free services like LetsEncrypt instead of self-signed certificates (sometimes this is
         not possible)

       • Keep your tokens as private as possible, and use them as recommended above

       • If you believe your tokens  are  compromised,  revoke  them,  but  also  check  if  your  attacker  has
         compromised  more  than you think (example, they may also have your username/password or access to your
         system via other exploits, in which case they can regenerate as many tokens/credentials as they want).

       NOTE:
          Subsequent sections don’t explicitly callout the key addition to APIs. We assume that you will  append
          the correct keys as per our explanation above.

   Examples
       (In all examples, replace ‘server’ with IP or hostname & port where ZoneMinder is running)

   API Version
       To retrieve the API version:

          curl http://server/zm/api/host/getVersion.json

   Return a list of all monitors
          curl http://server/zm/api/monitors.json

       It  is  worthwhile  to  note  that  starting ZM 1.32.3 and beyond, this API also returns a Monitor_Status
       object per monitor. It looks like this:

          "Monitor_Status": {
                  "MonitorId": "2",
                  "Status": "Connected",
                  "CaptureFPS": "1.67",
                  "AnalysisFPS": "1.67",
                  "CaptureBandwidth": "52095"
              }

       If you don’t see this in your API, you are running an  older  version  of  ZM.  This  gives  you  a  very
       convenient way to check monitor status without calling the daemonCheck API described later.

   Retrieve monitor 1
          curl http://server/zm/api/monitors/1.json

   Change State of Monitor 1
       This API changes monitor 1 to Modect and Enabled

          curl -XPOST http://server/zm/api/monitors/1.json -d "Monitor[Function]=Modect&Monitor[Enabled]=1"

   Get Daemon Status of Monitor 1
          curl http://server/zm/api/monitors/daemonStatus/id:1/daemon:zmc.json

   Add a monitor
       This command will add a new http monitor.

          curl -XPOST http://server/zm/api/monitors.json -d "Monitor[Name]=Cliff-Burton\
          &Monitor[Function]=Modect\
          &Monitor[Protocol]=http\
          &Monitor[Method]=simple\
          &Monitor[Host]=usr:pass@192.168.11.20\
          &Monitor[Port]=80\
          &Monitor[Path]=/mjpg/video.mjpg\
          &Monitor[Width]=704\
          &Monitor[Height]=480\
          &Monitor[Colours]=4"

   Edit monitor 1
       This command will change the ‘Name’ field of Monitor 1 to ‘test1’

          curl -XPUT http://server/zm/api/monitors/1.json -d "Monitor[Name]=test1"

   Delete monitor 1
       This command will delete Monitor 1, but will _not_ delete any Events which depend on it.

          curl -XDELETE http://server/zm/api/monitors/1.json

   Arm/Disarm monitors
       This command will force an alarm on Monitor 1:

          curl http://server/zm/api/monitors/alarm/id:1/command:on.json

       This command will disable the  alarm on Monitor 1:

          curl http://server/zm/api/monitors/alarm/id:1/command:off.json

       This command will report the status of the alarm  Monitor 1:

          curl http://server/zm/api/monitors/alarm/id:1/command:status.json

   Return a list of all events
          http://server/zm/api/events.json

       Note  that  events  list  can be quite large and this API (as with all other APIs in ZM) uses pagination.
       Each page returns a specific set of entries. By default this is 25 and ties into  WEB_EVENTS_PER_PAGE  in
       the ZM options menu.

       So  the  logic  to  iterate through all events should be something like this (pseudocode): (unfortunately
       there is no way to get pageCount without getting the first page)

          data = http://server/zm/api/events.json?page=1 # this returns the first page
          # The json object returned now has a property called data.pagination.pageCount
          count = data.pagination.pageCount;
          for (i=1, i<count, i++)
          {
            data = http://server/zm/api/events.json?page=i;
             doStuff(data);
          }

   Retrieve event Id 1000
          curl -XGET http://server/zm/api/events/1000.json

   Edit event 1
       This command will change the ‘Name’ field of Event 1 to ‘Seek and Destroy’

          curl -XPUT http://server/zm/api/events/1.json -d "Event[Name]=Seek and Destroy"

   Delete event 1
       This command will delete Event 1, and any Frames which depend on it.

          curl -XDELETE http://server/zm/api/events/1.json

   Return a list of events for a specific monitor Id =5
          curl -XGET http://server/zm/api/events/index/MonitorId:5.json

       Note that the same pagination logic applies if the list is too long

   Return a list of events for a specific monitor within a specific date/time range
          http://server/zm/api/events/index/MonitorId:5/StartTime >=:2015-05-15 18:43:56/EndTime <=:2015-05-16 18:43:56.json

       To try this in CuRL, you need to URL escape the spaces like so:

          curl -XGET  "http://server/zm/api/events/index/MonitorId:5/StartTime%20>=:2015-05-15%2018:43:56/EndTime%20<=:2015-05-16%2018:43:56.json"

   Return a list of events for all monitors within a specified date/time range
          curl -XGET "http://server/zm/api/events/index/StartTime%20>=:2015-05-15%2018:43:56/EndTime%20<=:208:43:56.json"

   Return event count based on times and conditions
       The API also supports a handy mechanism to return a count of events for a period of time.

       This returns number of events per monitor that were recorded in the last one hour

          curl "http://server/zm/api/events/consoleEvents/1%20hour.json"

       This returns number of events per monitor that were recorded in the last day where there were atleast  10
       frames that were alarms”

          curl "http://server/zm/api/events/consoleEvents/1%20day.json/AlarmFrames >=: 10.json"

   Return sorted events
       This returns a list of events within a time range and also sorts it by descending order

          curl -XGET "http://server/zm/api/events/index/StartTime%20>=:2015-05-15%2018:43:56/EndTime%20<=:208:43:56.json?sort=StartTime&direction=desc"

   Configuration Apis
       The APIs allow you to access all the configuration parameters of ZM that you typically set inside the web
       console.  This returns the full list of configuration parameters:

          curl -XGET http://server/zm/api/configs.json

       Each  configuration  parameter  has  an Id, Name, Value and other fields. Chances are you are likely only
       going to focus on these 3.

       The edit function of the Configs API is a little quirky at the moment. Its format deviates from the usual
       edit flow  of  other  APIs.  This  will  be  fixed,  eventually.  For  now,  to  change  the  “Value”  of
       ZM_X10_HOUSE_CODE from A to B:

          curl -XPUT http://server/zm/api/configs/edit/ZM_X10_HOUSE_CODE.json  -d "Config[Value]=B"

       To validate changes have been made:

          curl -XGET http://server/zm/api/configs/view/ZM_X10_HOUSE_CODE.json

   Run State Apis
       ZM API can be used to start/stop/restart/list states of  ZM as well Examples:

          curl -XGET  http://server/zm/api/states.json # returns list of run states
          curl -XPOST  http://server/zm/api/states/change/restart.json #restarts ZM
          curl -XPOST  http://server/zm/api/states/change/stop.json #Stops ZM
          curl -XPOST  http://server/zm/api/states/change/start.json #Starts ZM

   Create a Zone
          curl -XPOST http://server/zm/api/zones.json -d "Zone[Name]=Jason-Newsted\
          &Zone[MonitorId]=3\
          &Zone[Type]=Active\
          &Zone[Units]=Percent\
          &Zone[NumCoords]=4\
          &Zone[Coords]=0,0 639,0 639,479 0,479\
          &Zone[Area]=307200\
          &Zone[AlarmRGB]=16711680\
          &Zone[CheckMethod]=Blobs\
          &Zone[MinPixelThreshold]=25\
          &Zone[MaxPixelThreshold]=\
          &Zone[MinAlarmPixels]=9216\
          &Zone[MaxAlarmPixels]=\
          &Zone[FilterX]=3\
          &Zone[FilterY]=3\
          &Zone[MinFilterPixels]=9216\
          &Zone[MaxFilterPixels]=230400\
          &Zone[MinBlobPixels]=6144\
          &Zone[MaxBlobPixels]=\
          &Zone[MinBlobs]=1\
          &Zone[MaxBlobs]=\
          &Zone[OverloadFrames]=0"

   PTZ Control Meta-Data APIs
       PTZ controls associated with a monitor are stored in the Controls table and not the Monitors table inside
       ZM.  What  that  means is when you get the details of a Monitor, you will only know if it is controllable
       (isControllable:true) and the control ID.  To be able to retrieve PTZ information related to that Control
       ID, you need to use the controls API

       Note that these APIs only retrieve control data related to PTZ. They don’t actually move the camera.  See
       the “PTZ on live streams” section to move the camera.

