Provided by: zoneminder_1.29.0+dfsg-1ubuntu2_amd64 bug

NAME

       zoneminder - ZoneMinder Documentation

USER GUIDE

   Introduction
       Welcome to ZoneMinder, the all-in-one Linux GPL'd security camera solution.

       Most  commercial "security systems" are designed as a monitoring system that also records.
       Recording quality can vary from bad to unusable, locating the  relevant  video  can  range
       from  challenging  to  impractical,  and  exporting can often only be done with the manual
       present.  ZoneMinder was designed  primarily  to  record,  and  allow  easy  searches  and
       exporting.   Recordings  are  of  the  best possible quality, easy to filter and find, and
       simple to export using any system with a web browser.  It also monitors.

       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. A
       fairly ancient Pentium II PC should be able to track one camera per device  at  up  to  25
       frames  per  second with this dropping by half approximately for each additional camera on
       the same device. Additional cameras on other devices do not interact so can maintain  this
       frame  rate.  Even  monitoring  several  cameras  still will not overload the CPU as frame
       processing is designed to synchronise with capture and not stall it.

       As well as being fast ZoneMinder is designed to be  friendly  and  even  more  than  that,
       actually  useful.  As  well  as  the  fast  video interface core it also comes with a user
       friendly and comprehensive PHP based web interface allowing you  to  control  and  monitor
       your  cameras  from  home,  at  work,  on  the  road, or even 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 and archive them or review them
       time and again, or delete the ones you no longer wish to  keep.  The  web  pages  directly
       interact  with  the  core  daemons ensuring full co-operation at all times. ZoneMinder can
       even be installed as a system service ensuring it is right there if your computer  has  to
       reboot for any reason.

       The  core  of  ZoneMinder  is  the  capture  and  analysis of images and there is a highly
       configurable set of parameters that allow you to  ensure  that  you  can  eliminate  false
       positives whilst ensuring that anything you don't want to miss will be captured and saved.
       ZoneMinder allows you to define a set of 'zones' for each camera  of  varying  sensitivity
       and  functionality.  This  allows you to eliminate regions 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,  but  if  you  do  find  it  useful  then  please feel free to visit
       http://www.zoneminder.com/donate.html and help to fund future improvements to ZoneMinder.

   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.

       zmf    This  is  the  ZoneMinder  Frame daemon. This is an optional daemon that can run in
              concert with the Analysis daemon  and  whose  function  it  is  to  actually  write
              captured  frames to disk. This frees up the Analysis daemon to do more analysis (!)
              and so keep up with the Capture daemon better. If it isn’t running or dies then the
              Analysis daemon just writes them itself.

       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 4 possible skins.

       Classic
              Original ZoneMinder skin

       Flat   An updated version of classic skin, retaining the same layout with  a  more  modern
              style

       XML    Displays  certain  views  as  XML.  Used by eyeZM as an interfacing skin (Note that
              eyeZM no longer seems to work with later versions of Zoneminder). New developers of
              3rd party clients should use the API instead (../api)

       Mobile A  skin  that  displays  views  in  a more condensed and single page format, likely
              suitable for smaller mobile devices, should one choose  to  access  the  ZoneMinder
              console using such devices. Note that there are also third party mobile clients one
              could use (mobile)

   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.

       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.  This  script  is  also  responsible for the automatic uploading of
              events to a 3rd party server.

       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.

       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.

       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/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/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]

   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 right corner of the web interface

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

       • The relevant portions to change are marked in red above

       • Enable  OPT_USE_ATH  - 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 please don't use the same
         value in the example.

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

       • 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"

   Switching to flat theme
       What 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]

   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.  Obviously, this does not reflect your
       current web console - which is essentially void of any useful information till now, as  we
       are  yet to add things. Let's take a small break and understand what the various functions
       are before we configure our own empty screen.  [image]

       • A: This is the username that is logged in. You are logged in as 'admin' here

       • B: Click here to explore the various options of ZoneMinder and how  to  configure  them.
         You  already  used  this to enable authentication and change style above. Over time, you
         will find this to have many other things you will want to customize.

       • C: This link, when clicked, opens up a color coded log window of what  is  going  on  in
         Zoneminder and often gives you good insight into what is going wrong or right. Note that
         the color here is red - that is an indication that some error  occurred  in  ZoneMinder.
         You should click it and investigate.

       • D:  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.

       • E: 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.

       • F: 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. Note the color
         red on item F ? Well that means there is something wrong with that camera. No wonder the
         log also shows red. Good indication for you to tap on logs and investigate

       • G:  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,
         Modect = Don't record till an externa entity via zmtrigger tells Zoneminder to (this  is
         advanced usage).

       • H:  If you click on these links you can view a "Montage" of all your configured monitors
         or cycle through each one

   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.

       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 foums.

       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 new monitor" 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 'Remote'.

       NOTE:
          As  a   thumb  rule,  if  you have a camera accessible via IP and it does HTTP or RTSP,
          start   with   Remote,   then   try   FFMpeg   and   libvlc   if   it   doesn't    work
          (/userguide/definemonitor  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.

       • Let's leave the Function as 'Monitor' just so we can use this as an example to change it
         later another way. Practically, feel free to select your mode right now - Modect, Record
         etc depending on what you want ZoneMinder to do with this camera

       • We've  put in MaxFPS and AlarmFPS as 20 here. You can leave this empty too. Whatever you
         do here, it's important to make sure these values are higher than the FPS of the camera.
         The  reason  we've  added a value here is that as of Aug 2015, if a camera goes offline,
         ZoneMinder eats up a lot of CPU  trying to reach it and putting a larger value here than
         the actual FPS helps in that specific situation.

       NOTE:
          We  strongly  recommend  not putting in a lower FPS here that the one configured inside
          your camera.  Zoneminder should not be used to manage camera frame  rate.  That  always
          causes  many problems. It's much better you set the value directly in-camera and either
          leave this blank or specify a higher FPS here. In this case, our actual camera FPS is 3
          and we've set this value here to 10.

