Commit Graph

11 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dolf Starreveld 58152e8d94 Major refactoring of UI code, small UI changes. (#48)
* Major refactoring of UI code, small UI changes.

* Single file index.js split up into separate modules
* Modules for handling UI view components
* Modules for handling JSON/Model data
* Modules for support tasks
* Module to encapsulate Moonfire API
* Main application module
* index.js simplified to just activating main app
* Settings file functionality expanded
* UI adds "Time Format" popup to allow changing time representation
* CSS changes/additions to streamline looks
* Recordings loading indicator only appears after 500ms delay, if at all

* Address first set of PR change requests from Scott.

* Add copyright headers to all files (except JSON files)
* Fix bug with entering time values in range pickers
* Fixed an erroneous comment and/or spelling error here and there
* Fixed JSDoc comments where [description] was not filled in
* Removed a TODO from NVRApplication as it no longer applies
* Fixed bug handling "infinite" case of video segment lengths
* Fixed bug in "trim" handler and trim execution

* Retrofit video continues loading from separate PR

Signed-off-by: Dolf Starreveld <dolf@starreveld.com>

* Address PR comments

Signed-off-by: Dolf Starreveld <dolf@starreveld.com>

* Address PR comments

Signed-off-by: Dolf Starreveld <dolf@starreveld.com>
2018-03-20 07:03:12 -07:00
Dolf Starreveld 5727adf3df Settings can now be taken from separate file with local override.
* Various settings in settings-nvr.js module
* settings-nvr-local.js can override settings-nvr.js
* settings-nvr-local is unchecked file
* Both files can be straight maps, or functions returning maps
* webpack env and args available to those functions
2018-03-08 18:26:41 -08:00
Dolf Starreveld 760b8d95fb Rewrite of the installation script and accompanying documentation. (#15)
Rewrite of the installation script and accompanying documentation.
2018-03-03 06:41:15 -08:00
Scott Lamb 315f3594c2 add a basic Javascript UI
The Javascript is pretty amateurish I'm sure but at least it's something to
iterate from. It's already much more pleasant for browsing through videos in
several ways:

* more responsive to load only a day at a time rather than 90+ days
* much easier to see the same time segment on several cameras
* more pleasant to have the videos load as a popup rather than a link
  that blows away your position in an enormous list
* exposes the fancier .mp4 generation options: splitting at lengths
  other than the default, trimming to an arbitrary start and end time,
  including a subtitle track with timestamps.

There's a slight regression in functionality: I didn't match the former
top-level page which showed how much camera used of its disk allocation and
the total duration of video. This is exposed in the JSON API, so it shouldn't
be too hard to add back.
2017-10-21 21:54:27 -07:00
Scott Lamb 474b5403a9 Merge pull request #6 from dolfs/rust
Enhancements to the prep.sh script
2016-12-06 20:56:28 -08:00
Scott Lamb 3332f817c0 commit Cargo.lock
This is the best practice according to the Cargo FAQ:
http://doc.crates.io/faq.html#why-do-binaries-have-cargolock-in-version-control-but-not-libraries
2016-12-02 21:50:37 -08:00
Dolf Starreveld af7aa26709 - Fix prep.sh script to exit on test failure
- Add prep.sh capabilty to read custom configuration from file prep.config (ignored in .gitignore) to keep script pristine
2016-11-30 22:05:52 -08:00
Scott Lamb 0a7535536d Rust rewrite
I should have submitted/pushed more incrementally but just played with it on
my computer as I was learning the language. The new Rust version more or less
matches the functionality of the current C++ version, although there are many
caveats listed below.

Upgrade notes: when moving from the C++ version, I recommend dropping and
recreating the "recording_cover" index in SQLite3 to pick up the addition of
the "video_sync_samples" column:

    $ sudo systemctl stop moonfire-nvr
    $ sudo -u moonfire-nvr sqlite3 /var/lib/moonfire-nvr/db/db
    sqlite> drop index recording_cover;
    sqlite3> create index ...rest of command as in schema.sql...;
    sqlite3> ^D

Some known visible differences from the C++ version:

* .mp4 generation queries SQLite3 differently. Before it would just get all
  video indexes in a single query. Now it leads with a query that should be
  satisfiable by the covering index (assuming the index has been recreated as
  noted above), then queries individual recording's indexes as needed to fill
  a LRU cache. I believe this is roughly similar speed for the initial hit
  (which generates the moov part of the file) and significantly faster when
  seeking. I would have done it a while ago with the C++ version but didn't
  want to track down a lru cache library. It was easier to find with Rust.

* On startup, the Rust version cleans up old reserved files. This is as in the
  design; the C++ version was just missing this code.

* The .html recording list output is a little different. It's in ascending
  order, with the most current segment shorten than an hour rather than the
  oldest. This is less ergonomic, but it was easy. I could fix it or just wait
  to obsolete it with some fancier JavaScript UI.

* commandline argument parsing and logging have changed formats due to
  different underlying libraries.

* The JSON output isn't quite right (matching the spec / C++ implementation)
  yet.

Additional caveats:

* I haven't done any proof-reading of prep.sh + install instructions.

* There's a lot of code quality work to do: adding (back) comments and test
  coverage, developing a good Rust style.

* The ffmpeg foreign function interface is particularly sketchy. I'd
  eventually like to switch to something based on autogenerated bindings.
  I'd also like to use pure Rust code where practical, but once I do on-NVR
  motion detection I'll need to existing C/C++ libraries for speed (H.264
  decoding + OpenCL-based analysis).
2016-11-25 14:34:00 -08:00
Scott Lamb 0aadf227c1 Benchmark & speed up SampleIndexIterator
I'm seeing what is possible performance-wise in the current C++ before
trying out Go and Rust implementations.

* use the google benchmark framework and some real data.

* use release builds - I hadn't done this in a while, and there were a
  few compile errors that manifested only in release mode. Update the
  readme to suggest using a release build.

* optimize the varint decoder and SampleIndexIterator to branch less.

* enable link-time optimization for release builds.

* add some support for feedback-directed optimization. Ideally "make"
  would automatically produce the "generate" build outputs with a
  different object/library/executable suffix, run the generate
  benchmark, and then produce the "use" builds. This is not that fancy;
  you have to run an arcane command:

  alias cmake='cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release'
  cmake -DPROFILE_GENERATE=true -DPROFILE_USE=false .. && \
  make recording-bench && \
  src/recording-bench && \
  cmake -DPROFILE_GENERATE=false -DPROFILE_USE=true .. && \
  make recording-bench && \
  perf stat -e cycles,instructions,branches,branch-misses \
      src/recording-bench --benchmark_repetitions=5

  That said, the results are dramatic - at least 50% improvement. (The
  results weren't stable before as small tweaks to the code caused a
  huge shift in performance, presumably something something branch
  alignment something something.)
2016-05-19 22:53:23 -07:00
Dolf Starreveld e7456643cd Added prep.sh script for automated builds
* Changed README.md commensurately
* Add cameras.sql to .gitignore to not commit personal camera data
* Change CMakeLists.txt to explicitly refer to hand-built libevent dirs
2016-02-07 22:59:29 -08:00
Scott Lamb c9eda8ac15 Initial commit, with basic functionality. 2016-01-01 22:06:47 -08:00