2020-03-02 01:53:41 -05:00
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-- This file is part of Moonfire NVR, a security camera network video recorder.
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-- Copyright (C) 2016 The Moonfire NVR Authors
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2019-07-11 11:07:40 -04:00
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--
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-- This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
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-- it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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-- the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
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-- (at your option) any later version.
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--
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-- In addition, as a special exception, the copyright holders give
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-- permission to link the code of portions of this program with the
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-- OpenSSL library under certain conditions as described in each
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-- individual source file, and distribute linked combinations including
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-- the two.
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--
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-- You must obey the GNU General Public License in all respects for all
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-- of the code used other than OpenSSL. If you modify file(s) with this
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-- exception, you may extend this exception to your version of the
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-- file(s), but you are not obligated to do so. If you do not wish to do
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-- so, delete this exception statement from your version. If you delete
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-- this exception statement from all source files in the program, then
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-- also delete it here.
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--
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-- This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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-- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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-- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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-- GNU General Public License for more details.
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--
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-- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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-- along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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--
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-- schema.sql: SQLite3 database schema for Moonfire NVR.
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-- See also design/schema.md.
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-- Database metadata. There should be exactly one row in this table.
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create table meta (
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uuid blob not null check (length(uuid) = 16)
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);
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-- This table tracks the schema version.
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-- There is one row for the initial database creation (inserted below, after the
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-- create statements) and one for each upgrade procedure (if any).
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create table version (
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id integer primary key,
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-- The unix time as of the creation/upgrade, as determined by
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-- cast(strftime('%s', 'now') as int).
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unix_time integer not null,
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-- Optional notes on the creation/upgrade; could include the binary version.
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notes text
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);
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-- Tracks every time the database has been opened in read/write mode.
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-- This is used to ensure directories are in sync with the database (see
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-- schema.proto:DirMeta), to disambiguate uncommitted recordings, and
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-- potentially to understand time problems.
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create table open (
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id integer primary key,
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uuid blob unique not null check (length(uuid) = 16),
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-- Information about when / how long the database was open. These may be all
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-- null, for example in the open that represents all information written
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-- prior to database version 3.
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-- System time when the database was opened, in 90 kHz units since
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-- 1970-01-01 00:00:00Z excluding leap seconds.
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start_time_90k integer,
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-- System time when the database was closed or (on crash) last flushed.
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end_time_90k integer,
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-- How long the database was open. This is end_time_90k - start_time_90k if
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-- there were no time steps or leap seconds during this time.
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duration_90k integer
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);
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create table sample_file_dir (
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id integer primary key,
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path text unique not null,
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uuid blob unique not null check (length(uuid) = 16),
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-- The last (read/write) open of this directory which fully completed.
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-- See schema.proto:DirMeta for a more complete description.
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last_complete_open_id integer references open (id)
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);
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create table camera (
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id integer primary key,
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uuid blob unique not null check (length(uuid) = 16),
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-- A short name of the camera, used in log messages.
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short_name text not null,
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-- A short description of the camera.
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description text,
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-- The host (or IP address) to use in rtsp:// URLs when accessing the camera.
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host text,
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-- The username to use when accessing the camera.
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-- If empty, no username or password will be supplied.
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username text,
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-- The password to use when accessing the camera.
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password text
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);
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create table stream (
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id integer primary key,
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camera_id integer not null references camera (id),
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sample_file_dir_id integer references sample_file_dir (id),
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type text not null check (type in ('main', 'sub')),
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-- If record is true, the stream should start recording when moonfire
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-- starts. If false, no new recordings will be made, but old recordings
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-- will not be deleted.
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record integer not null check (record in (1, 0)),
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-- The path (starting with "/") to use in rtsp:// URLs to for this stream.
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rtsp_path text not null,
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-- The number of bytes of video to retain, excluding the currently-recording
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-- file. Older files will be deleted as necessary to stay within this limit.
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retain_bytes integer not null check (retain_bytes >= 0),
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-- Flush the database when the first instant of completed recording is this
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-- many seconds old. A value of 0 means that every completed recording will
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-- cause an immediate flush. Higher values may allow flushes to be combined,
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-- reducing SSD write cycles. For example, if all streams have a flush_if_sec
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-- >= x sec, there will be:
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--
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-- * at most one flush per x sec in total
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-- * at most x sec of completed but unflushed recordings per stream.
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-- * at most x completed but unflushed recordings per stream, in the worst
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-- case where a recording instantly fails, waits the 1-second retry delay,
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-- then fails again, forever.
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flush_if_sec integer not null,
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-- The low 32 bits of the next recording id to assign for this stream.
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-- Typically this is the maximum current recording + 1, but it does
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-- not decrease if that recording is deleted.
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next_recording_id integer not null check (next_recording_id >= 0),
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unique (camera_id, type)
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);
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-- Each row represents a single completed recorded segment of video.