       This returns all the control definitions:

          curl http://server/zm/api/controls.json

       This returns control definitions for a specific control ID=5

          curl http://server/zm/api/controls/5.json

   Host APIs
       ZM  APIs  have  various  APIs  that  help  you in determining host (aka ZM) daemon status, load etc. Some
       examples:

          curl -XGET  http://server/zm/api/host/getLoad.json # returns current load of ZM

          # Note that ZM 1.32.3 onwards has the same information in Monitors.json which is more reliable and works for multi-server too.
          curl -XGET  http://server/zm/api/host/daemonCheck.json # 1 = ZM running 0=not running

          # The API below uses "du" to calculate disk space. We no longer recommend you use it if you have many events. Use the Storage APIs instead, described later
          curl -XGET  http://server/zm/api/host/getDiskPercent.json # returns in GB (not percentage), disk usage per monitor (that is,space taken to store various event related information,images etc. per monitor)

   Storage and Server APIs
       ZoneMinder  introduced  many  new  options  that  allowed  you  to   configure   multiserver/multistorage
       configurations. While a part of this was available in previous versions, a lot of rework was done as part
       of  ZM  1.31  and  1.32. As part of that work, a lot of new and useful APIs were added. Some of these are
       part of ZM 1.32 and others will be part of ZM 1.32.3 (of course, if you build from master, you can access
       them right away, or wait till a stable release is out.

       This returns storage data for my single server install. If you are using multi-storage, you’ll  see  many
       such “Storage” entries, one for each storage defined:

          curl http://server/zm/api/storage.json

       Returns:

          {
              "storage": [
                  {
                      "Storage": {
                          "Id": "0",
                          "Path": "\/var\/cache\/zoneminder\/events",
                          "Name": "Default",
                          "Type": "local",
                          "Url": null,
                          "DiskSpace": "364705447651",
                          "Scheme": "Medium",
                          "ServerId": null,
                          "DoDelete": true
                      }
                   }
                 ]
          }

       “DiskSpace”  is  the  disk  used  in  bytes.  While  this  doesn’t  return  disk  space  data  as rich as
       /host/getDiskPercent, it is much more efficient.

       Similarly,

          curl http://server/zm/api/servers.json

       Returns:

          {
                "servers": [
                    {
                        "Server": {
                            "Id": "1",
                            "Name": "server1",
                            "Hostname": "server1.mydomain.com",
                            "State_Id": null,
                            "Status": "Running",
                            "CpuLoad": "0.9",
                            "TotalMem": "6186237952",
                            "FreeMem": "156102656",
                            "TotalSwap": "536866816",
                            "FreeSwap": "525697024",
                            "zmstats": false,
                            "zmaudit": false,
                            "zmtrigger": false
                        }
                    }
                ]
            }

       This only works if you have a multiserver setup in place. If you don’t it will return an empty array.

   Other APIs
       This is not a complete list. ZM supports more parameters/APIs. A good way to dive in is to  look  at  the
       API code directly.

   Streaming Interface
       Developers  working  on  their  application  often  ask  if there is an “API” to receive live streams, or
       recorded event streams.  It is possible to stream both live and recorded streams. This isn’t strictly  an
       “API”  per-se  (that  is, it is not integrated into the Cake PHP based API layer discussed here) and also
       why we’ve used the term “Interface” instead of an “API”.

   Live Streams
       What you need to know is that if you want to display “live streams”, ZoneMinder sends you streaming  JPEG
       images (MJPEG) which can easily be rendered in a browser using an img src tag.

       For example:

          <img src="https://yourserver/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?scale=50&width=640p&height=480px&mode=jpeg&maxfps=5&buffer=1000&&monitor=1&token=eW<deleted>03&connkey=36139" />

          # or

          <img src="https://yourserver/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?scale=50&width=640p&height=480px&mode=jpeg&maxfps=5&buffer=1000&&monitor=1&auth=b5<deleted>03&connkey=36139" />

       will display a live feed from monitor id 1, scaled down by 50% in quality and resized to 640x480px.

       • This assumes /zm/cgi-bin is your CGI_BIN path. Change it to what is correct in your system

       • The  “auth”  token you see above is required if you use ZoneMinder authentication. To understand how to
         get the auth token, please read the “Login, Logout & API security” section below.

       • The “connkey” parameter is essentially a random number which uniquely identifies a stream. If you don’t
         specify a connkey, ZM will generate its own. It is recommended to generate a connkey  because  you  can
         then use it to “control” the stream (pause/resume etc.)

       • Instead  of  dealing  with  the  “auth”  token,  you  can  also  use &user=username&pass=password where
         “username” and “password” are your ZoneMinder username and password respectively. Note that this is not
         recommended because you are transmitting them in a URL and even if you use HTTPS, they may show  up  in
         web server logs.

   PTZ on live streams
       PTZ  commands  are  pretty  cryptic  in ZoneMinder. This is not meant to be an exhaustive guide, but just
       something to whet your appetite:

       Lets assume you have a monitor, with ID=6. Let’s further assume you want to pan it left.

       You’d need to send a: POST command to https://yourserver/zm/index.php with the following data payload  in
       the command (NOT in the URL)

       view=request&request=control&id=6&control=moveConLeft&xge=30&yge=30

       Obviously, if you are using authentication, you need to be logged in for this to work.

       Like  I  said,  at this stage, this is only meant to get you started. Explore the ZoneMinder code and use
       “Inspect source” as you use PTZ commands in the ZoneMinder source code.  control_functions.php is a great
       place to start.

   Pre-recorded (past event) streams
       Similar to live playback, if you have chosen to store events in JPEG mode, you can play it back using:

          <img src="https://yourserver/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=jpeg&frame=1&replay=none&source=event&event=293820&connkey=77493&token=ew<deleted>" />

          # or

          <img src="https://yourserver/zm/cgi-bin/nph-zms?mode=jpeg&frame=1&replay=none&source=event&event=293820&connkey=77493&auth=b5<deleted>" />

       • This assumes /zm/cgi-bin is your CGI_BIN path. Change it to what is correct in your system

       • This will playback event 293820, starting from frame 1 as an MJPEG stream

       • Like before, you can add more parameters like scale etc.

       • auth  and  connkey  have  the  same  meaning  as  before,  and   yes,   you   can   replace   auth   by
         &user=usename&pass=password as before and the same security concerns cited above apply.

       If  instead,  you  have chosen to use the MP4 (Video) storage mode for events, you can directly play back
       the saved video file:

          <video src="https://yourserver/zm/index.php?view=view_video&eid=294690&token=eW<deleted>" type="video/mp4"></video>

          # or

          <video src="https://yourserver/zm/index.php?view=view_video&eid=294690&auth=33<deleted>" type="video/mp4"></video>

       This above will play back the video recording for event 294690

   What other parameters are supported?
       The best way to answer this question is to play with ZoneMinder console. Open a browser, play  back  live
       or recorded feed, and do an “Inspect Source” to see what parameters are generated. Change and observe.

   Further Reading
       As  described  earlier,  treat  this  document as an “introduction” to the important parts of the API and
       streaming interfaces.  There are several details that haven’t yet been documented. Till  they  are,  here
       are some resources:

       • zmNinja, the open source mobile app for ZoneMinder is 100% based on ZM APIs. Explore its source code to
         see how things work.