       • 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)

       • The other boxes are mostly self-explanatory

       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]

       If you want to change its mode from Monitor to say, Modect (Motion Detect), later all  you
       need  to  do is click on the Function column that says 'Monitor' and change it to 'Modect'
       like so: [image]

       and we now have: [image]

       And then, finally, to see if everything works, lets click on the monitor name ('Garage' in
       this example) and that should bring up a live feed just like this: [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 /userguide/definemonitor 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
              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. (Note for IP cameras: ZoneMinder has
              no  way  to  set or limit the mjpeg stream the camera passes, some cams you can set
              this through the url string, others do not. So if you're using mjpeg feeds you must
              NOT  throttle  here  at  the  server end, only the cam end. If you want to use this
              feature, the server to throttle, then you MUST use jpeg instead of mjpeg method  to
              get picture from the camera)

       Alarm Maximum FPS
              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.

       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
       Source Path
              Use  this  field  to  enter  the  full URL of the stream or file. Look in Supported
              Hardware > Network Cameras section, how to obtain these strings that may  apply  to
              your camera. RTSP streams may be specified here.

       Source 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.

   LibVLC
   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
              grey first, and then 24 bit colour. If neither of these work very well then YUV420P
              or one of the others probably will. There is  a  slight  performance  penalty  when
              using  palettes  other  than  grey  or  24  bit colour as an internal conversion is
              involved. These other formats are intended to be supported  natively  in  a  future
              version but for now if you have the choice choose one of grey or 24 bit colour.

       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 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 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 24 bit colour.

       Capture Width/Height
              As per local devices.

       Keep aspect ratio
              As per local devices.

       Orientation
              As per local devices.

   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
              This option ...

       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.

   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.

              • 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.

       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  AlarmedPixel
              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.

   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.  Once  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 from various views, one of which is to simply tap on the
       filter button in the main web view: [image]

       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 and 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 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

                • Email details of all matches: Sends an email to  the  configured  address  with
                  details about the event.  The email can be customized as per TBD

                • Execute  command on all matches: Allows you to execute any arbitrary command on
                  the matched events

                • Delete all matches: Deletes all the matched events

       • E: Use 'Submit' 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  (http://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

          • %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

          • %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

          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
       [image]

       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.

       For example: [image]

   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:

       • the primary filter processing process in ZoneMinder is a perl file called zmfilter.pl

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

       • in each run, it goes through all the filters which are marked as "Run in Background" and
         if the conditions match performs the specified action

       •

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

                • So  if  you  have  just created a new filter, zmfilter will not see it till the
                  next FILTER_RELOAD_DELAY cycle

                • This is also important if you are using  "relative  times"  like  'now'  -  see
                  Caveat with Relative items

   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]

       • A: Administrative Event options on the event including viewing individual frames

       • B: The actual image stream

       • C: Navigation control

       • D: You can switch between watching a single event or Continuous mode (where it  advances
         to the next event after playback is complete)

       • E: Event progress bar - how much of the current event has been played back

       You  will notice for the first time that alarm images now contain an overlay outlining the
       blobs that represent the alarmed area. This outline is in the colour defined for that zone
       and lets you see what it was that caused the alarm. Clicking on one of the thumbnails will
       take you to a full size window where you can see the image in all its  detail  and  scroll
       through  the  various images that make up the event. If you have the ZM_RECORD_EVENT_STATS
       option on, you will be able to click the 'Stats' link here and get some  analysis  of  the
       cause of the event.

   More details on the Administrative Event options (A)
       Should  you determine that you don't wish to keep the event, clicking on Delete will erase
       it from the database and file system. Returning to the event window,  other  options  here
       are  renaming  the event to something more meaningful, refreshing the window to replay the
       event stream, deleting the event, switching between streamed and  still  versions  of  the
       event (if supported) and generating an MPEG video of the event (if supported).

       These  last  two  options require further explanation. Archiving an event means that it is
       kept to one side and not displayed in the normal event listings  unless  you  specifically
       ask  to  view the archived events. This is useful for keeping events that you think may be
       important or just wish to protect. Once  an  event  is  archived  it  can  be  deleted  or
       unarchived but you cannot accidentally delete it when viewing normal unarchived events.

       The  final  option  of  generating  an  MPEG  video is still somewhat experimental and its
       usefulness may vary. It uses the open source ffmpeg  encoder  to  generate  short  videos,
       which  will  be  downloaded  to  your  browsing machine or viewed in place. When using the
       ffmpeg encoder, ZoneMinder will attempt to match  the  duration  of  the  video  with  the
       duration  of  the event. Ffmpeg has a particularly rich set of options and you can specify
       during configuration which additional options  you  may  wish  to  include  to  suit  your
       preferences.  In  particular  you may need to specify additional, or different, options if
       you are creating videos of events with particularly slow frame rates as some  codecs  only
       support  certain  ranges  of  frame  rates. A common value for FFMPEG_OUTPUT_OPTIONS under
       Options > Images might be '-r 25 -b 800k' for 25 fps  and  800  kbps.   Details  of  these
       options  can  be  found  in the documentation for the encoders and is outside the scope of
       this document.

       Building an MPEG video, especially for a large event, can take some time and should not be
       undertaken  lightly as the effect on your host box of many CPU intensive encoders will not
       be good. However once a video has been created for an event it will be kept so  subsequent
       viewing  will  not  incur  the  generation  overhead.  Videos  can  also  be  included  in
       notification emails, however care should be taken when  using  this  option  as  for  many
       frequent events the penalty in CPU and disk space can quickly mount up.

   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.

   Options - Display
       [image]

       This  option  screen  allows  user  to select the skin for ZoneMinder. Currently available
       skins are:

       • Classic

       • Flat

       • XML (Deprecated in favour of web/API)

       • Mobile (Deprecated)

   Options - System
       [image]

       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 authentication 'remote' user via http. In this case ZoneMinder would use the
       supplied user without additional authentication provided such a  user  is  configured  ion
       ZoneMinder.

       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  password. Although these string are reasonably secure the addition of a random secret
       increases security substantially.

