# ipcam_motion_worker.sh One worker per camera. ## Usage ``` ipcam_motion_worker.sh [-v] [--allow-multiple] -c ~/.config/ipcam_motion_worker/1.txt ``` ## Configuration Local worker config example: ``` api_url=http://ip:port camera=1 ``` Remote worker config example: ``` remote=1 api_url=http://ip:port camera=1 fs_root=/var/ipcam_motion_fs fs_max_filesize=146800640 ``` Optional fields (dvr-scan options): ``` roi_file=roi.txt threshold=1 min_event_length=3s downscale_factor=3 frame_skip=2 dvr_scan_path= ``` `api_url` must point to `ipcam_server` instance. `/var/ipcam_motion_fs` should be a tmpfs mountpoint. Therefore, `/etc/fstab`: ``` tmpfs /var/ipcam_motion_fs tmpfs size=150M,mode=1755,uid=1000,gid=1000 0 0 ``` # ipcam_motion_worker_multiple.sh This script just consequentially runs `ipcam_motion_worker.sh` with `-c ~/.config/ipcam_motion_worker/$NAME.txt` argument. ## Usage ``` ipcam_worker_worker_multiple.sh -v NAME NAME NAME ... ``` When launching by cron, set `TERM=xterm` and `PATH` (to your `$PATH`) variables in crontab. # Dependencies ``` apt-get install python3-opencv pip3 install dvr-scan ``` Then add to `~/.local/bin` to `$PATH`.