       • Launch up ZM console in a browser, and do an “Inspect source”. See how images are being rendered. Go to
         the  networks  tab  of  the  inspect source console and look at network requests that are made when you
         pause/play/forward streams.

       • If you still can’t find an answer, post your question in the forums (not the github repo).

FAQ

TODO

       needs to be reviewed - some entries may be old/invalid. I’ve done one round, but icOn needs to review.

       This is the FAQ page. Feel free to contribute any FAQs that you think are missing.

       NOTE:
          It is always a good idea to refer to the ZoneMinder forums for tips and tricks. While we try and  make
          sure  this  FAQ is pruned/adjusted to align with the latest stable release, some of the entries may no
          longer be accurate (or there may be better suggestions in the forums).

   How can I stop ZoneMinder filling up my disk?
       Recent versions of ZoneMinder come with a filter you can use for  this  purpose  already  included.   The
       filter  is  called PurgeWhenFull and to find it, click on the word Filters in the header.  Note that this
       filter is automatically enabled if you do  a  fresh  install  of  ZoneMinder  including  creating  a  new
       database.  If  you  already  have  an  existing database and are upgrading ZoneMinder, it will retain the
       settings of the filter (which in earlier releases was disabled by default). So you may want to  check  if
       PurgeWhenFull is enabled and if not, enable it.

       To enable it, go to Web Console, click on the word Filters in the UI header.

       In  the  filter window there is a drop down select box labeled ‘Use Filter’, that lets you select a saved
       filter. Select ‘PurgeWhenFull’ and it will load that filter.

       Make any modifications you might want, such as the percentage full you want it to kick in,  or  how  many
       events  to  delete  at  a time (it will repeat the filter as many times as needed to clear the space, but
       will only delete this many events each time to get there).

       Ensure that the Run filter in background checkbox  is  checked.   Ensure  that  the  Delete  all  matches
       checkbox is checked.

       Then  click  on  ‘Save’.  The filter will immediately begin executing in the background to keep your disk
       within those limits.

       Please note that that this filter will only affect the default storage location.  If you have added other
       storage areas, you must create a PurgeWhenFull filter for each one, and specify the Storage Area  as  one
       of  the  parameters  in  the filter. You can duplicate the existing PurgeWhenFull filter by using Save As
       instead of Save.

       Check the zmfilter.log file to make sure it is running as sometimes missing perl  modules  mean  that  it
       never runs but people don’t always realize.

       Purge  By  Age  To  delete  events that are older than 7 days, create a new filter with “End Date” set to
       “less than” and a value of “-7 days”, sort by “date/time” in “asc”ending order, then enable the  checkbox
       “delete all matches”. You can also use a value of week or week and days: “-2 week”  or “-2 week 4 day”

       Save  with  ‘Run  Filter  In  Background’  enabled  to have it run automatically.  Optional skip archived
       events:  click on the plus sign next to -7 days to add another condition.  “and” “archive  status”  equal
       to “unarchived only”.

       Optional  slow  delete:   limit  the  number of results to a number, say 10 in the filter.  If you have a
       large backlog of events that would be deleted, this can hard  spike  the  CPU  usage  for  a  long  time.
       Limiting the number of results to only the first three each time the filter is run spreads out the delete
       processes over time, dramatically lessening the CPU load.

       WARNING:
          We no longer recommend use enable OPT_FAST_DELETE or RUN_AUDIT anymore, unless you are using an old or
          low  powered  system  to  run  Zoneminder.  Please  consider  the  remaining tips in this answer to be
          ‘generally deprecated, use only if you must’.

       There are two methods for ZM to remove files when they are deleted that can be found in Options under the
       System tab ZM_OPT_FAST_DELETE and ZM_RUN_AUDIT.

       ZM_OPT_FAST_DELETE:

       Normally an event created as the result of an alarm consists of entries in one or  more  database  tables
       plus the various files associated with it. When deleting events in the browser it can take a long time to
       remove  all  of  this  if you are trying to do a lot of events at once. If you are running on an older or
       under-powered system, you may want to set this option which means that the browser  client  only  deletes
       the  key  entries  in  the events table, which means the events will no longer appear in the listing, and
       leaves the zmaudit daemon to clear up the rest later. If  you  do  so,  disk  space  will  not  be  freed
       immediately  so  you  will need to run zmaudit more frequently.  On modern systems, we recommend that you
       leave this off.

       ZM_RUN_AUDIT:

       The zmaudit daemon exists to check that the saved information in the database  and  on  the  file  system
       match and are consistent with each other. If an error occurs or if you are using ‘fast deletes’ it may be
       that  database  records  are  deleted  but  files  remain. In this case, and similar, zmaudit will remove
       redundant information to synchronize the two data stores. This option controls whether zmaudit is run  in
       the  background  and  performs  these  checks  and  fixes  continuously. This is not recommended for most
       systems, as zmaudit.pl is very resource intensive.

       ZM_AUDIT_CHECK_INTERVAL:

       The zmaudit daemon exists to check that the saved information in the database and  on  the  files  system
       match and are consistent with each other. If an error occurs or if you are using ‘fast deletes’ it may be
       that  database  records  are  deleted  but  files  remain. In this case, and similar, zmaudit will remove
       redundant information to synchronize the two data stores. The default check interval of 900  seconds  (15
       minutes)  is  fine  for  most  systems  however  if you have a very large number of events the process of
       scanning the database and file system may take a long time and impact performance. In this case  you  may
       prefer  to make this interval much larger to reduce the impact on your system. This option determines how
       often these checks are performed.

   Math for Memory: Making sure you have enough memory to handle your cameras
       One of the most common issues for erratic ZoneMinder behavior is you don’t have enough memory  to  handle
       all your cameras. Many users often configure multiple HD cameras at full resolution and 15FPS or more and
       then  face  various  issues about processes failing, blank screens and other completely erratic behavior.
       The core reason for all of this is you either don’t have enough memory or horsepower to handle  all  your
       cameras. The solution often is to reduce FPS, reduce cameras or bump up your server capabilities.

       Here  are  some guidelines with examples on how you can figure out how much memory you need. With respect
       to CPU, you should benchmark your server using standard unix tools like top, iotop  and  others  to  make
       sure  your  CPU load is manageable. ZoneMinder also shows average load on the top right corner of the Web
       Console for easy access.

       In general a good estimate of memory required would be:

          Min Bits of Memory = 20% overhead * (image-width*image-height*image buffer size*target color space*number of cameras)

       Where:

       • image-width and image-height are the width and height of images that your camera is configured for  (in
         my case, 1280x960). This value is in the Source tab for each monitor

       • image buffer size is the # of images ZM will keep in memory (this is used by ZM to make sure it has pre
         and  post  images before detecting an alarm - very useful because by the time an alarm is detected, the
         reason for the alarm may move out of view and a  buffer  is  really  useful  for  this,  including  for
         analyzing stats/scores). This value is in the buffers tab for each monitor

       • target  color  space  is  the  color depth - 8bit, 24bit or 32bit. It’s again in the source tab of each
         monitor

       The 20% overhead on top of the calculation to account for image/stream overheads (this is an estimate)

       The math breakdown for 4 cameras running at 1280x960 capture, 50 frame buffer, 24 bit color space:

          1280*960 = 1,228,800 (bytes)
          1,228,800 * (3 bytes for 24 bit) = 3,686,400 (bytes)
          3,686,400 * 50 = 184,320,000 (bytes)
          184,320,000 * 4 = 737,280,000 (bytes)
          737,280,000 / 1024 = 720,000 (Kilobytes)
          720,000 / 1024 = 703.125 (Megabytes)
          703.125 / 1024 = 0.686 (Gigabytes)

       Around 700MB of memory.

       So if you have 2GB of memory, you should be all set. Right? Not, really:

          • This is just the base memory required to capture  the  streams.  Remember  ZM  is  always  capturing
            streams  irrespective  of  whether  you  are actually recording or not - to make sure its image ring
            buffer is there with pre images when an alarm kicks in.