       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.

       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 hae 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 somethign unique to your system.

       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 your are trying  to
       do  a  lot  of events at once. It is recommended that you 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.

       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.

       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.

       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.

       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. This is recommended 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 not
       have  zmaudit  running  unconditionally  and  schedule  occasional  checks  at other, more
       convenient, times.

       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.

       OPT_FRAME_SERVER - In some circumstances it is possible for a slow disk to  take  so  long
       writing images to disk that it causes the analysis daemon to fall behind especially during
       high frame rate events. Setting this option to yes enables a  frame  server  daemon  (zmf)
       which  will  be sent the images from the analysis daemon and will do the actual writing of
       images itself freeing up the analysis daemon to get on  with  other  things.  Should  this
       transmission  fail  or  other  permanent or transient error occur, this function will fall
       back to the analysis daemon.

       FRAME_SOCKET_SIZE - For large captured images it is  possible  for  the  writes  from  the
       analysis  daemon  to  the  frame  server  to  fail as the amount to be written exceeds the
       default buffer size. While the images are then written by the analysis daemon so  no  data
       is  lost, it defeats the object of the frame server daemon in the first place. You can use
       this option to indicate that a larger buffer size should be used. Note that you  may  have
       to  change  the  existing  maximum  socket  buffer  size  on your system via sysctl (or in
       /proc/sys/net/core/wmem_max) to allow this new size  to  be  set.  Alternatively  you  can
       change  the  default buffer size on your system in the same way in which case that will be
       used with no change necessary in this option

       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 - From ZoneMinder version 1.17.0 onwards new versions are expected to be
       more frequent. 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 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.

   Options - Config
       [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.

       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.

       SIGNAL_CHECK_POINTS - For locally attached video cameras ZoneMinder can check  for  signal
       loss  by  looking  at  a  number  of random points on each captured image. If all of these
       points are set to the same fixed colour then the camera is assumed to  have  lost  signal.
       When  this  happens  any open events are closed and a short one frame signal loss event is
       generated, as is another when the signal returns. This option defines how many  points  on
       each  image  to check. Note that this is a maximum, any points found to not have the check
       colour will abort any further checks so in most cases on a couple of points will  actually
       be checked. Network and file based cameras are never checked.

       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.

       CREATE_ANALYSIS_IMAGES - By default during  an  alarm  ZoneMinder  records  both  the  raw
       captured  image  and  one  that  has been analysed and had areas where motion was detected
       outlined. This can be very useful during zone configuration or  in  analysing  why  events
       occurred.  However  it  also  incurs some overhead and in a stable system may no longer be
       necessary. This parameter allows you to switch the generation of these images off.

       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 - Paths
       [image]

       ZM_DIR_EVENTS - This is the path to the events directory where all the  event  images  and
       other  miscellaneous  files  are stored. CAUTION: The directory you specify here cannot be
       outside the web root. This is a common mistake. Most users should never change this value.
       If  you  intend  to record events to a second disk or network share, then you should mount
       the drive or share directly to the ZoneMinder events folder or follow the instructions  in
       the ZoneMinder Wiki titled Using a dedicated Hard Drive.

       USE_DEEP_STORAGE  -  Traditionally  ZoneMinder  stores  all  events  for  a monitor in one
       directory for that monitor. This is simple and efficient except when you have  very  large
       amounts  of  events.  Some  filesystems  are  unable  to  store more than 32k files in one
       directory and even without this limitation, large numbers of files in a directory can slow
       creation  and  deletion  of files. This option allows you to select an alternate method of
       storing events by year/month/day/hour/min/second which has the effect of separating events
       out  into  more directories, resulting in less per directory, and also making it easier to
       manually navigate to any events that may have happened at a particular time or date.

       DIR_IMAGES - ZoneMinder generates a myriad of images, mostly of which are associated  with
       events.  For  those  that aren't this is where they go. CAUTION: The directory you specify
       here cannot be outside the web root. This is a common mistake.  Most  users  should  never
       change  this  value.  If you intend to save images to a second disk or network share, then
       you should mount the drive or share directly to the ZoneMinder images folder or follow the
       instructions in the ZoneMinder Wiki titled Using a dedicated Hard Drive.

       DIR_SOUNDS  -  ZoneMinder can optionally play a sound file when an alarm is detected. This
       indicates where to look for this file. CAUTION: The directory you specify here  cannot  be
       outside the web root. Most users should never change this value.

       PATH_ZMS  -  The  ZoneMinder  streaming server is required to send streamed images to your
       browser. It will be installed into the cgi-bin path  given  at  configuration  time.  This
       option  determines  what  the web path to the server is rather than the local path on your
       machine. Ordinarily the streaming  server  runs  in  parser-header  mode  however  if  you
       experience  problems with streaming you can change this to non-parsed-header (nph) mode by
       changing 'zms' to 'nph-zms'.

       PATH_MAP - ZoneMinder has historically used IPC shared  memory  for  shared  data  between
       processes. This has it's advantages and limitations. This version of ZoneMinder can use an
       alternate method, mapped memory, instead with  can  be  enabled  with  the  --enable--mmap
       directive  to  configure.  This  requires  less system configuration and is generally more
       flexible. However it requires each shared data segment to map onto a filesystem file. This
       option  indicates  where  those  mapped files go. You should ensure that this location has
       sufficient space for these files and for the best performance it should be  a  tmpfs  file
       system  or  ramdisk  otherwise  disk access may render this method slower than the regular
       shared memory one.

       PATH_SOCKS - ZoneMinder generally uses Unix domain sockets where  possible.  This  reduces
       the   need   for  port  assignments  and  prevents  external  applications  from  possibly
       compromising the daemons. However each Unix socket requires a .sock file  to  be  created.
       This option indicates where those socket files go.

       PATH_LOGS  -  There  are  various  daemons  that are used by ZoneMinder to perform various
       tasks. Most generate helpful log files and this is where they go. They can be  deleted  if
       not required for debugging.

