-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 8
MJPEG stream
Thomas T. Jarløv edited this page Aug 8, 2018
·
6 revisions
This tutorial has to be done manually on a device. This example will use a Raspberry Pi 3.
-
You need to have a USB camera plugged into your RPi. This could be a Sony PS3.
-
You need
ffmpeg
to create the stream:
On most systems you can install it directly with your package manager
Open sources:
sudo nano /etc/apt/sources.list
Append the following to the bottom of file:
deb http://ftp.debian.org/debian jessie-backports main
gpg --keyserver pgpkeys.mit.edu --recv-key 7638D0442B90D010
gpg -a --export 7638D0442B90D010 | sudo apt-key add -
sudo apt update
sudo apt install ffmpeg
You have to update the ffserver's configuration file.
Backup the original config and create a new
sudo mv /etc/ffserver.conf /etc/ffserver.conf.bak
sudo nano /etc/ffserver.conf
Insert the following data
HTTPPort 9090
HTTPBindAddress 0.0.0.0
MaxHTTPConnections 2000
MaxClients 1000
MaxBandwidth 100000
#NoDaemon
<Feed feed1.ffm>
File /tmp/feed1.ffm
FileMaxSize 200K
ACL allow 127.0.0.1
</Feed>
<Stream test.mjpeg>
Feed feed1.ffm
Format mpjpeg
VideoFrameRate 15
VideoIntraOnly
VideoBitRate 4096
VideoBufferSize 4096
VideoSize 640x480
VideoQMin 5
VideoQMax 51
NoAudio
Strict -1
</Stream>
<Stream stat.html>
Format status
# Only allow local people to get the status
ACL allow localhost
ACL allow 192.168.0.0 192.168.255.255
</Stream>
Run the following and you should see your camera:
lsusb
If you can see your camera, identify the video device with:
ls -ltrh /dev/video*
ffserver -f /etc/ffserver.conf & ffmpeg -r 15 -s 640x480 -f video4linux2 -i /dev/video0 http://127.0.0.1:9090/feed1.ffm
Go to http://lan-ip-or-127:9090/test.mjpeg
- Home
- Requirements
- Install NimHA
- Optional
- Modules
- Tutorials (helpers, etc.)
- Development