561 lines
26 KiB
Markdown
561 lines
26 KiB
Markdown
# Moonfire NVR Storage Schema
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Status: **current**. This is largely implemented; there is optimization and
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testing work left to do.
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This is the initial design for the most fundamental parts of the Moonfire NVR
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storage schema. See also [guide/schema.md](../guide/schema.md) for more
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administrator-focused documentation.
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## Objective
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Goals:
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* record streams from modern ONVIF/PSIA IP security cameras
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* support several cameras
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* maintain full fidelity of incoming compressed video streams
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* record continuously
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* support on-demand serving in different file formats / protocols
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(such as standard .mp4 files for arbitrary timespans, fragmented .mp4 files
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for MPEG-DASH or HTML5 Video Source Extensions, MPEG-TS files for HTTP Live
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Streaming, and "trick play" RTSP)
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* annotate camera timelines with metadata
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(such as motion detection, security alarm events, etc)
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* retain video segments with ~1-minute granularity based on metadata
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(e.g., extend retention of motion events)
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* take advantage of compact, inexpensive, low-power, commonly-available
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hardware such as the $35 [Raspberry Pi 2 Model B][pi2]
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* support high- and low-bandwidth playback
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* support near-live playback (~second old), including "trick play"
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* allow verifying database consistency with an `fsck` tool
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Non-goals:
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* record streams from older cameras: JPEG/MJPEG USB "webcams" and analog
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security cameras/capture cards
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* allow users to directly access or manipulate the stored data with standard
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video or filesystem tools
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* support H.264 features not used by common IP camera encoders, such as
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B-frames and Periodic Infra Refresh.
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* support recovering the last ~minute of video after a crash or power loss
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Possible future goals:
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* record audio and/or other types of timestamped samples (such as
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[Xandem][xandem] tomography data).
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### Cameras
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Inexpensive modern ONVIF/PSIA IP security cameras, such as the $100
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[Hikvision DS-2CD2032-I][hikcam], support two H.264-encoded RTSP
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streams. They have many customizable settings, such as resolution, frame rate,
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compression quality, maximum bitrate, I-frame interval. A typical setup might be
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as follows:
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* the high-quality "main" stream as 1080p/30fps, 3000 kbps.
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This stream is well-suited to local viewing or forensics.
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* the low-bandwidth "sub" stream as 704x480/10fps, 100 kbps.
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This stream may be preferred for mobile/remote viewing, when viewing several
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streams side-by-side, and for real-time computer vision (such as salient
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motion detection).
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The dual pre-encoded H.264 video streams provide a tremendous advantage over
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older camera models (which provided raw video or JPEG-encoded frames) because
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the encoding is prohibitively expensive in multi-camera setups.
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[libx264][libx264] supports "encoding 4 or more 1080p streams in realtime on a
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single consumer-level computer", but this does not apply to the low-cost devices
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Moonfire NVR targets. In fact, even decoding can be expensive on the
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full-quality streams, enough to challenge the feasibility of on-NVR motion
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detection. It's valuable to have the "sub" stream for this purpose.
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The table below shows cost of processing a single stream, as a percentage of the
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whole processor ((user+sys) time / video duration / CPU cores). **TODO:** try
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different quality settings as well.
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Decode:
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$ time ffmpeg -y -threads 1 -i input.mp4 \
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-f null /dev/null
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Combo (Decode + encode with libx264):
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$ time ffmpeg -y -threads 1 -i input.mp4 \
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-c:v libx264 -preset ultrafast -threads 1 -f mp4 /dev/null
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| Processor | 1080p30 decode | 1080p30 combo | 704x480p10 decode | 704x480p10 combo |
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| :---------------------------- | -------------: | ------------: | ----------------: | ---------------: |
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| [Intel i7-2635QM][2635QM] | 6.0% | 23.7% | 0.2% | 1.0% |
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| [Intel Atom C2538][C2538] | 16.7% | 58.1% | 0.7% | 3.0% |
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| [Raspberry Pi 2 Model B][pi2] | 68.4% | **230.1%** | 2.9% | 11.7% |
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Hardware-accelerated decoding/encoding is possible in some cases (VAAPI on the
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Intel processors, or OpenMAX on the Raspberry Pi), but similarly it would not be
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possible to have several high-quality streams without using the camera's
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encoding. **TODO:** get numbers.
