On Fri, Jul 3, 2009 at 3:59 PM, Jim March
<1.jim.march@gmail.com> wrote:
Folks,
I've successfully built a webserver (hosting Zoneminder camera images
and feed) for a friend's local business. First time I've ever done
this :). It's on their local net off an Actiontek "basic home router"
(Qwest DSL).
I've given the camera server box a static IP address, and told the
router to do static IPs from 192.168.0.53 on up (DHCP below that for
wireless clients). If I put my laptop on the WiFi net and go to the
camera server IP of 192.168.0.53 I can see the Zoneminder console
web-page, look at camera feeds, etc. Works great.
I told the router to forward port 80 to 192.168.0.53. On the camera
server, pulling up whatismyipaddress.com shows that (for now at least)
IP is 174.18.245.74. (The camera server has working full internet
access - I had to rip out networkmanager to do static IPs manually
under Xubuntu Intrepid.)
BUT, whoops, if I try and connect to 174.18.245.74 from a computer
outside of the local net (using my laptop and a Verizon cellular
modem) I can't get squat. My understanding is that it should work at
this point, right? Router should forward port 80 to local
192.168.0.53?
Is it possible Zoneminder is using a different port? I doubt it...a
Windows machine on the local net can go to 192.168.0.53 and get the ZM
console without specifying a port number.
I realize I'm going to have to use something like DynDNS to make this
work long-term...as in, the next time the router resets and scoops up
a different address. But in the meantime, this step should work,
right?
Any idea what I've missed here?
I believe that the Quest DSL allows port 80 inbound, but I would check this.
In your local "router" did you configure a PORT FORWARD entry - this forwards all requests for port 80 from the WAN side to an internal IP (which would be the DHCP or static private RFC 1918 style non-fully routable internet address) 192.168.0.53 [which IS NOT your CAMERA DEVICE feed (depending on how you have your Zoneminder Setup)].
Alternately, you can configure your ActionTec router with a DMZ to this Zoneminder server showing the images, but be sure you are running a firewall on the local box.
Reference:
http://www.webcamsoft.com/en/faq/actiontec.html
Thanks,
Jim
Hey, we want to see it too!
Once in 1995, I built a camera system in our NOC and people could actually watch us type in the root passwords a million times a day, because we didn't use keys/rsh (maniac "senior" admin), so we telnetted and logged in everywhere all day long. Laugh!
What's the show? Camera dogs? Clowns? Independence Day kazoos (fireworks are illegal!) ?