       PATH_SWAP  -  Buffered  playback  requires  temporary  swap  images  to be stored for each
       instance of the streaming daemons. This option  determines  where  these  images  will  be
       stored.  The  images  will actually be stored in sub directories beneath this location and
       will be automatically cleaned up after a period of time.

   Options - Web
       [image]

       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.

       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_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.

   Options - Images
       [image]

       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.

       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
       his 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
       http://www.charliemouse.com/code/cambozola/  however if it is not installed  still  images
       at a lower refresh rate can still be viewed.

       PATH_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
       http://www.charliemouse.com/code/cambozola/  however if it is not installed  still  images
       at a lower refresh rate can still be viewed. 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
       [image]

       LOG_LEVEL_SYSLOG - ZoneMinder logging is now more 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 affect 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 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 affect 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 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 affect 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 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 affect 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.

       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_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.

                              ┌───────┬──────────────────────────────────┐
                              │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                │
                              ├───────┼──────────────────────────────────┤
                              │%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.php.

   Options - Upload
       [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_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
       [image]

       There  are now 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. 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 - Phone Bandwidth
       [image]

       WEB_P_CAN_STREAM - Override the automatic detection of browser  streaming  capability.  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
       natively,  'no'  means  that  it  can't  and  so the plugin will be used while 'auto' lets
       ZoneMinder decide.

       WEB_P_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_P_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_P_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_P_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_P_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_P_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_P_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 - eyeZM
       NOTE:
          eyeZM  does not seem to be actively maintained by the developers and does not work with
          later versions of ZoneMinder.
       [image]

       EYEZM_DEBUG - Enable or Disable extra debugging from the  eyeZm  Plugin.  Extra  debugging
       information  will be displayed in it's own file (EYEZM_LOG_TO_FILE is set), or your Apache
       error log

       EYEZM_LOG_TO_FILE - When EYEZM_DEBUG is on and EYEZM_LOG_TO_FILE is on,  output  generated
       from  the  eyeZm Plugin will go to it's own file. Otherwise it will go to the apache error
       log.

       EYEZM_LOG_FILE - Default filename to use when logging eyeZm Output  and  EYEZM_LOG_TO_FILE
       is  enabled.  This  file  will  contain  it's  own  output  from  the  eyeZm  Plugin  when
       EYEZM_LOG_TO_FILE and EYEZM_DEBUG are both enabled.

       EYEZM_EVENT_VCODEC - The eyeZm Plugin calls  FFMPEG  externally  to  encode  the  captured
       images. If your FFMPEG is not built with support for H264, change this to MPEG-4. If using
       H264, please check http://www.eyezm.com for H264 requirements and that your eyeZm  version
       supports H264 (v1.2+).

       EYEZM_FEED_VCODEC  -  Determines  whether  the live stream is generated using native MJPEG
       streaming with ZoneMinder, or H264 using FFMPEG  and  HTML-5  streaming.  If  using  H264,
       please  check  http://www.eyezm.com  for  H264  requirements  and  that your eyeZm version
       supports H264 (v1.2+). This is just a default parameter, and can be overridden with eyeZm.

       EYEZM_H264_DEFAULT_BR - Default bit-rate to use with FFMPEG for H264 streaming. When using
       the eyeZm Plugin to stream H264 data, FFMPEG requires a bitrate to control the quality and
       bandwidth of the video. This should be specified in a format  acceptable  to  FFMPEG.  The
       default  value is sufficient for most installations. This is just a default parameter, and
       can be overridden with eyeZm.

       EYEZM_H264_DEFAULT_EVBR - Default bit-rate to use with FFMPEG for H264 event viewing. When
       using  the  eyeZm  Plugin to view events in H264, FFMPEG requires a bitrate to control the
       quality and bandwidth of the video. This should be specified in  a  format  acceptable  to
       FFMPEG.  The  default  value  is sufficient for most installations. This is just a default
       parameter, and can be overridden with eyeZm.

       EYEZM_H264_TIMEOUT - Timeout (sec) to wait for H264 stream to  start  before  terminating.
       The  eyeZm Plugin will attempt to spawn an H264 stream when requested, and require that it
       complete within the timeout specified. If you have a slow system or find through the  logs
       that  the  H264 stream is not starting because the timeout is expiring, even though FFMPEG
       is running, try increasing this value. If you have a fast system,  decreasing  this  value
       can improve the responsiveness when there are issues starting H264 streams.

       EYEZM_SEG_DURATION  - Segment duration used for streaming using HTTP-5 Streaming protocol.
       The HTTP-5 Live Streaming Protocol segments the input video stream into small chunks of  a
       duration  specified  by  this  parameter.  Increasing  the segment duration will help with
       choppy connections on the other end, but will increase the latency in starting a stream.

   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.

       There are also five values that define the user permissions, these are ‘Stream’, ‘Events’,
       ‘Control’,  ‘Monitors’ and ‘System’ Each can have values of ‘None’, ‘View’ or ‘Edit’ apart
       from ‘Stream’ which has no ‘Edit’ setting. These values  cover  access  to  the  following
       areas;  ‘Stream’  defines  whether a user is allowed to view the ‘live’ video feeds coming
       from the cameras. You may wish to allow a user to view historical  events  only  in  which
       case  this  setting  should  be ‘none’. The ‘Events’ setting determines whether a user can
       view and modify or delete any retained historical events. The ‘Control’ setting allows you
       to  indicate  whether  the  user is able to control any Pan/Tilt/Zoom type cameras you may
       have on your system. The ‘Monitors’ setting specifies whether a user can see  the  current
       monitor  settings  and change them. Finally the ‘System’ setting 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.

       As  well  as these settings there is also a ‘Bandwidth’ setting which can be used to limit
       the maximum bandwidth that a user can view at and a ‘Monitor Ids’ setting that can be used
       for  non-’System’  users  to restrict them to only being able to access streams, events or
       monitors for the given monitors ids as a comma separated list with no spaces.  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.’

