retina
moonfire-nvr
retina | moonfire-nvr | |
---|---|---|
4 | 31 | |
208 | 1,114 | |
- | - | |
7.6 | 8.6 | |
9 days ago | 14 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
retina
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S p a m m y s y s C a l l s in strace dumps
Yeah, excellent description of why the volume is so high, and when you're tracing a multithreaded one there's the additional noise from the way they're interleaved.
Besides filtering, I forgot to mention that some kind of aggregation/summary. strace flags are useful; even better to write a little program with eBPF (on Linux) or DTrace (on macOS/BSD/Solaris). I like being able to do stuff like this: https://github.com/scottlamb/retina/issues/5#issue-933945792
- Managing and using ONVIF IP cameras with Linux
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Async cancellation: a case study of pub-sub in mini-redis
I suspected exactly that in this issue in one of my libraries, but when I actually looked with strace, I didn't see many syscalls returning EWOULDBLOCK. So then after that measurement, my new theory was that e.g. tokio::net::{Udp,Tcp}Socket would skip actually issuing the syscall if the mio layer hasn't returned availability since the last poll. Not true? Maybe I need to run my experiment again...
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What's everyone working on this week (23/2021)?
I'm plugging my new RTSP library retina into moonfire-nvr. But progress may be slow this week due to family obligations.
moonfire-nvr
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Mock Service Worker(msw) releases 2.0
How do folks test timing-related stuff with MSW? AFAIK, MSW doesn't get along with jest.useFakeTimers. It drives me nuts; I have a bunch of disabled tests in an open-source project and at least one that is flaky because it uses real timers where I'd like to be using fake timers. [1, 2]
I've been thinking about ripping out MSW from my tests in favor of my own API-level mock for this reason. But it seems like many other folks are happy with MSW. I have to assume there's something I'm not getting. I'm a fish out of water with frontend stuff in general...
[1] https://github.com/scottlamb/moonfire-nvr/blob/5ea5d27908f1a...
[2] https://github.com/scottlamb/moonfire-nvr/blob/5ea5d27908f1a...
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Alternative open firmware for your IP camera
> I wonder how hard it would be to run your own streamer pipeline or whatnot on these things?
Agree with the_biot: The actual streaming component is not too hard. If this were the biggest problem, I'd be thrilled to contribute to an open source streaming server to complement my open source NVR. [1] The driver situation is indeed a bit harder—these things don't just have mainline Linux support with v4l2 for the video input and encoder. Or open source drivers of any kind to crib from AFAIK.
The biggest problem IMHO is that there just aren't any good cameras to buy, even completely ignoring the software aspect. I want a camera that:
1. doesn't support genocide. Nothing that involves Dahua, Hikvision, or Huawei. See IPVM articles on the subject. And a lot of available cameras are relabeled Dahua/Hikvision stuff and/or use Huawei components.
2. is legal for sale / authorized for use in the US. (See the Secure Equipment Act of 2021.)
3. has good night mode performance: IR/day switch, a sensor that is at least 1/1.8", reasonable resolution (somewhere from HD to 4k).
4. has an "eyeball" or "turret" form factor rather than "bullet". The latter seems to really attract spiders, so you end up with a really nice video of a web...
5. supports PoE.
6. is weatherized (IP66 or so).
7. is reasonably priced.
If you ignore #1 and #2, there's some nice hardware out there, but I'm not willing to do that. If you ignore #3, there are a few options (GeoVision, maybe Reolink, maybe Hanwha.) If you ignore #4 and #7, there might be a couple (Axis, maybe Hanwha.) Nothing that ticks all the boxes.
Hard to get excited about investing a lot in the software when the hardware isn't there.
[1] https://github.com/scottlamb/moonfire-nvr
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NVR in Rust
saw one nvr project in rust - https://github.com/scottlamb/moonfire-nvr - maybe you can find answer there
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IP Camera stream - simple recording - no resize/detection/etc - is it possible?
Moonfire NVR does basically that. No decoding at all. The configuration process could be smoother, but there's a decent setup guide to follow.
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Surveillance system, how low can you go?
This is exactly what you're looking for: https://github.com/scottlamb/moonfire-nvr
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Installing Rust in a Raspberry Pi 3A+
But I would definitely avoid compiling Rust on the Raspberry Pi 3 if you can avoid it. I set up a Docker cross-compile environment for this reason.
- Self Hosted CCTV/Home Security
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NVR Suggestions & Experience...Any decent alternatives for MotionEye?
Moonfire may be what you're looking for otherwise.
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What's everyone working on this week (50/2022)?
That last bit's not quite true: another option is to just use the cameras as a dumb stream source and do all the fanciness in an open source NVR. I've been slowly working on moonfire-nvr. Help welcome!
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surveillance station
Moonfire
What are some alternatives?
neolink - An RTSP bridge to Reolink IP cameras
Shinobi - :peace_symbol: :palestinian_territories: Shinobi CE - The Free Open Source CCTV platform written in Node.JS (Camera Recorder - Security Surveillance Software - Restreamer
aboba - Yet another audio book player (mobile friendly)
frigate - NVR with realtime local object detection for IP cameras
tiny-tokio-actor - A simple tiny actor library on top of Tokio
motioneyeos - A Video Surveillance OS For Single-board Computers
gdbstub - An ergonomic, featureful, and easy-to-integrate implementation of the GDB Remote Serial Protocol in Rust (with no-compromises #![no_std] support)
viseron - Self-hosted, local only NVR and AI Computer Vision software. With features such as object detection, motion detection, face recognition and more, it gives you the power to keep an eye on your home, office or any other place you want to monitor.
artillery - Fire-forged cluster management & Distributed data protocol
jupyter-rust - a docker container for jupyter notebooks for rust
diesel - A safe, extensible ORM and Query Builder for Rust