          • You also need to account for other processes not related to ZM running in your box

          • You also need to account for other ZM processes - for example, I noticed the audit daemon takes up a
            good amount of memory when it runs, DB updates also take up memory

          • If you are using H264 encoding, that buffers a lot of frames in memory as well.

       So a good rule of thumb is to make sure you have twice the memory as the calculation above  (and  if  you
       are using the ZM server for other purposes, please factor in those memory requirements as well)

       Also remember by default ZM only uses 50% of your available memory unless you change it

       As it turns out, ZM uses mapped memory and by default, 50% of your physical memory is what this will grow
       to. When you reach that limit , ZM breaks down with various errors.

       A good way to know how much memory is allocated to ZM for its operation is to do a df -h

       A sample output on Ubuntu:

          pp@camerapc:~$ df -h|grep "Filesystem\|shm"
          Filesystem                 Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
          tmpfs                      2.6G  923M  1.7G  36% /run/shm

       The  key  item  here is tmpfs –> the example above shows we have allocated 1.7G of mapped memory space of
       which 36% is used which is a healthy number. If you are seeing Use% going beyond 70% you  should  probaby
       increase the mapped memory.

       For  example,  if  you want to increase this limit to 70% of your memory, add the following to /etc/fstab
       tmpfs SHMPATH tmpfs defaults,noexec,nosuid,size=70% 0 0 where SHMPATH is the Mounted on path.  Here, that
       would be /run/shm.  Other systems may be /dev/shm.

   I have enabled motion detection but it is not always being triggered when things happen in the camera view
       ZoneMinder uses zones to examine images for motion detection. When you create the initial zones  you  can
       choose from a number of preset values for sensitivity etc. Whilst these are usually a good starting point
       they  are  not always suitable for all situations and you will probably need to tweak the values for your
       specific circumstances. The meanings of the various settings are described in the  documentation  (here).
       Another  user  contributed  illustrated  Zone definition guide can be found here: An illustrated guide to
       Zones

       However if you believe you have sensible settings configured then there are diagnostic approaches you can
       use.

   Event Statistics
       The first technique is to use event statistics. Firstly  you  should  ensure  they  are  switched  on  in
       Options->Logging->RECORD_EVENT_STATS.  This  will  then cause the raw motion detection statistics for any
       subsequently generated events to be written to the DB. These can then be accessed by  first  clicking  on
       the Frames or Alarm Frames values of the event from any event list view in the web gui. Then click on the
       score  value  to  see the actual values that caused the event. Alternatively the stats can be accessed by
       clicking on the ‘Stats’ link when viewing any individual frame. The  values  displayed  there  correspond
       with  the values that are used in the zone configuration and give you an idea of what ‘real world’ values
       are being generated.

       Note that if you are investigating why events ‘do not’ happen then these will not be saved and  so  won’t
       be  accessible.  The best thing to do in that circumstance is to make your zone more sensitive so that it
       captures all events (perhap even ones you don’t want) so you can get an idea of  what  values  are  being
       generated and then start to adjust back to less sensitive settings if necessary. You should make sure you
       test  your settings under a variety of lighting conditions (e.g. day and night, sunny or dull) to get the
       best feel for that works and what doesn’t.

       Using statistics will slow your system down to a small degree and use a little extra disk space in the DB
       so once you are happy you can switch them off again. However  it  is  perfectly  feasible  to  keep  them
       permanently on if your system is able to cope which will allow you to review your setting periodically.

   Diagnostic Images along with FIFO
       The second approach is to use diagnostic images which are saved copies of the intermediate images that ZM
       uses    when    determining    motion    detection.    These    are    switched    on   and   off   using
       Options->Logging->RECORD_DIAG_IMAGES.

       NOTE:
          In addition to the detailed explanation below, a recently added RECORD_DIAG_IMAGES_FIFO  option,  also
          available  in  Options->Logging  can be an invaluable tool to see how your current motion settings are
          affecting motion detection. The delta stream along with the raw (json output) stream can be invaluable
          to see the effect in real time. Please refer to the explanation of this feature in Options - Logging

       There are two kinds of diagnostic images which are and are written (and continuously overwritten) to  the
       top level monitor event directory. If an event occurs then the files are additionally copied to the event
       directory and renamed with the appropriate frame number as a prefix.

       The  first  set  are produced by the monitor on the image as a whole. The diag-r.jpg image is the current
       reference image against which all individual frames are compared and the diag-d.jpg image  is  the  delta
       image highlighting the difference between the reference image and the last analysed image. In this images
       identical  pixels  will  be  black  and the more different a pixel is the whiter it will be. Viewing this
       image and determining the colour of the pixels is a good way of getting a feel for the pixel  differences
       you might expect (often more than you think).

       The  second  set  of  diag images are labelled as diag-<zoneid>-<stage>.jpg where zoneid is the id of the
       zone in question (Smile) and the stage is where in the alarm check process the image is  generated  from.
       So  if  you have several zones you can expect to see multiple files. Also these files are only interested
       in what is happening in their zone only and will ignore anything else outside of  the  zone.  The  stages
       that each number represents are as follows,

       • Alarmed  Pixels  -  This  image shows all pixels in the zone that are considered to be alarmed as white
         pixels and all other pixels as black.

       • Filtered Pixels - This is as stage one except that all pixels removed by the filters are now black. The
         white pixels represent the pixels that are candidates to generate an event.

       • Raw Blobs - This image contains all alarmed pixels from stage 2 but aggrageted into  blobs.  Each  blob
         will  have  a  different  greyscale value (between 1 and 254) so they can be difficult to spot with the
         naked eye but using a colour picker or photoshop will make it easier to see what blob is what.

       • Filtered Blobs - This image is as stage 3 but under (or over) sized blobs have been  removed.  This  is
         the  final  step  before  determining if an event has occurred, just prior to the number of blobs being
         counted. Thus this image forms the basis for determining whether an event is generated and outlining on
         alarmed images is done from the blobs in this image.

       Using the above images you should be able to tell at all stages what ZM is doing to determine if an event
       should happen or not. They are useful diagnostic tools but as is mentioned elsewhere they will  massively
       slow  your  system  down  and  take up a great deal more space. You should never leave ZM running for any
       length of time with diagnostic images on.

   Why can’t ZoneMinder capture images (either at all or just particularly fast) when I can see my  camera  just
       fine in xawtv or similar?
       With  capture  cards  ZoneMinder  will  pull  images  as  fast  as  it  possibly  can  unless  limited by
       configuration. ZoneMinder (and any similar application) uses the frame grabber interface to  copy  frames
       from  video  memory  into  user memory. This takes some time, plus if you have several inputs sharing one
       capture chip it has to switch between inputs between captures which further slows things down.

       On average a card that can capture at 25fps per chip PAL for one input will do  maybe  6-10fps  for  two,
       1-4fps  for  three  and  1-2  for four. For a 30fps NTSC chip the figures will be correspondingly higher.
       However sometimes it is necessary to slow down capture even further as after an input switch it may  take
       a short while for the new image to settle before it can be captured without corruption.

       When  using xawtv etc to view the stream you are not looking at an image captured using the frame grabber
       but the card’s video memory mapped onto your screen. This requires no capture or processing unless you do
       an explicit capture via the J or ctrl-J keys for instance. Some cards or drivers do not support the frame
       grabber interface at all so may not work with ZoneMinder even though you can view the stream in xawtv. If
       you can grab a still using the grab functionality of xawtv then in  general  your  card  will  work  with
       ZoneMinder.