   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 and Play Store - websitezmView (limited, free) and zmView Pro (more features, paid)

                • Available in App Store and Play Store, relies on ZM skins 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

       • ZoneMinder also has a "mobile skin" that offers limited functionality (not all views are
         present   in   this    skin).    You    can    point    your     mobile    browser    to
         http://yourzoneminderip/zm/index.php?skin=mobile   and  bookmark  it.  Note however that
         1.29 is the last release that will support the mobile skin. It's use is deprecated

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

       • eyeZM

   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
       ‘/tmp’ though it can be overridden (see the Options  and  Users  section  above).  So  for
       example,  the  zmpkg.pl  script will output messages to /tmp/zmpkg.pl, an example of these
       messages is:

          03/01/06 13:46:00.166046 zmpkg[11148].INF [Command: start]

       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 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.

       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
          }

API

       This document will provide an overview of ZoneMinder's API. This is work in progress.

   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.

   Security
       The  APIs  tie  into ZoneMinder's existing security model. This means if you have OPT_AUTH
       enabled, you need to log into ZoneMinder using the same browser you plan to use  the  APIs
       from.  If  you  are  developing an app that relies on the API, you need to do a POST login
       from the app into ZoneMinder before you can access the API.

       Then, you need to re-use the authentication information of the login (returned  as  cookie
       states)  with  subsequent  APIs  for the authentication information to flow through to the
       APIs.

       This means if you plan to use cuRL to experiment with these APIs, you first need to do

          curl -d "username=XXXX&password=YYYY&action=login&view=console" -c cookies.txt  http://yourzmip/zm/index.php

       replacing XXXX and YYYY with your username and password, respectively.

       Please make sure you do this in a directory where you have  write  permissions,  otherwise
       cookies.txt will not be created and the command will silently  fail.

       What  the  "-c  cookies.txt"  does is store a cookie state reflecting that you have logged
       into ZM. You now need to apply that cookie state to all subsequent APIs. You  do  that  by
       using a '-b cookies.txt' to subsequent APIs if you are using CuRL like so:

          curl -b cookies.txt http://yourzmip/zm/api/monitors.json

       This  would return a list of monitors and pass on the authentication information to the ZM
       API layer.

       So remember, if you are using authentication, please add a -b cookies.txt  to each of  the
       commands  below if you are using CuRL. If you are not using CuRL and writing your own app,
       you need to make sure you pass on cookies to subsequent requests in your app.

   Examples (please read security notice above)
       You will see each URL ending in either .xml or .json.  This is the format of the  request,
       and  it  determines  the  format  that  any data returned to you will be in.  I like json,
       however you can use xml if you'd like.

       (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

   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]:true"

   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

   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/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/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"

   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.

       (Example of changing config TBD)

   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[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 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

       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/daemonCheck.json # 1 = ZM running 0=not running
          curl -XGET  http://server/zm/api/host/getLoad.json # returns current load of ZM
          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) ``

FAQ

       This is the FAQ page. Feel free to contribute any FAQs that you think are missing.

   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,  choose  one  of  the  event
       counts  from  the  console  page,  for  instance  events in the last hour, for one of your
       monitors. Note that this filter is automatically enabled if you do  a  frresh  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 any of your Events  of  any  of  your  monitors.
       This will bring up an event listing and a filter window.

       In  the filter window there is a drop down select box labeled 'Use Filter', that lets your
       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).

       Then click on 'Save' which will bring up  a  new  window.  Make  sure  the  'Automatically
       delete'  box  is  checked  and  press  save to save your filter. This will then run in the
       background to keep your disk within those limits.

       After you've done that, you changes will automatically be loaded into  zmfilter  within  a
       few minutes.

       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  "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 3.  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.

       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 your are trying to do a lot of
       events at once. It is recommended that you 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.

       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 recommended 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 not have zmaudit
       running unconditionally and schedule occasional checks at other, more convenient, times.

       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 Memory = 1.2 * ((image-width*image-height*image buffer size*target color space*number of cameras/8/1024/1024 )

       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 1.2 at the start is basically
       adding 20% on top of the calculation to account for image/stream  overheads  (this  is  an
       estimate)

       So  let's do the math. If we have 4 cameras running at 1280x960 with 32bit color space and
       one camera running at 640x480 with 8bit greyscale color space, the system would require:

       1.2 * ((1280*960*50*32*4/8/1024/1024 )  + (640 *480  *50*8/8 /1024/1024))

       Or, around 900MB 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

       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.

       (Note: Mapped memory is applicable when you install ZoneMinder with mapped memory support,
       which is the default mode. If you have specifically disabled mapped memory then please see
       the next FAQ enty on how to increase shared memory)

       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
          Filesystem                 Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
          /dev/sda1                  226G   96G  119G  45% /
          none                       4.0K     0  4.0K   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
          udev                       1.8G  4.0K  1.8G   1% /dev
          tmpfs                      371M  816K  370M   1% /run
          none                       5.0M     0  5.0M   0% /run/lock
          tmpfs                      2.6G  923M  1.7G  36% /run/shm
          none                       100M     0  100M   0% /run/user

       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 this to go
       beyond 70% you should probaby increase mapped memory

       If you want to increase this limit to 70% of your memory, add the following to  /etc/fstab
       tmpfs /run/shm tmpfs defaults,noexec,nosuid,size=70% 0 0

   What  does  a  'Can't shmget: Invalid argument' error in my logs mean? (and my camera does not
       display at higher resolutions)
       (Note: This is applicable for systems that have mapped memory disabled in  ZoneMinder.  By
       default,  Mapped  memory is enabled and unless you have disabled it manually, please refer
       to the "Math for Memory" question above and how to increase mapped memory limits)

       This error is discussed in the README in the following excerpt:- ''...this is caused by an
       attempt  to  allocate  an amount of shared memory greater than your system can handle. The
       size it requests is based on the following formula, ring buffer size x image width x image
       height x 3 (for 24 bit images) + a bit of overhead.