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### Hard drives ###
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With current hard drives prices (see [WD Purple][wdpurple] prices below), it's
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cost-effective to store a month or more of high-quality video, at roughly 1
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camera-month per TB.
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| Capacity | Price |
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| -------: | ----: |
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| 1 TB | $61 |
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| 2 TB | $82 |
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| 3 TB | $107 |
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| 4 TB | $157 |
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| 6 TB | $240 |
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Typical sequential bandwidth is >100 MB/sec, more than that required by over a
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hundred streams at 3 Mbps. The concern is seek times: a [WD20EURS][wd20eurs]
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appears to require 20 ms per sequential random access (across the full range
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of the disk), as measured with [seeker][seeker]. Put another way, the drive is
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only capable of 50 random accesses per second, and each one takes time that
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otherwise could be used to transfer 2+ MB. The constrained resource, *disk
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time fraction*, can be bounded as follows:
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disk time fraction <= (seek rate) / (50 seeks/sec) +
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(bandwidth) / (100 MB/sec)
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## Overview
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Moonfire NVR divides video streams into 1-minute recordings. These boundaries
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are invisible to the user. On playback, the UI moves from one recording to
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another seamlessly. When exporting video, recordings are automatically spliced
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together.
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Each recording is stored in two places:
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* the recording samples directory, intended to be stored on spinning disk.
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Each file in this directory is simply a concatenation of the compressed,
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timestamped video samples (also called "packets" or encoded frames), as
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received from the camera. In MPEG-4 terminology (see [ISO
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14496-12][iso-14496-12]), this is the contents of a `mdat` box for a `.mp4`
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file representing the segment. These files do not contain framing data (start
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and end byte offsets of samples) and thus are not meant to be decoded on
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their own.
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* the `recording` table in a [SQLite3][sqlite3] database, intended to be
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stored on flash if possible. A row in this table contains all the metadata
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associated with the segment, including the sample-by-sample contents of the
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MPEG-4 `stbl` box. At 30 fps, a row is expected to require roughly 4 KB of
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storage (2 bytes per sample, plus some fixed overhead).
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Putting the metadata on flash means metadata operations can be fast
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(sub-millisecond random access, with parallelism) and do not take precious
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disk time fraction away from accessing sample data. Disk time can be saved for
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long sequential accesses. Assuming filesystem metadata is cached, Moonfire NVR
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can seek directly to the correct sample.
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To avoid a burst of seeks every minute, rotation times will be staggered. For
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example, if there are two cameras (A and B), camera A's main stream might
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switch to a new recording at :00 seconds past the minute, B's main stream at
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:15 seconds past the minute, and likewise the sub streams, as shown below.
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| camera | stream | switchover |
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| :----- | :----- | ---------: |
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| A | main | xx:xx:00 |
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| B | main | xx:xx:15 |
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| A | sub | xx:xx:30 |
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| B | sub | xx:xx:45 |
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## Detailed design
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### SQLite3
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All metadata, including the `recording` table and others, will be stored in
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the SQLite3 database using [write-ahead logging][sqlite3-wal]. There are
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several reasons for this decision:
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* No user administration required. SQLite3, unlike its heavier-weight friends
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MySQL and PostgreSQL, can be completely internal to the application. In many
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applications, end users are unaware of the existence of a RDBMS, and
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Moonfire NVR should be no exception.
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* Correctness. It's relatively easy to make guarantees about the state of an
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ACID database, and SQLite3 in particular has a robust implementation. (See
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[Files Are Hard][file-consistency].)
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* Developer ease and familiarity. SQL-based RDBMSs are quite common and
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provide a lot of high-level constructs that ease development. SQLite3 in
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particular is ubiquitous. Contributors are likely to come with some
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understanding of the database, and there are many resources to learn more.
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Total database size is expected to be roughly 4 KB per minute at 30 fps, or
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1 GB for six camera-months of video. This will easily fit on a modest flash
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device. Given the fast storage and modest size, the database is not expected
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to be a performance bottleneck.