   Why can’t I see streamed images when I can see stills in the zone window etc?
       This issue is normally down to one of two causes

       1. You  are  using  Internet Explorer and are trying to view multi-part jpeg streams. IE does not support
          these streams directly, unlike most other browsers. You will need  to  install  Cambozola  or  another
          multi-part  jpeg  aware  plugin  to  view them. To do this you will need to obtain the applet from the
          Downloads page and install the cambozola.jar file in the same directory as the ZoneMinder  php  files.
          Then  find  the ZoneMinder Options->Images page and enable OPT_CAMBOZOLA and enter the web path to the
          .jar file in PATH_CAMBOZOLA. This will ordinarily just be cambozola.jar. Provided (Options / B/W tabs)
          WEB_H_CAN_STREAM is set to auto and WEB_H_STREAM_METHOD is set to jpeg then Cambozola should be loaded
          next time you try and view a stream.

       NOTE: If you find that the Cambozola applet loads in IE but the applet  just  displays  the  version   of
       Cambozola  and  the  author’s  name  (as  opposed  to seeing the streaming images), you may need to chmod
       (-rwxrwxr-x) your (usr/share/zoneminder/) cambozola.jar:

          sudo chmod 775 cambozola.jar

       Once I did this, images started to stream for me.

       2. The other common cause for being unable to view streams is that you have installed the ZoneMinder  cgi
          binaries  (zms and nph-zms) in a different directory than your web server is expecting. Make sure that
          the –with-cgidir option you use to the ZoneMinder configure script is the same as  the  CGI  directory
          configure  for  your  web  server. If you are using Apache, which is the most common one, then in your
          httpd.conf file there should be a line like ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ "/var/www/cgi-bin/" where  the  last
          directory  in  the quotes is the one you have specified. If not then change one or the other to match.
          Be warned that configuring apache can be  complex  so  changing  the  one  passed  to  the  ZoneMinder
          configure  (and  then rebuilding and reinstalling) is recommended in the first instance. If you change
          the apache config you will need to restart apache for the changes to take effect. If you still  cannot
          see  stream reliably then try changing ZM_PATH_ZMS in your /etc/zm/config directory to just use zms if
          nph-zms is specified, or vice versa. Also check in your apache error logs.

       Lastly, please look for errors created by the zmc processes.  If zmc isn’t running, then zms will not  be
       able to get an image from it and will exit.

   I have several monitors configured but when I load the Montage view why can I only see two? or, Why don’t all
       my cameras display when I use the Montage view?
       By  default  most  browsers  only support a small number of simultaneous connections to any given server.
       Using the montage view usually requires one persistent  connection  for  each  camera  plus  intermittent
       connections for other information such as statuses.

       In firefox you can increase the limit, but other browsers are not configurable in this way.

       A  solution  for all browsers is something we call multi-port.  We reconfigure apache to operate on ports
       other than the default of 80(http) or 443(https).  You need to pick a range, let’s say 30000 to 30010  in
       order to support 10 cameras.  We add lines to your zoneminder apache config file as follows:

       Listen 30000 Listen 30001 Listen 30002 Listen 30003 etc Listen 30010

       If you are using virtualhosts, you will have to add these to the VirtualHost directive as well.

       Then  in  ZoneMinder  config,  Go  Options  ->  Network  and  set  MIN_STREAMING_PORT to 30000.  Now when
       generating urls to stream images from ZoneMinder a port will be appended that is 30000  +  MonitorId,  so
       Monitor 1 will stream from 30001 and so on.  This will allow Montage to stream from all monitors.

       Alternatively if you are in fact using only Firefox, you can increase the limit as follows:

       Enter about:config in the address bar

       scroll down to browser.cache.check_doc_frequency 3 change the 3 to a 1

          browser.cache.disk.enable True -> False
          network.http.max-connections-per-server -> put a value of 100
          network.http.max-persistent-connections-per-proxy -> 100 again
          network.http.max-persistent-connections-per-server -> 100 again

   I can’t see more than 6 monitors in montage on my browser
       Browsers such a Chrome and Safari only support up to 6 streams from the same domain. To work around that,
       take a look at the multi-port configuration discussed in  the MIN_STREAMING_PORT configuration in Options
       - Network

   Why is ZoneMinder using so much CPU?
       The  various  elements  of ZoneMinder can be involved in some pretty intensive activity, especially while
       analysing images for motion. However generally this should not overwhelm your machine unless it  is  very
       old or underpowered.

       There  are  a number of specific reasons why processor loads can be high either by design or by accident.
       To figure out exactly what is causing it in your circumstances requires a bit of experimentation.

       The main causes are.

          • Using a video palette other than greyscale or RGB24. This can cause a relatively  minor  performance
            hit,  though  still  significant.  Although  some cameras and cards require using planar palettes ZM
            currently  doesn’t  support  this  format  internally  and  each  frame  is  converted  to  an   RGB
            representation  prior to processing. Unless you have compelling reasons for using YUV or reduced RGB
            type palettes such as hitting USB transfer limits I would experiment to see if RGB24 or greyscale is
            quicker. Put your monitors into ‘Monitor’ mode so that only the  capture  daemons  are  running  and
            monitor  the  process load of these (the ‘zmc’ processes) using top. Try it with various palettes to
            see if it makes a difference.

          • Big image sizes. A image of 640x480 requires at least four times the processing of a 320x240  image.
            Experiment  with different sizes to see what effect it may have. Sometimes a large image is just two
            interlaced smaller frames so has no  real  benefit  anyway.  This  is  especially  true  for  analog
            cameras/cards as image height over 320 (NTSC) or 352 PAL) are invariably interlaced.

          • Capture  frame  rates. Unless there’s a compelling reason in your case there is often little benefit
            in running cameras at 25fps when 5-10fps would often get you results just as good. Try changing your
            monitor settings to limit your cameras to lower frame rates. You can still configure  ZM  to  ignore
            these limits and capture as fast as possible when motion is detected.

          • Run function. Obviously running in Record or Mocord modes or in Modect with lots of events generates
            a lot of DB and file activity and so CPU and load will increase.

          • Basic  default  detection zones. By default when a camera is added one detection zone is added which
            covers the whole image with a default set of parameters. If your  camera  covers  a  view  in  which
            various  regions  are  unlikely  to generate a valid alarm (ie the sky) then I would experiment with
            reducing the zone sizes or adding inactive zones to blank out  areas  you  don’t  want  to  monitor.
            Additionally  the  actual  settings  of  the  zone  themselves may not be optimal. When doing motion
            detection the number of changed pixels above a threshold is examined,  then  this  is  filter,  then
            contiguous  regions  are  calculated  to  see  if  an  alarm is generated. If any maximum or minimum
            threshold is exceeded according to your zone settings at any time the  calculation  stops.  If  your
            settings  always result in the calculations going through to the last stage before being failed then
            additional CPU time is used unnecessarily. Make sure your maximum and minimumzone thresholds are set
            to sensible values and experiment by switching RECORD_EVENT_STATS on  and  seeing  what  the  actual
            values of alarmed pixels etc are during sample events.

          • Optimise  your  settings.  After  you’ve  got  some  settings  you’re  happy with then switching off
            RECORD_EVENT_STATS will prevent the statistics being written to the database which saves some  time.
            Other settings which might make a difference are ZM_FAST_RGB_DIFFS and the JPEG_xxx_QUALITY ones.

       I’m  sure  there are other things which might make a difference such as what else you have running on the
       box and memory sizes (make sure there’s no swapping going on). Also speed of  disk  etc  will  make  some
       difference  during event capture and also if you are watching the whole time then you may have a bunch of
       zms processes running also.

       I think the biggest factors are image size, colour depth and capture rate. Having said that I also  don’t
       always  know why you get certains results from ‘top’. For instance if I have a ‘zma’ daemon running for a
       monitor that is capturing an image. I’ve commented out the actual analysis so all it’s doing is  blending
       the  image  with  the previous one. In colour mode this takes ~11 milliseconds per frame on my system and
       the camera is capturing at ~10fps. Using ‘top’  this  reports  the  process  as  using  ~5%  of  CPU  and
       permanently  in R(un) state. Changing to greyscale mode the blending takes ~4msec (as you would expect as
       this is roughly a third of 11) but top reports the process as now with 0% CPU and permanently in  S(leep)
       state.  So  an  actual CPU resource usage change of a factor of 3 causes huge differences in reported CPU
       usage. I have yet to get to the bottom of this but I suspect it’s to do with scheduling  somewhere  along
       the  line  and  that  maybe  the greyscale processing will fit into one scheduling time slice whereas the
       colour one won’t but I have no evidence of this yet!