       So, for example:

          384x288 capture resolution, that makes: 110 592 pixels
          in 24 bit color that's x24 = 2 654 208 bits per frame
          by 80 frames ring buffer x80 = 212 336 640 bits per camera
          by 4 cameras x4 = 849 346 560 bits.
          Plus 10% overhead = 934 281 216 bits
          That's 116 785 152 bytes, and
          = 114 048 kB, respectively 111.38 MB.
          If my shared memory is set to 134 217 728, which is exactly 128MB,
          that means I shouldn't have any problem.
          (Note that 1 byte = 8 bits and 1kbyte = 1024bytes, 1MB = 1024 kB)

       If for instance you were using 24bit 640x480 then this would come to about 92Mb if you are
       using the default buffer size of 100. If this is too large then you can either reduce  the
       image  or  buffer  sizes or increase the maximum amount of shared memory available. If you
       are using RedHat then you can get details on how to change these settings here

       You should be able to use a similar procedure  with  other  distributions  to  modify  the
       shared  memory  pool  without  kernel  recompilations  though  in  some  cases this may be
       necessary. Note, this error also sometimes occurs if you have an old shared memory segment
       lying around from a previous run that is too small. Use the ipcs and ipcrm system commands
       to check and remove it if necessary.'"

       You can often find out how many 4KB shared  memory  pages  are  available  by  typing  the
       following :-

          # cat /proc/sys/kernel/shmall
          2097152

       In  recent  kernels the shmall is set to 2097152 memory pages multiplied by 4096 bytes per
       page for a total of 8 GB of shared memory available.  You only need to increase the shmall
       value  if  you have a computer with more than 8GB of memory and wish to use more of it for
       shared memory usage, such as large databases.

       The most shared memory bytes you can allocate in one go :-

          # cat /proc/sys/kernel/shmmax
          33554432

       In recent kernels the shmmax is set to 33554432 bytes for only 32  MB  of  maximum  shared
       memory  allocatable at a time, hardly enough for ZoneMinder to go above 320 x 240 x 24-bit
       resolution at 40 frames in the buffer if it is using the /dev/shm shared memory device, so
       this  value  needs  to  be  increased.  If you are using ZoneMinder with the memory mapped
       (mmap) compile time option then this doesn't affect you.

       To change the value to 128 MB temporarily during this kernel execution type (for  example)
       :- echo 536870912 >/proc/sys/kernel/shmmax

       Be sure to restart ZoneMinder after this.

       However be aware that sometimes you will only need to change the shmmax value as shmall is
       often large enough. Also changing these values in this way is only  effective  until  your
       machine is rebooted.

       To  change  them  permanently you will need to edit /etc/sysctl.conf and add the following
       lines (for example) :- kernel.shmmax = 536870912

       Or if your distribution has the /etc/sysctl.d/ folder you can create a file in this folder
       without  modifying  the /etc/sysctl.d so you won't lose the changes during distro upgrades
       :- `echo kernel.shmmax = 536870912 >/etc/sysctl.d/60-kernel-shm.conf`

       To load these settings in the sysctl.conf file type: sysctl -p

       To check your shared memory settings type: ipcs -l

       Note that with Megapixel cameras like the Axis 207mw becoming cheaper and more attractive,
       the  above  memory  settings  are  not  adequate.  To  get  Zoneminder working with a full
       1280x1024 resolution camera in full color, increase 134217728 (128 MB)  to,  for  example,
       268435456 (256 MB) and multiple this value by each camera.

       These changes will now also be set the next time your machine is restarted.

       Versions  1.24.x of ZoneMinder also allows you to use an alternate method of shared memory
       allocation, Mmap mapped memory . This requires less configuration and can  be  simpler  to
       use.  Mapped  memory  allows you to use a special type of file as the placeholder for your
       memory and this file is 'mapped' into memory space for easy and fast access.

       To enable mapped memory in ZoneMinder you need add add the  --enable--mmap=yes  switch  to
       your  configure line. By default mapped memory files are created in /dev/shm which on most
       distributions is a dedicated pseudo-partition containing memory formatted as a filesystem.
       If  your  system  uses  a  different  path  then  this  can  be  changed  in ZoneMinder in
       Options->paths->PATH_MAP. It uses a filesystem type called tmpfs. If you type  df  -h  you
       should  see  this  area  and  the size of memory it currently allows. To increase size for
       tmpfs you need to  edit  /etc/default/tmpfs.  Search  for:  SHM_SIZE=128M  and  change  to
       something  like  SHM_SIZE=1G  then  reboot  the  system. You could possibly need to change
       RUN_SIZE, too.

       It is important that you do not use a disk based filesystem for your memory  mapped  files
       as  this  will  cause  memory access to be extremely slow. ZoneMinder creates files called
       .zm.mmap.<monitor id> in the mapped memory filesystem.

       Mapped memory is subject to the same limitations in terms of total memory  as  using  more
       traditional  shared memory but does not require any configuration per allocation or chunk.
       In future versions of ZoneMinder this will be the default shared memory storage method.

       Another good article about shared memory settings can be found here .

       The essential difference was that the kernel.shmall setting is  NOT  in  a  direct  memory
       setting in KB but in pages of memory. it is Max Pages of memory

       For  example:  If you want to allocate a maximum memory setting to 8GB you have to convert
       it to the number of pages (or segments).  with a  page  size  of  4096.   kernel.shmall  =
       8000x1024x1024/4096  kernel.shmall  =  2097152 NOT 8388608000 as would be suggested in the
       RedHat article linked above.

       shmmax is the max amount to allocate in one request - this is is an actual memory size (as
       opposed to pages) set to 4GB kernel.shmmax = 4294967296

       The /etc/sysctl.conf would have these lines

          kernel.shmall = 2097152
          kernel.shmmax = 4294967296</pre>

       As  above,  reload your sysctl.conf with sysctl -p and check that the settings are correct
       with ipcs -l.

   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) however if you believe you have
       sensible settings configured then there are two diagnostic approaches you can use.

       Another user  contributed  illustrated  Zone  definition  guide  can  be  found  here:  An
       illustrated guide to Zones

   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
       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.

