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Report features if you think something is missing, and should be added to Kerberos.io, we love to hear about your ideas.
In this thread you can find a list of cameras that users confirmed working properly. Do you have a working camera missing from this list? Report your camera here.
As burglary is very common, we believe that video surveillance is a trivial tool in our daily lifes which helps us to feel a little bit more secure. Responding to this need, a lot of companies have started developing their own video surveillance software in the past few years.
Nowadays we have a myriad of expensive cameras, recorders, and software solutions which are mainly outdated and difficult to install and use. Kerberos.io's goal is to solve these problems and to provide every human being in this world to have their own ecological, affordable, easy-to-use and innovative surveillance solution.
Kerberos.io is a low-budget video surveillance solution, that uses computer vision algorithms to detect changes, and that can trigger other devices. Kerberos.io is open source so everyone can customize the source code to their needs and share it with the community under the CC-NC-ND license model. When deployed on the Raspberry Pi, it has a green footprint and it's easy to install; you only need to transfer the Kerberos.io OS (KIOS) to your SD card and that's it.
Use your mobile phone, tablet or PC to keep an eye on your property. View the images taken by Kerberos.io with our responsive and user-friendly web interface. Look at the dashboard to get a graphical overview of the past days. Multiple Kerberos.io instances can be installed and can be viewed with only 1 web interface.
The machinery is responsible for the processing. It's an image processing framework which takes images from the type of camera (USB-, IP- or RPi-camera) you've configured in the configuration files and executes one or more algorithms and post-processes (e.g. save a snapshot). The configuration files allow you to define the type of camera, post-processes, conditions and much more; it's highly configurable. It's important to note that the machinery, out-of-the-box, can handle only one camera at a time; more information can be found on the documentation website.
Developers can easily add new:
- Algorithms to detect motion, by using the OpenCV library.
- Create new heuristics to validate if detection was real.
- Integrate support for other output devices (a NOSQL database, E-mail, GPIO, TCP server and other notification services)
The machinery is an image processing framework which is devided into four steps:
- condition
- algorithm
- expositor
- heuristic
The steps belong to a four passway; illustrated on the image below. In each cycle a sequence of images is processed. Each step will process the sequence, and will return some result to the next step. Please check out the demo environment if you want to see a real life example.
The reason why you're reading this paragraph is because you want to know how to install the machinery on your Raspberry Pi, local working station, server or whatever machine you prefer. The good news is that we have different approaches from basic to advanced; it depends on how you want to install it.
KiOS is a custom linux OS (created by buildroot) which runs Kerberos.io out-of-the-box (it contains both the machinery and the web). KiOS is installed like every other OS for the Raspberry Pi, you need to flash the OS (.img) to a SD card, update your network configuration and you're up and running; no manual compilation or horrible configurations. This is the most simple and basic installation procedure.
If you already have a Raspberry Pi running with Raspbian, you probably don't want to reflash your SD-card. Therefore you can install the different parts of Kerberos.io (the machinery and the web) manual.
Kerberos.io can also be installed on other boards, which run the Armbian OS.
If you want to install the machinery on your working station, than you'll need to compile the source code yourself; it's a little bit more work.
Update the packages and kernel.
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade
Install development tools (c++, cmake) and V4L utils.
sudo apt-get install git libav-tools cmake subversion dh-autoreconf libcurl4-openssl-dev
Go to home directory and pull the machinery from github.
cd && sudo git clone https://github.com/kerberos-io/machinery
Compile the machinery; this can take some time.
cd machinery && mkdir build && cd build
cmake .. && make && make check && sudo make install
Start the machinery on start-up, and reboot the system.
sudo systemctl enable kerberosio
sudo reboot
The configuration files can be found at /etc/opt/kerberosio/config. By default the Raspberry Pi Camera module is set as capture device. You can update the config.xml file to change it to USBCamera or IPCamera. Images are stored in the /etc/opt/kerberosio/capture directory; this location can be changed by editing the io.xml file.
After kerberos is installed a binary is available at /usr/bin/kerberosio. Just run following command in your terminal to start kerberosio.
kerberosio
Want to contribute? You're a Ph.D. in Computer Vision, or an ambitious programmer who wants to take kerberos.io to the next level? Then we like to welcome you to the community. Contributions are taken very seriously, besides your code, testing and documentation is very very ... very important! We only will accept pull-request with tests and documentation of a decent level and of course if everything works as expected.