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### Duration of recordings
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There are many constraints that influenced the choice of 1 minute as the
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duration of recordings.
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* Per-recording metadata size. There is a fixed component to the size of each
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row, including the starting/ending timestamps, sample file UUID, etc. This
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should not cause the database to be too large to fit on low-cost flash
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devices. As described in the previous section, with 1 minute recordings the
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size is quite modest.
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* Disk seeks. Sample files should be large enough that even during
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simultaneous recording and playback of several streams, the disk seeks
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incurred when switching from one file to another should not be significant.
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At the extreme, a sample file per frame could cause an unacceptable 240
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seeks per second just to record 8 30 fps streams. At one minute recording
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time, 16 recording streams (2 per each of 8 cameras) and 4 playback streams
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would cause on average 20 seeks per minute, or under 1% disk time.
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* Internal fragmentation. Common Linux filesystems have a block size of 4 KiB
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(see `statvfs.f_frsize`). Up to this much space per file will be wasted at
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the end of each file. At the bitrates described in "Background", this is an
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insignicant .02% waste for main streams and .5% waste for sub streams.
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* Number of "slices" in .mp4 files. As described [below](#on-demand),
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`.mp4` files will be constructed on-demand for export. It should be
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possible to export an hours-long segment without too much overhead. In
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particular, it must be possible to iterate through all the recordings,
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assemble the list of slices, and calculate offsets and total size. One
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minute seems acceptable; though we will watch this as work proceeds.
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* Crashes. On program crash or power loss, ideally it's acceptable to simply
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discard any recordings in progress rather than add a checkpointing scheme.
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* Granularity of retention. It should be possible to extend retention time
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around motion events without forcing retention of too much additional data
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or copying bytes around on disk.
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The design avoids the need for the following constraints:
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* Dealing with events crossing segment boundaries. This is meant to be
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invisible.
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* Serving close to live. It's possible to serve a recording as it is being
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written.
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### Lifecycle of a recording
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Because a major part of the recording state is outside the SQL database, care
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must be taken to guarantee consistency and durability. Moonfire NVR maintains
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three invariants about sample files:
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1. `recording` table rows have sample files on disk
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(named by the given UUID) with the indicated size and SHA-1 hash.
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2. There are no sample files without a corresponding `recording` or
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`reserved_sample_files` table row referencing their UUID.
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3. After an orderly shutdown of Moonfire NVR, there are no
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`reserved_sample_files` rows, even if there have been previous crashes.
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The first invariant provides certainty that a recording is properly stored. It
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would be prohibitively expensive to verify hashes on demand (when listing or
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serving recordings), or in some cases even to verify the size of the files via
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`stat()` calls.
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The second invariant avoids an accidental data loss scenario. On startup, as
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part of normal crash recovery, Moonfire NVR should delete sample files which are
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half-written (and useless without their indices) and ones which were already in
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the process of being deleted (for exceeding their retention time). The absence
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of a `recording` table row could be taken to indicate one of these conditions.
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But consider another possibility: the SQLite database might not match the sample
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directory. This could happen if the wrong disk is mounted at a given path or
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after a botched restore from backup. Moonfire NVR would delete everything in
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this case! It's far safer to require a specific mention of each file to be
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deleted, requiring human intervention before touching unexpected files.
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The third invariant prevents accumulation of garbage files which could fill the
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drive and stop recording.
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Sample files are named by UUID. Imagine if files were named by autoincrement
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instead. One file could be mistaken for another on database vs directory
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mismatch. With UUIDs, this is impossible: by design they can be assumed to be
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universally unique, so two distinct recordings will never share a UUID.
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These invariants are updated through the following procedure:
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*Create a recording:*
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1. Insert a `reserved_sample_files` row, in state `WRITING`.
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2. Write the sample file, aborting if `open(..., O\_WRONLY|O\_CREATE|O\_EXCL)`
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fails with `EEXIST`. (This would indicate a non-unique UUID, a serious
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defect.)
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3. `fsync()` the sample file.
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4. `fsync()` the sample file directory.
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5. Replace the `reserved_sample_files` row with a `recording` row,
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marking its size and SHA-1 hash in the process.
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*Delete a recording:*
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1. Replace the `recording` row with a `reserved_sample_files` row in state
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`DELETED`.