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-- Recordings are typically ~60 seconds; never more than 5 minutes.
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create table recording (
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-- The high 32 bits of composite_id are taken from the stream's id, which
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-- improves locality. The low 32 bits are taken from the stream's
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-- next_recording_id (which should be post-incremented in the same
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-- transaction). It'd be simpler to use a "without rowid" table and separate
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-- fields to make up the primary key, but
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-- <https://www.sqlite.org/withoutrowid.html> points out that "without rowid"
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-- is not appropriate when the average row size is in excess of 50 bytes.
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-- recording_cover rows (which match this id format) are typically 1--5 KiB.
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composite_id integer primary key,
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-- The open in which this was committed to the database. For a given
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-- composite_id, only one recording will ever be committed to the database,
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-- but in-memory state may reflect a recording which never gets committed.
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-- This field allows disambiguation in etags and such.
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open_id integer not null references open (id),
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-- This field is redundant with id above, but used to enforce the reference
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-- constraint and to structure the recording_start_time index.
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stream_id integer not null references stream (id),
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-- The offset of this recording within a run. 0 means this was the first
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-- recording made from a RTSP session. The start of the run has id
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-- (id-run_offset).
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run_offset integer not null,
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-- flags is a bitmask:
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--
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-- * 1, or "trailing zero", indicates that this recording is the last in a
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-- stream. As the duration of a sample is not known until the next sample
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-- is received, the final sample in this recording will have duration 0.
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flags integer not null,
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sample_file_bytes integer not null check (sample_file_bytes > 0),
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-- The starting time of the recording, in 90 kHz units since
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-- 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC excluding leap seconds. Currently on initial
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-- connection, this is taken from the local system time; on subsequent
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-- recordings, it exactly matches the previous recording's end time.
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start_time_90k integer not null check (start_time_90k > 0),
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-- The duration of the recording, in 90 kHz units.
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duration_90k integer not null
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check (duration_90k >= 0 and duration_90k < 5*60*90000),
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video_samples integer not null check (video_samples > 0),
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video_sync_samples integer not null check (video_sync_samples > 0),
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video_sample_entry_id integer references video_sample_entry (id),
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check (composite_id >> 32 = stream_id)
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);
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create index recording_cover on recording (
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-- Typical queries use "where stream_id = ? order by start_time_90k".
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stream_id,
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start_time_90k,
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-- These fields are not used for ordering; they cover most queries so
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-- that only database verification and actual viewing of recordings need
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-- to consult the underlying row.
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open_id,
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duration_90k,
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video_samples,
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video_sync_samples,
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video_sample_entry_id,
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sample_file_bytes,
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run_offset,
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flags
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);
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-- Fields which are only needed to check/correct database integrity problems
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-- (such as incorrect timestamps).
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create table recording_integrity (
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-- See description on recording table.
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composite_id integer primary key references recording (composite_id),
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-- The number of 90 kHz units the local system's monotonic clock has
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-- advanced more than the stated duration of recordings in a run since the
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-- first recording ended. Negative numbers indicate the local system time is
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-- behind the recording.
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--
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-- The first recording of a run (that is, one with run_offset=0) has null
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-- local_time_delta_90k because errors are assumed to
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-- be the result of initial buffering rather than frequency mismatch.
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--
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-- This value should be near 0 even on long runs in which the camera's clock
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-- and local system's clock frequency differ because each recording's delta
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-- is used to correct the durations of the next (up to 500 ppm error).
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local_time_delta_90k integer,
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-- The number of 90 kHz units the local system's monotonic clock had
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-- advanced since the database was opened, as of the start of recording.
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-- TODO: fill this in!
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local_time_since_open_90k integer,
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-- The difference between start_time_90k+duration_90k and a wall clock
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-- timestamp captured at end of this recording. This is meaningful for all
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-- recordings in a run, even the initial one (run_offset=0), because
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-- start_time_90k is derived from the wall time as of when recording
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-- starts, not when it ends.
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-- TODO: fill this in!
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wall_time_delta_90k integer,
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-- The sha1 hash of the contents of the sample file.
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sample_file_sha1 blob check (length(sample_file_sha1) <= 20)
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);
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-- Large fields for a recording which are needed ony for playback.
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-- In particular, when serving a byte range within a .mp4 file, the
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-- recording_playback row is needed for the recording(s) corresponding to that
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-- particular byte range, needed, but the recording rows suffice for all other
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-- recordings in the .mp4.
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create table recording_playback (
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-- See description on recording table.
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composite_id integer primary key references recording (composite_id),
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-- See design/schema.md#video_index for a description of this field.
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video_index blob not null check (length(video_index) > 0)
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-- audio_index could be added here in the future.
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);
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-- Files which are to be deleted (may or may not still exist).
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-- Note that besides these files, for each stream, any recordings >= its
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-- next_recording_id should be discarded on startup.