   Why is the timeline view all messed up?
       The timeline view is a new view allowing you to see a graph of alarm activity over time  and  to  quickly
       scan  and  home in on events of interest. However this feature is highly complex and still in beta. It is
       based extensively on HTML div tags, sometimes lots of them. Whilst FireFox is able to  render  this  view
       successfully  other  browsers,  particular  Internet  Explorer  do not seem able to cope and so present a
       messed up view, either always or when there are a lot  of  events.   Using  the  timeline  view  is  only
       recommended when using FireFox, however even then there may be issues.

       This  function has from time to time been corrupted in the SVN release or in the stable releases, try and
       reinstall from a fresh download.

   How much Hard Disk Space / Bandwidth do I need for ZM?
       Please see this online excel sheet. Note that this is just an estimate

       Or go to this link for the Axis bandwidth calculator. Although this is aimed at  Axis  cameras  it  still
       produces valid results for any kind of IP camera.

       As  a quick guide I have 4 cameras at 320x240 storing 1 fps except during alarm events. After 1 week 60GB
       of space in the volume where the events are stored (/var/www/html/zm) has been used.

   When I try and run ZoneMinder I get lots of audit permission errors in the logs and it won’t start
       Many Linux distributions nowadays are built with security in mind. One of the latest methods of achieving
       this is via SELinux (Secure Linux) which controls who is able to run what in  a  more  precise  way  then
       traditional  accounting  and file based permissions (link).  If you are seeing entries in your system log
       like:
          Jun 11 20:44:02 kernel: audit(1150033442.443:226): avc: denied { read  }  for  pid=5068  comm=”uptime”
          name=”utmp”          dev=dm-0         ino=16908345         scontext=user_u:system_r:httpd_sys_script_t
          tcontext=user_u:object_r:initrc_var_run_t tclass=file

       then it is likely that your system has SELinux enabled and it is preventing ZoneMinder  from  performaing
       certain  activities.  You  then  have  two  choices.  You  can either tune SELinux to permit the required
       operations or you can disable SELinux entirely which will permit ZoneMinder to run unhindered.  Disabling
       SELinux  is  usually  performed  by  editing  its configuration file (e.g., /etc/selinux/config) and then
       rebooting. However if you run a public server you should read up on the risks  associated  with  disabled
       Secure Linux before disabling it.

       Note  that SELinux may cause errors other than those listed above. If you are in any doubt then it can be
       worth disabling SELinux experimentally to see if it fixes your problem before trying other solutions.

   How do I enable ZoneMinder’s security?
       In the console, click on Options->System. Check the box next to ZM_OPT_USE_AUTH. You will immediately  be
       asked to login. The default username is ‘admin’ and the password is ‘admin’.

       To Manage Users: In main console, go to Options->Users.

       You may also consider to use the web server security, for example, htaccess files under Apache scope; You
       may  even  use this as an additional/redundant security on top of Zoneminders built-in security features.
       Note that if you choose to enable webserver auth, zmNinja may have issues. Please read the zmNinja FAQ on
       basic authentication for more information.  Also  please  note  that  zmNinja  does  not  support  digest
       authentication.

   Managing system load (with IP Cameras in mind)
   Introduction
       Zoneminder  is  a  superb  application  in  every  way,  but it does a job that needs a lot of horsepower
       especially when using multiple IP cameras. IP Cams require an extra level of processing to analogue cards
       as the jpg or mjpeg images need to be decoded before analysing. This needs grunt. If  you  have  lots  of
       cameras, you need lots of grunt.

       Why do ZM need so much grunt?  Think what Zoneminder is actually doing. In modect mode ZM is: 1. Fetching
       a  jpeg  from  the  camera.  (Either  in single part or multipart stream) 2. Decoding the jpeg image.  3.
       Comparing the zoned selections to the previous image or images and applying rules.  4. If in alarm state,
       writing that image to the disk and updating the mysql database.

       If you’re capturing at five frames per second, the above is repeated five times every second,  multiplied
       by the number of cameras. Decoding the images is what takes the real power from the processor and this is
       the main reason why analogue cameras which present an image ready-decoded in memory take less work.

   How do I know if my computer is overloaded?
       If your CPU is running at 100% all the time, it’s probably overloaded (or running at exact optimisation).
       If  the  load  is consistently high (over 10.0 for a single processor) then Bad Things happen - like lost
       frames, unrecorded events etc. Occasional peaks are fine, normal and nothing to worry about.

       Zoneminder runs on Linux, Linux measures system load using “load”, which is complicated but gives a rough
       guide on what the computer is doing at any given time. Zoneminder shows Load on the main page (top right)
       as well as disk space. Typing “uptime” on the command line will give a  similar  guide,  but  with  three
       figures  to give a fuller measure of what’s happening over a period of time but for the best guide to see
       what’s happening, install “htop” - which gives easy to read graphs for load, memory and cpu usage.

       A load of 1.0 means the processor has “just enough to do right now”. Also worth noting that a load of 4.0
       means exactly the same for a quad processor machine - each number equals a single processor’s workload. A
       very high load can be fine on a computer that has a stacked workload - such as a machine sending out bulk
       emails, or working its way through a knotty problem; it’ll just  keep  churning  away  until  it’s  done.
       However  -  Zoneminder needs to process information in real time so it can’t afford to stack its jobs, it
       needs to deal with them right away.

       For a better and full explanation of Load: Please read this

   My load is too high, how can I reduce it?
       (The previous documentation explained how to use turbo jpeg libraries as an optimization technique. These
       libraries have long been part of standard linux distros since that article was authored  and  hence  that
       section has been removed)

       Zoneminder is very tweakable and it’s possible to tune it to compromise. The following are good things to
       try, in no particular order;

          • If  your camera allows you to change image size, think whether you can get away with smaller images.
            Smaller pics = less load. 320x240 is usually ok for close-up corridor shots.

          • Go Black and White. Colour pictures use twice to three times the CPU, memory and diskspace but  give
            little benefit to identification.

          • Reduce  frames per second. Halve the fps, halve the workload. If your camera supports fps throttling
            (Axis do), try that - saves ZM having to drop frames from a stream. 2-5 fps seems to be widely used.

          • Experiment with using jpeg instead of mjpeg. Some users have reported it gives  better  performance,
            but YMMV.

          • Tweak the zones. Keep them as small and as few as possible. Stick to one zone unless you really need
            more. Read this for an easy to understand explanation along with the official Zone guide.

          • Schedule.  If  you are running a linux system at near capacity, you’ll need to think carefully about
            things like backups and scheduled tasks. updatedb - the process which maintains a file  database  so
            that  ‘locate’  works  quickly,  is normally scheduled to run once a day and if on a busy system can
            create a heavy increase on the load. The same is true for scheduled backups, especially those  which
            compress  the  files.  Re-schedule  these tasks to a time when the cpu is less likely to be busy, if
            possible - and also use the “nice” command to reduce their priority. (crontab  and  /etc/cron.daily/
            are good places to start)

          • Reduce clutter on your PC. Don’t run X unless you really need it, the GUI is a huge overhead in both
            memory and cpu.

       More expensive options:

          • Increase  RAM.  If  your  system is having to use disk swap it will HUGELY impact performance in all
            areas. Again, htop is a good monitor - but first you need to understand that because Linux is  using
            all  the memory, it doesn’t mean it needs it all - linux handles ram very differently to Windows/DOS
            and caches stuff. htop will show cached ram as a different colour in the memory  graph.  Also  check
            that  you’re  actually using a high memory capable kernel - many kernels don’t enable high memory by
            default.