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2. `unlink()` the sample file, warning on `ENOENT`. (This would indicate
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invariant #2 is false.)
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3. `fsync()` the sample file directory.
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4. Delete the `reserved_sample_files` row.
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*Startup (crash recovery):*
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1. Acquire a lock to guarantee this is the only Moonfire NVR process running
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against the given database. This lock is not released until program shutdown.
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2. Query `reserved_sample_files` table.
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3. `unlink()` all the sample files associated with rows returned by #2,
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ignoring `ENOENT`.
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4. `fsync()` the samples directory.
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5. Delete the rows returned by #2 from the `reserved_sample_files` table.
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The procedures can be batched: while for a given recording, the steps must be
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strictly ordered, multiple recordings can be proceeding through the steps
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simultaneously. In particular, there is no need to hurry syncing deletions to
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disk, so deletion steps #3 and #4 can be done opportunistically if it's
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desirable to avoid extra disk seeks or flash write cycles.
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There could be another procedure for moving a sample file from one filesystem
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to another. This might be used when splitting cameras across hard drives.
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New states could be introduced indicating that a recording is "is moving from
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A to B" (thus, A is complete, and B is in an undefined state) or "has just
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moved from A to B" (thus, B is complete, and A may be present or not).
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Alternatively, a camera might have a search path specified for its recordings,
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such that the first directory in which a recording is found must have a
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complete copy (and subsequent directories' copies may be partial/corrupt).
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It'd also be possible to conserve some partial recordings. Moonfire NVR could,
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as a recording is written, record the latest sample tables,
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size, and hash fields without marking the recording as fully written. On
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startup, the file would be truncated to match and then the recording marked
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as fully written. The file would either have to be synced prior to each update
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(to guarantee it is at least as new as the row) or multiple checkpoints would
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be kept, using the last one with a correct hash (if any) on a best-effort
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basis. However, this may not be worth the complexity; it's simpler to just
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keep recording time short enough that losing partial recordings is not a
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problem.
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### Verifying invariants
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There should be a means to verify the invariants above. There are three
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possible levels of verification:
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1. Compare presence of sample files.
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2. Compare size of sample files.
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3. Compare hashes of sample files.
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Consider a database with a 6 camera-months of recordings at 3.1 Mbps (for
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both main and sub streams). There would be 0.5 million files, taking 5.9 TB.
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The times are roughly:
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| level | operation | time |
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| :------- | :---------- | -------: |
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| presence | `readdir()` | ~3 sec |
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| size | `fstat()` | ~3 sec |
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| hash | `read()` | ~8 hours |
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The `readdir()` and `fstat()` times can be tested simply:
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$ mkdir testdir
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$ cd testdir
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$ seq 1 $[60*24*365*6/12*2] | xargs touch
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$ sudo sh -c 'echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches'
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$ time ls -1 -F | wc -l
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$ sudo sh -c 'echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches'
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$ time ls -1 -F --size | wc -l
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(The system calls used by `ls` can be verified through strace.)
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The hash verification time is easiest to calculate: reading 5.9 TB at 100
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MB/sec takes about 8 hours. On some systems, it will be even slower. On
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the Raspberry Pi 2, flash, network, and disk are all on the same USB 2.0 bus
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(see [Raspberry Pi 2 NAS Experiment HOWTO][pi-2-nas]). Disk throughput seems
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to be about 25 MB/sec on an idle system (~40% of the theoretical 480
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Mbit/sec). Therefore the process will take over a day.
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The size check is fast enough that it seems reasonable to simply always
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perform it on startup. Hash checks are too expensive to wait for in normal
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operation; they will either be a rare offline data recovery mechanism or done
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in the background at low priority.
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### Recording table
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The snippet below is a illustrative excerpt of the SQLite schema; see
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`schema.sql` for the authoritative, up-to-date version.
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-- A single, typically 60-second, recorded segment of video.
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create table recording (
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id integer primary key,
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camera_id integer references camera (id) not null,
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sample_file_uuid blob unique not null,
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sample_file_sha1 blob,
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sample_file_size integer,
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-- The starting time and duration of the recording, in 90 kHz units since
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-- 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC.