       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 pluging 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 directly as  the  ZoneMinder  php  files.  Then  find  the  ZoneMinder
          Options->Images  page  and  enable  ZM_OPT_CAMBOZOLA and enter the web path to the .jar
          file in  ZM_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 Options->Paths->ZM_PATH_ZMS to just use zms if nph-zms is  specified,
          or vice versa. Also check in your apache error logs.

   I  have several monitors configured but when I load the Montage view in FireFox why can I only
       see two? or, Why don't all my cameras display when I use the Montage view in FireFox?
       By default FireFox only supports a small number of  simultaneous  connections.  Using  the
       montage  view usually requires one persistent connection for each camera plus intermittent
       connections for other information such as statuses.

       You will need to increase the number of allowed connections to use the montage  view  with
       more  than  a  small  number of cameras.  Certain FireFox extensions such as FasterFox may
       also help to achieve the same result.

       To resolve this situation, follow the instructions below:

       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

   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  performace  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, ZM_OPT_FRAME_SERVER 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 excel sheet or  this online excel sheet (both are user contributed excel
       sheets)

       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. 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;

   Why does ZM stop recording once I have 32000 events for my monitor?
       Storing more than 32k files in a single folder is a limitation  of  some  filesystems.  To
       avoid this, enable USE_DEEP_STORAGE under Options.

       USE_DEEP_STORAGE  is  now the default for new ZoneMinder systems so this limitation should
       only apply to users upgrading from a previous version of ZoneMinder.

       Versions of ZM from 1.23.0 onwards allow you to have a deeper filesystem with fewer  files
       per  individual directory. As well as not being susceptible to the 32k limit, this is also
       somewhat faster.

       If you have upgraded from a previous version of ZoneMinder and this option is not  already
       enabled,  it  is  very  important  to  follow  the steps below to enable it on an existing
       system. Failure to properly follow these steps WILL RESULT IN LOSS OF YOUR DATA!

          # Stop ZoneMinder
          # Backup your event data and the dB if you have the available storage
          # Enable USE_DEEP_STORAGE under Options.
          # From the command line, run "sudo zmupdate.pl --migrate-events"
          # Monitor the output for any events that fail to convert.
          # After the conversion completes, you can restart ZoneMinder

       Note that you can re-run the migrate-events command if any error messages scroll  off  the
       screen.

       You  can  read  about  the  lack  of  a limit in the number of sub-directories in the ext4
       filesystem at: this link and see what tools may assist in your use of this filesystem here
       If  you  search  for  ext3 or reiserfs on the forums you will find various threads on this
       issue with guidance on how to convert.

   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.

          ./configure CFLAGS="-g -O3 -march=athlon-xp -mtune=athlon-xp" CXXFLAGS="-g -O3 -march=athlon-xp -mtune=athlon-xp"

       The  above  command is optimised for an Athlon XP cpu so you will need to use the specific
       processor tag for your cpu, also the compiler optimisation has been increased to -O3.

       You also need to put in your normal ./configure commands as if you were compiling with out
       this optimisation.

       A further note is that the compile must be performed on the system that Zoneminder will be
       running on as this optimisation will make it hardware specific code.

       Processor specific commands can be found in the GCC manual along with  some  more  options
       that                      may                     increase                     performanc.
       http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/i386-and-x86_002d64-Options.html#i386-and-x86_002d64-Options

       The below command has been used to compile Zoneminder on a Athlon XP system running CentOS
       5.5 and along with the  libjpeg-turbo  modification  to  reduce  the  CPU  load  in  half,
       libjpeg-turbo reduced the load by 1/3 before the processor optimisation.

          ./configure --with-webdir=/var/www/html/zm --with-cgidir=/var/www/cgi-bin CFLAGS="-g -O3 -march=athlon-xp -mtune=athlon-xp" CXXFLAGS="-D__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS -g -O3 -march=athlon-xp -mtune=athlon-xp" --enable-mmap --sysconfdir=/etc/zm

       The following command has been used to compile Zoneminder 1.25 on a CentOS 6.0 system, the
       native command should choose the processor automatically during compile time,  this  needs
       to be performed on the actual system!!.

          CFLAGS="-g -O3 -march=native -mtune=native" CXXFLAGS="-D__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS -g -O3 -march=native -mtune=native" ./configure  --with-webdir=/var/www/html/zm --with-cgidir=/var/www/cgi-bin --with-webuser=apache --with-webgroup=apache ZM_DB_HOST=localhost ZM_DB_NAME=zm ZM_DB_USER=your_zm_user ZM_DB_PASS=your_zm_password ZM_SSL_LIB=openssl

   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   on   the   Zoneminder   wiki   here:
       http://www.zoneminder.com/wiki/index.php/FAQ#How_much_Hard_Disk_Space_.2F_Bandwidth_do_I_need_for_ZM.3F

   Building ZoneMinder
   When running configure I am getting a lot of messages about not  being  able  to  compile  the
       ffmpeg libraries
       If you see output from configure that looks like this

          checking libavcodec/avcodec.h usability... no
          checking libavcodec/avcodec.h presence... yes
          configure: WARNING: libavcodec/avcodec.h: present but cannot be compiled
          configure: WARNING: libavcodec/avcodec.h:     check for missing
          prerequisite headers?
          configure: WARNING: libavcodec/avcodec.h: see the Autoconf documentation
          configure: WARNING: libavcodec/avcodec.h:     section "Present But
          Cannot Be Compiled"
          configure: WARNING: libavcodec/avcodec.h: proceeding with the compiler's
          result
          configure: WARNING:     ## ------------------------------------- ##
          configure: WARNING:     ## Report this to support@zoneminder.com ##
          configure: WARNING:     ## ------------------------------------- ##</pre>

       then it is caused not by the ZoneMinder build system but ffmpeg itself. However there is a
       workaround you can use which is to add CPPFLAGS=-D__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS

       to the ZoneMinder ./configure command which should solve the issue. However this is not  a
       proper 'fix' as such, which can only come from the ffmpeg project itself.

