moonfire-nvr/design/api.md

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Moonfire NVR API

Status: current.

Objective

Allow a JavaScript-based web interface to list cameras and view recordings.

In the future, this is likely to be expanded:

  • configuration support
  • commandline tool over a UNIX-domain socket (at least for bootstrapping web authentication)
  • mobile interface

Detailed design

All requests for JSON data should be sent with the header Accept: application/json (exactly).

/api/login

A POST request on this URL should have an application/x-www-form-urlencoded body containing username and password parameters.

On successful authentication, the server will return an HTTP 204 (no content) with a Set-Cookie header for the s cookie, which is an opaque, HttpOnly (unavailable to Javascript) session identifier.

If authentication or authorization fails, the server will return a HTTP 403 (forbidden) response. Currently the body will be a text/plain error message; future versions will likely be more sophisticated.

/api/logout

A POST request on this URL should have an application/x-www-form-urlencoded body containing a csrf parameter copied from the session.csrf of the top-level API request.

On success, returns an HTTP 204 (no content) responses. On failure, returns a 4xx response with text/plain error message.

/api/

A GET request on this URL returns basic information about the server, including all cameras. Valid request parameters:

  • days: a boolean indicating if the days parameter described below should be included.

Example request URI:

/api/?days=true

The application/json response will have a dict as follows:

  • timeZoneName: the name of the IANA time zone the server is using to divide recordings into days as described further below.
  • cameras: a list of cameras. Each is a dict as follows:
    • uuid: in text format
    • shortName: a short name (typically one or two words)
    • description: a longer description (typically a phrase or paragraph)
    • streams: a dict of stream type ("main" or "sub") to a dictionary describing the stream:
      • retainBytes: the configured total number of bytes of completed recordings to retain.
      • minStartTime90k: the start time of the earliest recording for this camera, in 90kHz units since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC.
      • maxEndTime90k: the end time of the latest recording for this camera, in 90kHz units since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC.
      • totalDuration90k: the total duration recorded, in 90 kHz units. This is no greater than maxEndTime90k - maxStartTime90k; it will be lesser if there are gaps in the recorded data.
      • totalSampleFileBytes: the total number of bytes of sample data (the mdat portion of a .mp4 file).
      • days: object representing calendar days (in the server's time zone) with non-zero total duration of recordings for that day. The keys are of the form YYYY-mm-dd; the values are objects with the following attributes:
        • totalDuration90k is the total duration recorded during that day. If a recording spans a day boundary, some portion of it is accounted to each day.
        • startTime90k is the start of that calendar day in the server's time zone.
        • endTime90k is the end of that calendar day in the server's time zone. It is usually 24 hours after the start time. It might be 23 hours or 25 hours during spring forward or fall back, respectively.
  • session: if logged in, a dict with the following properties:
    • username
    • csrf: a cross-site request forgery token for use in POST requests.

Example response:

{
  "timeZoneName": "America/Los_Angeles",
  "cameras": [
    {
      "uuid": "fd20f7a2-9d69-4cb3-94ed-d51a20c3edfe",
      "shortName": "driveway",
      "description": "Hikvision DS-2CD2032 overlooking the driveway from east",
      "streams": {
        "main": {
          "retainBytes": 536870912000,
          "minStartTime90k": 130888729442361,
          "maxEndTime90k": 130985466591817,
          "totalDuration90k": 96736169725,
          "totalSampleFileBytes": 446774393937,
          "days": {
            "2016-05-01": {
              "endTime90k": 131595516000000,
              "startTime90k": 131587740000000,
              "totalDuration90k": 52617609
            },
            "2016-05-02": {
              "endTime90k": 131603292000000,
              "startTime90k": 131595516000000,
              "totalDuration90k": 20946022
            }
          }
        }
      }
    },
    ...
  ],
  "session": {
    "username": "slamb",
    "csrf": "2DivvlnKUQ9JD4ao6YACBJm8XK4bFmOc",
  }
}

/api/cameras/<uuid>/

A GET returns information for the camera with the given URL. The information

Example response:

{
  "description": "",
  "streams": {
    "main": {
      "days": {
        "2016-05-01": {
          "endTime90k": 131595516000000,
          "startTime90k": 131587740000000,
          "totalDuration90k": 52617609
        },
        "2016-05-02": {
          "endTime90k": 131603292000000,
          "startTime90k": 131595516000000,
          "totalDuration90k": 20946022
        }
      },
      "maxEndTime90k": 131598273666690,
      "minStartTime90k": 131590386129355,
      "retainBytes": 104857600,
      "totalDuration90k": 73563631,
      "totalSampleFileBytes": 98901406
    }
  },
  "shortName": "driveway"
}

/api/cameras/<uuid>/<stream>/recordings

A GET returns information about recordings, in descending order.

Valid request parameters:

  • startTime90k and and endTime90k limit the data returned to only recordings which overlap with the given half-open interval. Either or both may be absent; they default to the beginning and end of time, respectively.
  • split90k causes long runs of recordings to be split at the next convenient boundary after the given duration.
  • TODO(slamb): continue to support paging. (If data is too large, the server should return a continue key which is expected to be returned on following requests.)

TODO(slamb): once we support annotations, should they be included in the same URI or as a separate /annotations?