          • Faster CPU. Simple but effective. Zoneminder also works very well with  multiple  processor  systems
            out  of  the  box (if SMP is enabled in your kernel). The load of different cameras is spread across
            the processors.

          • Try building Zoneminder with processor specific instructions that are optimised  to  the  system  it
            will  be running on, also increasing the optimisation level of GCC beyond -O2 will help.  This topic
            is beyond the scope of this document.

       Processor specific commands can be found in the GCC manual along with some more options that may increase
       performance.

   What about disks and bandwidth?
       A typical 100mbit LAN will cope with most setups easily. If you’re feeding from cameras over  smaller  or
       internet links, obviously fps will be much lower.

       Disk and Bandwidth calculators are referenced in How much Hard Disk Space / Bandwidth do I need for ZM?.

   How do I build for X10 support?
       You do not need to rebuild ZM for X10 support. You will need to install the perl module and switch on X10
       in  the  options,  then restart. Installing the perl module is covered in the README amongst other places
       but in summary, do:
          perl -MCPAN -eshell install X10::ActiveHome quit

   Extending Zoneminder
   How can I get ZM to do different things at different times of day or week?
       If you want to configure ZoneMinder to do motion detection during the day and just record at  night,  for
       example,  you  will  need  to  use  ZoneMinder ‘run states’. A run state is a particular configuration of
       monitor functions that you want to use at any time.

       To save a run state you should first configure your monitors for Modect, Record, Monitor etc as you would
       want them during one of the times of day. Then click on the running state link at the top of the  Console
       view.  This  will usually say ‘Running’ or ‘Stopped’. You will then be able to save the current state and
       give it a name, ‘Daytime’ for example. Now configure your monitors how you would want them  during  other
       times of day and save that, for instance as ‘Nighttime’.

       Now  you  can  switch  between these two states by selecting them from the same dialog you saved them, or
       from the command line from issue the command ‘’zmpkg.pl <run state>’’, for example ‘’zmpkg.pl Daytime’’.

       The final step you need to take, is scheduling the time the changes take effect. For  this  you  can  use
       cron. A simple entry to change to the Daylight state at at 8am and to the nighttime state at 8pm would be
       as follows,

          0 8 * * * root /usr/local/bin/zmpkg.pl Daytime
          0 20 * * * root /usr/local/bin/zmpkg.pl Nighttime

       On Ubuntu 7.04 and possibly others, look in /usr/bin not just /usr/local/bin for the zmpkg.pl file.

       Although  the  example  above describes changing states at different times of day, the same principle can
       equally be applied to days of the week or other more arbitrary periods.

   How can I use ZoneMinder to trigger something else when there is an alarm?
       ZoneMinder includes a perl API which means you can create a script to interact with the ZM shared  memory
       data  and  use it in your own scripts to react to ZM alarms or to trigger ZM to generate new alarms. Full
       details are in the README or by doing perldoc ZoneMinder  etc.

       ZoneMinder provides a sample alarm script called zmalarm.pl that you can refer to as a starting point.

   Trouble Shooting
       Here are some things that will help you track down whats wrong.  This is also how to obtain the info that
       we need to help you on the forums.

   What logs should I check for errors?
       ZoneMinder creates its own logs and are usually located in the /var/log/ directory. Refer to the  logging
       discussion  in  Options - Logging for more details on where logs are stored and how to enable various log
       levels.

       Since ZM is dependent on other components to work, you might not find errors  in  ZM  but  in  the  other
       components.

          */var/log/messages and/or /var/log/syslog
          */var/log/dmesg
          */var/log/httpd/error_log`` (RedHat/Fedora) or ``/var/log/apache2/error_log
          */var/log/mysqld.log`` (Errors here don't happen very often but just in case)

       If  ZM  is not functioning, you should always be able to find an error in at least one of these logs. Use
       the [[tail]] command to get info from the logs. This can be done like so:
          tail -f /var/log/messages /var/log/httpd/error_log /var/log/zm/zm*.log

       This will append any data entered to any of these logs to your console screen (-f). To  exit,  hit  [ctrl
       -c].

   How can I trouble shoot the hardware and/or software?
       Here  are some commands to get information about your hardware. Some commands are distribution dependent.
       * [[lspci]] -vv – Returns lots of detailed info. Check for conflicting interrupts  or  port  assignments.
       You  can  sometimes  alter  interrupts/ ports in bios. Try a different pci slot to get a clue if it is HW
       conflict (command provided by the pciutils package).  * [[scanpci]] -v  – Gives you information from your
       hardware EPROM * [[lsusb]] -vv – Returns lots of detail about USB devices (camand  provided  by  usbutils
       package).  * [[dmesg]] – Shows you how your hardware initialized (or didn’t) on boot-up. You will get the
       most  use  of  this.   * [[v4l-info]] – to see how driver is talking to card. look for unusual values.  *
       [[modinfo bttv]] – some bttv driver stats.  * [[zmu]]  -m 0 -q -v – Returns various information regarding
       a monitor configuration.  * [[ipcs]] ``  -- Provides information on the  ipc  facilities  for  which  the
       calling  process  has  read  access.  * ``[[ipcrm]] ``  -- The ipcrm command can be used to remove an IPC
       object from the kernel.  * ``cat /proc/interrupts  – This will dispaly what interrupts your  hardware  is
       using.

   Why am I getting a 403 access error with my web browser when trying to access http //localhost/zm?
       The  apache  web  server  needs  to  have  the right permissions and configuration to be able to read the
       Zoneminder files. Check the forums for solution, and edit the apache configuration and  change  directory
       permissions  to  give  apache  the  right  to  read  the  Zoneminder  files. Depending on your Zoneminder
       configuration, you would use the zm user and group that Zoneminder was built with, such  as  wwwuser  and
       www.

   Why am I getting broken images when trying to view events?
       Zoneminder  and  the  Apache  web  server  need to have the right permissions. Check this forum topic and
       similar ones:

   I can review events for the current day, but ones from yesterday and beyond error out
       If you’ve checked that the www-data user has permissions to the storage folders, perhaps  your  php.ini’s
       timezone setting is incorrect. They _must_ match for certain playback functions.

       If you’re using Linux, this can be found using the following command:

          timedatectl | grep "Time zone"

       If using FreeBSD, you can use this one-liner:

          cd /usr/share/zoneinfo/ && find * -type f -exec cmp -s {} /etc/localtime \; -print;

       Once  you know what timezone your system is set to make sure you set the right time zone in ZM (Available
       in Options->System->TimeZone)

   Why is the image from my color camera appearing in black and white?
       If you recently upgraded to zoneminder 1.26, there is a per camera option  that  defaults  to  black  and
       white    and   can   be   mis-set   if   your   upgrade   didn’t   happen   right.   See   this   thread:
       https://forums.zoneminder.com/viewtopic.php?f=30&t=21344

       This may occur if you have a NTSC analog camera but have configured the source in ZoneMinder as  PAL  for
       the Device Format under the source tab.  You may also be mislead because zmu can report the video port as
       being  PAL  when  the camera is actually NTSC.  Confirm the format of your analog camera by checking it’s
       technical specifications, possibly found with the packaging it came in, on the manufacturers website,  or
       even  on the retail website where you purchased the camera.  Change the Device Format setting to NTSC and
       set it to the lowest resolution of 320 x 240.  If you have confirmed  that  the  camera  itself  is  NTSC
       format,  but  don’t  get  a  picture  using  the  NTSC  setting,  consider  increasing  the shared memory
       ‘’’kernel.shmall’’’ and ‘’’kernel.shmmax’’’ settings in  /etc/sysctl.conf  to  a  larger  value  such  as
       268435456.   This  is also the reason you should start with the 320x240 resolution, so as to minimize the
       potential of memory problems which would interfere with your attempts to troubleshoot the  device  format
       issue.   Once  you  have obtained a picture in the monitor using the NTSC format, then you can experiment
       with raising the resolution.