   I cannot build ZoneMinder and am getting lots of undefined C++ template errors
       This  is  almost  certainly  due  to  the  'ccache'  package  which  attempts  to speed up
       compilation by caching compiled objects. Unfortunately one of the side effects is that  it
       breaks  the GNU g++ template resolution method that ZoneMinder uses in building by prevent
       files getting recompiled. The simplest way around this is to  remove  the  ccache  package
       using your distros package manager.

   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,
       perldoc  ZoneMinder::SharedMem  etc.   Below is an example script that checks all monitors
       for alarms and when one occurs, prints a message to the screen. You can add  in  your  own
       code to make this reaction a little more useful.

          #!/usr/bin/perl -w

          use strict;

          use ZoneMinder;

          $| = 1;

          zmDbgInit( "myscript", level=>0, to_log=>0, to_syslog=>0, to_term=>1 );

          my $dbh = DBI->connect( "DBI:mysql:database=".ZM_DB_NAME.";host=".ZM_DB_HOST, ZM_DB_USER, ZM_DB_PASS );

          my $sql = "select M.*, max(E.Id) as LastEventId from Monitors as M left join Events as E on M.Id = E.MonitorId where M.Function != 'None' group by (M.Id)";
          my $sth = $dbh->prepare_cached( $sql ) or die( "Can't prepare '$sql': ".$dbh->errstr() );

          my $res = $sth->execute() or die( "Can't execute '$sql': ".$sth->errstr() );
          my @monitors;
          while ( my $monitor = $sth->fetchrow_hashref() )
          {
              push( @monitors, $monitor );
          }

          while( 1 )
          {
              foreach my $monitor ( @monitors )
              {
                  next if ( !zmMemVerify( $monitor ) );

                  if ( my $last_event_id = zmHasAlarmed( $monitor, $monitor->{LastEventId} ) )
                  {
                      $monitor->{LastEventId} = $last_event_id;
                      print( "Monitor ".$monitor->{Name}." has alarmed\n" );
                      #
                      # Do your stuff here
                      #
                  }
              }
              sleep( 1 );
          }

   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 /tmp directory.

       The ZoneMinder logs for the RPM packages are located in /var/log/zm.

       Depending on your problem errors can show up in any of these logs but, usually the logs of
       interest are zmdc.log and zmpkg.log if ZM is not able to start.

       Now 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].

       More verbose logging for the ZoneMinder binaries is available by enabling the debug option
       from  the  control  panel and will be placed in the path you have configured for the debug
       logs. Output can be limited to a specific binary as described in the  Debug  options  page
       under the "?" marks.

   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: http://www.zoneminder.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=48754#48754

   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:
       http://www.zoneminder.com/forums/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.

   I am getting messages about a backtrace in my logs, what do I do?
       If you are seeing entries in your log like the following

          Jan 11 20:25:22 localhost zma_m2[19051]: ERR [Backtrace: /lib64/libc.so.6 [0x3347230210]]
          Jan 11 20:25:22 localhost zma_m2[19051]: ERR [Backtrace: /lib64/libc.so.6(memset+0xce) [0x334727684e]]
          Jan 11 20:25:22 localhost zma_m2[19051]: ERR [Backtrace: /usr/local/bin/zma [0x40ee9a]]
          Jan 11 20:25:22 localhost zma_m2[19051]: ERR [Backtrace: /usr/local/bin/zma [0x419946]]
          Jan 11 20:25:22 localhost zma_m2[19051]: ERR [Backtrace: /usr/local/bin/zma [0x4213cf]]
          Jan 11 20:25:22 localhost zma_m2[19051]: ERR [Backtrace: /usr/local/bin/zma(cos+0x35c) [0x404674]]
          Jan 11 20:25:22 localhost zma_m2[19051]: ERR [Backtrace: /lib64/libc.so.6(__libc_start_main+0xf4) [0x334721da44]]
          Jan 11 20:25:22 localhost zma_m2[19051]: ERR [Backtrace: /usr/local/bin/zma(cos+0xd1) [0x4043e9]]
          Jan 11 20:25:22 localhost zma_m2[19051]: INF [Backtrace complete]</pre>

       then you can help diagnose the problem by running a special command to translate  the  hex
       addresses into helpful information. This command is called addr2line and you can type 'man
       addr2line' for more information.  Basically addr2line takes two sets  of  parameters,  the
       first is the name of the binary file, and the second is a list of addresses. Both of these
       pieces of information are displayed in the logs. The filename is the first part after  the
       'Backtrace:' tag, in this case /usr/local/bin/zma, though it may well be different in your
       case. Some of the lines refer to libraries rather than the zma executable but those can be
       ignored for now, the important part is noting which ZM binary is involved. The binary file
       is passed in following the -e flag. The addresses to pass to addr2line are those contained
       in  the '[]' pairs. Again you can ignore those that are on a line that refers to a library
       but it will not hurt if you include them.  So in the example above, the command  would  be
       addr2line  -e  /usr/local/bin/zma 0x40ee9a 0x419946 0x4213cf 0x404674 0x4043e9 This should
       then dump out a more symbolic list containing source file names and line numbers,  and  it
       is  this  information  which  will be helpful if posted to the forums. Sometimes addr2line
       fails to produce useful output. This is usually because either the problem  is  so  severe
       that  it has corrupted the stack and prevented useful information from being displayed, or
       that you have either compiled ZM without the -g flag for debug, or you have  stripped  the
       binaries  of  symbol  information  after  installation.  This  this case you would need to
       rebuild temporarily with debug enabled for the information to be useful.

       This error some times happens when a linked camera looses its link or it is  corrupted  by
       the user or some other system event, try deleting the affected cameras and recreating them
       in the Zoneminder console.

   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 possibilties (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  http://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
       http://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.

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, the following resources are available

       userguide/index
              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.

       • genindex

       • modindex

       • search

AUTHOR

       https://github.com/ZoneMinder/ZoneMinder/graphs/contributors

COPYRIGHT

       2014, https://github.com/ZoneMinder/ZoneMinder/graphs/contributors

                                          April 05, 2016                            ZONEMINDER(1)