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start_time_90k integer not null,
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duration_90k integer,
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video_samples integer,
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video_sample_entry_id blob references visual_sample_entry (id),
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video_index blob,
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...
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);
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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 visual_sample_entry (
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-- A SHA-1 hash of |bytes|.
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sha1 blob primary key,
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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,
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height integer,
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-- A serialized SampleEntry box, including the leading length and box
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-- type (avcC in the case of H.264).
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data blob
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);
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As mentioned by the `start_time_90k` field above, recordings use a 90 kHz time
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base. This matches the RTP timestamp frequency used for H.264 and other video
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encodings. See [RFC 3551][rfc-3551] section 5 for an explanation of this
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choice.
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It's tempting to downscale to a coarser timebase, rounding as necessary, in
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the name of a more compact encoding of `video_index`. (By having timestamp
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deltas near zero and borrowing some of the timestamp varint to represent
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additional bits of the size deltas, it's possible to use barely more than 2
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bytes per frame on a typical recording. **TODO:** recalculate database size
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estimates above, which were made using this technique.) But matching the input
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timebase is the most understandable approach and leaves the most flexibility
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available for handling timestamps encoded in RTCP Sender Report messages. In
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practice, a database size of two gigabytes rather than one is unlikely to cause
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problems.
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One likely point of difficulty is reliably mapping recordings to wall clock
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time. (This may be the subject of a separate design doc later.) In an ideal
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world, the NVR and cameras would each be closely synced to a reliable NTP time
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reference, time would advance at a consistent rate, time would never jump
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forward or backward, each transmission would take bounded time, and cameras
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would reliably send RTCP Sender Reports. In reality, none of that is likely to
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be consistently true. For example, Hikvision cameras send RTCP Sender Reports
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only with certain firmware versions (see [thread][hikvision-sr]). Most likely
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it will be useful to have any available clock/timing information for
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diagnosing problems, such as the following:
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* the NVR's wall clock time
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* the NVR's NTP server sync status
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* the NVR's uptime
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* the camera's time as of the RTP play response
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* the camera's time as of any RTCP Sender Reports, and the corresponding RTP
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timestamps
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#### `video_index`
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The `video_index` field conceptually holds three pieces of information about
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the samples:
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1. the duration (in 90kHz units) of each sample
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2. the byte size of each sample
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3. which samples are "sync samples" (aka key frames or I-frames)
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These correspond to [ISO/IEC 14496-12][iso-14496-12] `stts` (TimeToSampleBox,
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section 8.6.1.2), `stsz` (SampleSizeBox, section 8.7.3), and `stss`
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(SyncSampleBox, section 8.6.2) boxes, respectively.
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Currently the `stsc` (SampleToChunkBox, section 8.7.4) information is implied:
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all samples are in a single chunk from the beginning of the file to the end.
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If in the future support for interleaved audio is added, there will be a new
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blob field with chunk information. **TODO:** can audio data really be sliced
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to fit the visual samples like this?
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The index is structured as two [varints][varints] per sample. The first varint
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represents the delta between this frame's duration and the previous frame's,
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in [zigzag][zigzag] form. The low bit is borrowed to indicate if this frame
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is a key frame. The second varint represents the delta between this frame's
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duration and the duration of the last frame of the same type (key or non-key).
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This encoding is chosen so that values will be near zero, and thus the varints
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will be at their most compact possible form. An index might be written by the
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following pseudocode:
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prev_duration = 0
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prev_bytes_key = 0
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prev_bytes_nonkey = 0
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for each frame:
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duration_delta = duration - prev_duration
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bytes_delta = bytes - (is_key ? prev_bytes_key : prev_bytes_nonkey)
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prev_duration_ms = duration_ms
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if key: prev_bytes_key = bytes else: prev_bytes_nonkey = bytes
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PutVarint((Zigzag(duration_delta) << 1) | is_key)
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PutVarint(Zigzag(bytes_delta)
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See also the example below:
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| | frame 1 | frame 2 | frame 3 | frame 4 | frame 5 |
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| :-------------- | ---------: | ------: | ------: | ------: | ------: |
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| duration | 10 | 9 | 11 | 10 | 10 |
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| is\_key | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
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| bytes | 1000 | 10 | 15 | 12 | 1050 |
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| duration\_delta | 10 | -1 | 2 | -1 | 0 |
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| bytes\_delta | 1000 | 10 | 5 | -3 | 50 |
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| varint1 | 41 | 2 | 8 | 3 | 1 |
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| varint2 | 2000 | 20 | 10 | 5 | 100 |
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| encoded | `29 d0 0f` | `02 14` | `08 0a` | `02 05` | `01 64` |
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### <a href="on-demand"></a>On-demand `.mp4` construction
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A major goal of this format is to support on-demand serving in various formats,
|
|
including two types of `.mp4` files:
|
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|
|
* unfragmented `.mp4` files, for traditional video players.