In the property recordings, returns a list of recordings in arbitrary order. Each recording object has the following properties:

  • startId. The id of this recording, which can be used with /view.mp4 to retrieve its content.
  • endId (optional). If absent, this object describes a single recording. If present, this indicates that recordings startId-endId (inclusive) together are as described. Adjacent recordings from the same RTSP session may be coalesced in this fashion to reduce the amount of redundant data transferred.
  • firstUncommitted (optional). If this range is not fully committed to the database, the first id that is uncommitted. This is significant because it's possible that after a crash and restart, this id will refer to a completely different recording. That recording will have a different openId.
  • growing (optional). If this boolean is true, the recording endId is still being written to. Accesses to this id (such as view.mp4) may retrieve more data than described here if not bounded by duration. Additionally, if startId == endId, the start time of the recording is "unanchored" and may change in subsequent accesses.
  • openId. Each time Moonfire NVR starts in read-write mode, it is assigned an increasing "open id". This field is the open id as of when these recordings were written. This can be used to disambiguate ids referring to uncommitted recordings.
  • startTime90k: the start time of the given recording. Note this may be less than the requested startTime90k if this recording was ongoing at the requested time.
  • endTime90k: the end time of the given recording. Note this may be greater than the requested endTime90k if this recording was ongoing at the requested time.
  • sampleFileBytes
  • videoSampleEntrySha1
  • videoSampleEntryWidth
  • videoSampleEntryHeight
  • videoSamples: the number of samples (aka frames) of video in this recording.

Example request URI (with added whitespace between parameters):

/api/cameras/fd20f7a2-9d69-4cb3-94ed-d51a20c3edfe/main/recordings
    ?startTime90k=130888729442361
    &endTime90k=130985466591817

Example response:

{
  "recordings": [
    {
      "startId": 1,
      "startTime90k": 130985461191810,
      "endTime90k": 130985466591817,
      "sampleFileBytes": 8405564,
      "videoSampleEntrySha1": "81710c9c51a02cc95439caa8dd3bc12b77ffe767",
      "videoSampleEntryWidth": 1280,
      "videoSampleEntryHeight": 720,
    },
    {
      "endTime90k": 130985461191810,
      ...
    },
    ...
  ],
  "continue": "<opaque blob>",
}

/api/cameras/<uuid>/<stream>/view.mp4

A GET returns a .mp4 file, with an etag and support for range requests. The MIME type will be video/mp4, with a codecs parameter as specified in RFC 6381.

Expected query parameters:

  • s (one or more): a string of the form START_ID[-END_ID][@OPEN_ID][.[REL_START_TIME]-[REL_END_TIME]]. This specifies recording segments to include. The produced .mp4 file will be a concatenation of the segments indicated by all s parameters. The ids to retrieve are as returned by the /recordings URL. The open id is optional and will be enforced if present; it's recommended for disambiguation when the requested range includes uncommitted recordings. The optional start and end times are in 90k units and relative to the start of the first specified id. These can be used to clip the returned segments. Note they can be used to skip over some ids entirely; this is allowed so that the caller doesn't need to know the start time of each interior id. If there is no key frame at the desired relative start time, frames back to the last key frame will be included in the returned data, and an edit list will instruct the viewer to skip to the desired start time.
  • ts (optional): should be set to true to request a subtitle track be added with human-readable recording timestamps.

Example request URI to retrieve all of recording id 1 from the given camera:

    /api/cameras/fd20f7a2-9d69-4cb3-94ed-d51a20c3edfe/main/view.mp4?s=1

Example request URI to retrieve all of recording ids 15 from the given camera, with timestamp subtitles:

    /api/cameras/fd20f7a2-9d69-4cb3-94ed-d51a20c3edfe/main/view.mp4?s=1-5&ts=true

Example request URI to retrieve recording id 1, skipping its first 26 90,000ths of a second:

    /api/cameras/fd20f7a2-9d69-4cb3-94ed-d51a20c3edfe/main/view.mp4?s=1.26

TODO: error behavior on missing segment. It should be a 404, likely with an application/json body describing what portion if any (still) exists.

/api/cameras/<uuid>/<stream>/view.m4s

A GET returns a .mp4 suitable for use as a HTML5 Media Source Extensions media segment. The MIME type will be video/mp4, with a codecs parameter as specified in RFC 6381.

Expected query parameters:

  • s (one or more): as with the .mp4 URL, except that media segments can't contain edit lists so none will be generated. TODO: maybe add a Leading-Time: header to indicate how many leading 90,000ths of a second are present, so that the caller can trim it in some other way.

It's recommended that each .m4s retrieval be for at most one Moonfire NVR recording segment for several reasons:

  • The Media Source Extension API appears structured for adding a complete segment at a time. Large media segments thus impose significant latency on seeking.
  • There is currently a hard limit of 4 GiB of data because the .m4s uses a single moof followed by a single mdat; the former references the latter with 32-bit offsets.
  • There's currently no way to generate an initialization segment for more than one video sample entry, so a .m4s that uses more than one video sample entry can't be used.

/api/init/<sha1>.mp4

A GET returns a .mp4 suitable for use as a HTML5 Media Source Extensions initialization segment. The MIME type will be video/mp4, with a codecs parameter as specified in RFC 6381.