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create table garbage (
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-- This is _mostly_ redundant with composite_id, which contains the stream
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-- id and thus a linkage to the sample file directory. Listing it here
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-- explicitly means that streams can be deleted without losing the
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-- association of garbage to directory.
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sample_file_dir_id integer not null references sample_file_dir (id),
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-- See description on recording table.
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composite_id integer not null,
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-- Organize the table first by directory, as that's how it will be queried.
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primary key (sample_file_dir_id, composite_id)
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) without rowid;
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-- A concrete box derived from a ISO/IEC 14496-12 section 8.5.2
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-- VisualSampleEntry box. Describes the codec, width, height, etc.
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create table video_sample_entry (
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id integer primary key,
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-- A SHA-1 hash of |bytes|.
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sha1 blob unique not null check (length(sha1) = 20),
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-- The width and height in pixels; must match values within
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-- |sample_entry_bytes|.
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width integer not null check (width > 0),
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height integer not null check (height > 0),
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-- The codec in RFC-6381 format, such as "avc1.4d001f".
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rfc6381_codec text not null,
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-- The serialized box, including the leading length and box type (avcC in
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-- the case of H.264).
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data blob not null check (length(data) > 86)
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);
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create table user (
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id integer primary key,
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username unique not null,
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-- Bitwise mask of flags:
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-- 1: disabled. If set, no method of authentication for this user will succeed.
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flags integer not null,
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-- If set, a hash for password authentication, as generated by `libpasta::hash_password`.
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password_hash text,
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-- A counter which increments with every password reset or clear.
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password_id integer not null default 0,
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-- Updated lazily on database flush; reset when password_id is incremented.
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-- This could be used to automatically disable the password on hitting a threshold.
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password_failure_count integer not null default 0,
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-- If set, a Unix UID that is accepted for authentication when using HTTP over
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-- a Unix domain socket. (Additionally, the UID running Moonfire NVR can authenticate
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-- as anyone; there's no point in trying to do otherwise.) This might be an easy
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-- bootstrap method once configuration happens through a web UI rather than text UI.
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unix_uid integer
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);
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-- A single session, whether for browser or robot use.
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-- These map at the HTTP layer to an "s" cookie (exact format described
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-- elsewhere), which holds the session id and an encrypted sequence number for
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-- replay protection.
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create table user_session (
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-- The session id is a 48-byte blob. This is the unencoded, unsalted Blake2b-192
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-- (24 bytes) of the unencoded session id. Much like `password_hash`, a
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-- hash is used here so that a leaked database backup can't be trivially used
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-- to steal credentials.
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session_id_hash blob primary key not null,
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user_id integer references user (id) not null,
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-- A 32-byte random number. Used to derive keys for the replay protection
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-- and CSRF tokens.
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seed blob not null,
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-- A bitwise mask of flags, currently all properties of the HTTP cookie
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-- used to hold the session:
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-- 1: HttpOnly
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-- 2: Secure
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-- 4: SameSite=Lax
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-- 8: SameSite=Strict - 4 must also be set.
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flags integer not null,
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-- The domain of the HTTP cookie used to store this session. The outbound
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-- `Set-Cookie` header never specifies a scope, so this matches the `Host:` of
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-- the inbound HTTP request (minus the :port, if any was specified).
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domain text,
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-- An editable description which might describe the device/program which uses
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-- this session, such as "Chromebook", "iPhone", or "motion detection worker".
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description text,
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creation_password_id integer, -- the id it was created from, if created via password
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creation_time_sec integer not null, -- sec since epoch
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creation_user_agent text, -- User-Agent header from inbound HTTP request.
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creation_peer_addr blob, -- IPv4 or IPv6 address, or null for Unix socket.
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revocation_time_sec integer, -- sec since epoch
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revocation_user_agent text, -- User-Agent header from inbound HTTP request.
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revocation_peer_addr blob, -- IPv4 or IPv6 address, or null for Unix socket/no peer.
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-- A value indicating the reason for revocation, with optional additional
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-- text detail. Enumeration values:
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-- 0: logout link clicked (i.e. from within the session itself)
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--
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-- This might be extended for a variety of other reasons:
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-- x: user revoked (while authenticated in another way)
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-- x: password change invalidated all sessions created with that password
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-- x: expired (due to fixed total time or time inactive)
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-- x: evicted (due to too many sessions)
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-- x: suspicious activity
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revocation_reason integer,
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revocation_reason_detail text,
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-- Information about requests which used this session, updated lazily on database flush.
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last_use_time_sec integer, -- sec since epoch
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last_use_user_agent text, -- User-Agent header from inbound HTTP request.
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last_use_peer_addr blob, -- IPv4 or IPv6 address, or null for Unix socket.
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use_count not null default 0
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) without rowid;
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create index user_session_uid on user_session (user_id);
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insert into version (id, unix_time, notes)
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values (3, cast(strftime('%s', 'now') as int), 'db creation');
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