|
|
* fragmented `.mp4` files for MPEG-DASH or HTML5 Media Source Extensions
|
|
(see [Media Source ISO BMFF Byte Stream Format][media-bmff]), for
|
|
a browser-based user interface.
|
|
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|
This does not require writing new `.mp4` files to disk. In fact, HTTP range
|
|
requests (for "pseudo-streaming") can be satisfied on `.mp4` files aggregated
|
|
from several segments. The implementation details are outside the scope of this
|
|
document, but this is possible in part due to the use of an on-flash database
|
|
to store metadata and the simple, consistent format of sample indexes.
|
|
|
|
### Copyright
|
|
|
|
This file is part of Moonfire NVR, a security camera network video recorder.
|
|
Copyright (C) 2016 Scott Lamb <slamb@slamb.org>
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|
|
|
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
|
|
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
|
|
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
|
|
(at your option) any later version.
|
|
|
|
In addition, as a special exception, the copyright holders give
|
|
permission to link the code of portions of this program with the
|
|
OpenSSL library under certain conditions as described in each
|
|
individual source file, and distribute linked combinations including
|
|
the two.
|
|
|
|
You must obey the GNU General Public License in all respects for all
|
|
of the code used other than OpenSSL. If you modify file(s) with this
|
|
exception, you may extend this exception to your version of the
|
|
file(s), but you are not obligated to do so. If you do not wish to do
|
|
so, delete this exception statement from your version. If you delete
|
|
this exception statement from all source files in the program, then
|
|
also delete it here.
|
|
|
|
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
|
|
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
|
|
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
|
|
GNU General Public License for more details.
|
|
|
|
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
|
|
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
|
|
|
|
[pi2]: https://www.raspberrypi.org/products/raspberry-pi-2-model-b/
|
|
[xandem]: http://www.xandemhome.com/
|
|
[hikcam]: http://overseas.hikvision.com/us/Products_accessries_10533_i7696.html
|
|
[libx264]: http://www.videolan.org/developers/x264.html
|
|
[2635QM]: http://ark.intel.com/products/53463/Intel-Core-i7-2635QM-Processor-6M-Cache-up-to-2_90-GHz
|
|
[C2538]: http://ark.intel.com/products/77981/Intel-Atom-Processor-C2538-2M-Cache-2_40-GHz
|
|
[wdpurple]: http://www.wdc.com/en/products/products.aspx?id=1210
|
|
[wd20eurs]: http://www.wdc.com/wdproducts/library/SpecSheet/ENG/2879-701250.pdf
|
|
[seeker]: http://www.linuxinsight.com/how_fast_is_your_disk.html
|
|
[rfc-3551]: https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3551.txt
|
|
[hikvision-sr]: http://www.cctvforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=44534
|
|
[iso-14496-12]: http://www.iso.org/iso/home/store/catalogue_ics/catalogue_detail_ics.htm?csnumber=68960
|
|
[sqlite3]: https://www.sqlite.org/
|
|
[sqlite3-wal]: https://www.sqlite.org/wal.html
|
|
[file-consistency]: http://danluu.com/file-consistency/
|
|
[pi-2-nas]: http://www.mikronauts.com/raspberry-pi/raspberry-pi-2-nas-experiment-howto/
|
|
[varints]: https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/encoding#varints
|
|
[zigzag]: https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/encoding#types
|
|
[media-bmff]: https://w3c.github.io/media-source/isobmff-byte-stream-format.html
|