   Why do I only see blue screens with a timestamp when monitoring my camera?
       If this camera is attached to a capture card, then you may have  selected  the  wrong  Device  Source  or
       Channel  when configuring the monitor in the ZoneMinder console.  If you have a capture card with 2 D-sub
       style inputs(looks like a VGA port) to which you attach a provided  splitter  that  splits  off  multiple
       cables,  then the splitter may be attached to the wrong port.  For example, PV-149 capture cards have two
       D-sub style ports labeled as DB1 and DB2, and come packaged with a connector for one of these ports  that
       splits  into  4 BNC connecters.  The initial four video ports are available with the splitter attached to
       DB1.

   Why do I only see black screens with a timestamp when monitoring my camera?
       In the monitor windows where you see the black screen with a timestamp, select  settings  and  enter  the
       Brightness,  Contrast,  Hue,  and  Color  settings reported for the device by zmu -d <device_path> -q -v.
       32768 may be appropriate values to try for these settings.  After saving the  settings,  select  Settings
       again to confirm they saved successfully.

   How do I repair the MySQL Database?
       There  is  two  ways  to  go  about this. In most cases you can run from the command prompt -> mysqlcheck
       --all-databases --auto-repair -p your_database_password -u your_databse_user

       If that does not work then you will have to make sure that ZoneMinder is stopped then run  the  following
       (nothing  should  be  using  the database while running this and you will have to adjust for your correct
       path if it is different):

       myisamchk --silent --force --fast --update-state -O key_buffer=64M -O sort_buffer=64M  -O  read_buffer=1M
       -O write_buffer=1M /var/lib/mysql/*/*.MYI

   How do I repair the MySQL Database when the cli fails?
       In Ubuntu, the commands listed above do not seem to work.  However, actually doing it by hand from within
       MySQL  does.   (But that is beyond the scope of this document)  But that got me thinking…  And phpmyadmin
       does work.  Bring up a terminal.  sudo apt-get install phpmyadmin

       Now go to http://zoneminder_IP/ and stop the ZM service.  Continue to http://zoneminder_IP/phpmyadmin and
       select the zoneminder database.  Select and tables marked ‘in use’ and pick the action ‘repare’  to  fix.
       Restart the zoneminder service from the web browser.  Remove or disable the phpmyadmin tool, as it is not
       always  the  most  secure thing around, and opens your database wide to any skilled hacker.  sudo apt-get
       remove phpmyadmin

   I upgraded by distribution and ZM stopped working
       Some   possibilities   (Incomplete   list   and   subject    to    correction)    [[/usr/local/bin/zmfix:
       /usr/lib/libmysqlclient.so.15:  version  `MYSQL_5.0'  not  found (required by /usr/local/bin/zmfix)]]  ::
       Solution: Recompile and reinstall Zoneminder.  Any time  you  update  a  major  version  that  ZoneMinder
       depends on, you need to recompile ZoneMinder.

   Zoneminder doesn’t start automatically on boot
       Check  the  list  for  log entries like “zmfix[766]: ERR [Can’t connect to server: Can’t connect to local
       MySQL server through socket ‘/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock’ (2)] “.  What can happen is that zoneminder  is
       started  too  quickly  after Mysql and tries to contact the database server before it’s ready. Zoneminder
       gets no answer and aborts.  August 2010 - Ubuntu upgrades seem to be  leaving  several  systems  in  this
       state.  One  way  around this is to add a delay to the zoneminder startup script allowing Mysql to finish
       starting.  “Simply adding ‘sleep 15’ in the line above ‘zmfix  -a’  in  the  /etc/init.d/zoneminder  file
       fixed my ZoneMinder startup problems!” - credit to Pada.

   Remote Path setup for Panasonic and other Camera
       On  adding  or  editing  the  source  you can select the preset link for the parameters for the specified
       camera .  In version 1.23.3  presets for BTTV,Axis,Panasonic,GadSpot,VEO, and  BlueNet  are  available  .
       Selecting the presets  ZM fills up the required value for the remote path variable

   Why do I get repeated/ mixed/unstable/ blank monitors on bt878-like cards (a.k.a. PICO 2000)
       Please have a check at [[Pico2000]];

   What causes “Invalid JPEG file structure: two SOI markers” from zmc (1.24.x)
       Some  settings  that  used  to  be global only are now per camera.  On the Monitor Source tab, if you are
       using Remote Protocol  “HTTP” and Remote Method “Simple”, try changing Remote Method to “Regexp”.

   Miscellaneous
   I see ZoneMinder is licensed under the GPL. What does that allow or restrict me in doing with ZoneMinder?
       The ZoneMinder license is described at the end of the documentation and consists of the following section
          This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the  terms  of  the  GNU
          General  Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License,
          or (at your option) any later version.

          This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even
          the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A  PARTICULAR  PURPOSE.  See  the  GNU  General
          Public License for more details.

       This  means  that  ZoneMinder  is  licensed  under the terms described here. There is a comprehensive FAQ
       covering the  GPL  at  https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html  but  in  essence  you  are  allowed  to
       redistribute or modify GPL licensed software provided that you release your distribution or modifications
       freely  under  the same terms. You are allowed to sell systems based on GPL software. You are not allowed
       to restrict or reduce the rights of GPL software in your distribution however. Of course if you are  just
       making  modifications for your system locally you are not releasing changes so you have no obligations in
       this case. I recommend reading the GPL FAQ for more in-depth coverage of this issue.

   Can I use ZoneMinder as part of my commercial product?
       The GPL license allows you produce systems based on GPL software provided your  systems  also  adhere  to
       that  license  and  any  modifications you make are also released under the same terms.  The GPL does not
       permit      you      to      include       ZoneMinder       in       proprietary       systems       (see
       https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html#GPLInProprietarySystem  for  details).  If  you wish to include
       ZoneMinder in this kind of system then you will need to license ZoneMinder under different terms. This is
       sometimes possible and you will need to contact me for further details in these circumstances.

   I am having issues with zmNinja and/or Event Notification Server
       zmNinja and the Event Notification Server are 3rd party solutions.  The  developer  maintains  exhaustive
       documentation and FAQs. Please direct your questions there.

CONTRIBUTING

       Source hosted at GitHub Report issues/questions/feature requests on GitHub Issues

       Pull requests are very welcome! If you would like to contribute, please follow the following steps.

       • Fork the repo

       • Open  an  issue  at our GitHub Issues Tracker. Describe the bug that you’ve found, or the feature which
         you’re asking for. Jot down the issue number (e.g. 456)

       • Create your feature branch (git checkout -b 456-my-new-feature)

       • Commit your changes (git commit -m 'Added some feature') It is preferred that  you  ‘commit  early  and
         often’ instead of bunching all changes into a single commit.

       • Push your branch to your fork on github (git push origin 456-my-new-feature)

       • Create new Pull Request

       • The team will then review, discuss and hopefully merge your changes.

       Welcome to ZoneMinder’s documentation. Please navigate to one of the links below.

       If  you  are  facing  issues  that  are  not  covered in the documentation, please feel free to check the
       ZoneMinder Forums or join the ZoneMinder-Chat Slack channel if you prefer real time interaction.

       User Guide
              Guide to setting up ZoneMinder for the first time and detailed guides  for  using  the  ZoneMinder
              front end.

       API    Information on using the CakePHP based API for interfacing to ZoneMinder

       FAQ    Frequently Asked Questions

       Contributing
              How  to contribute to ZoneMinder. As a community project we always need help, you don’t need to be
              a coder to test or update documentation.

       Event Notification Server and Machine Learning hooks
              Documentation  for  the  3rd  party  Event  Notification   Server   and   Machine   Learning   for
              Object/People/Face detection.

       • IndexModule IndexSearch Page

AUTHOR

       https://github.com/ZoneMinder/ZoneMinder/graphs/contributors

COPYRIGHT

       2024, https://github.com/ZoneMinder/ZoneMinder/graphs/contributors

                                                  Apr 01, 2024                                     ZONEMINDER(1)