Difference between revisions of "Debian 11 Bullseye with Zoneminder 1.36.x"
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Note: The following is for amd64 version of Bullseye. If there are packages in the zmrepo for other Buster architectures this should work by substituting the install packages for your architecture. | Note: The following is for amd64 version of Bullseye. If there are packages in the zmrepo for other Buster architectures this should work by substituting the install packages for your architecture. | ||
Debian, unlike Ubuntu, does not install sudo with the initial setup. While you can log in as root, a user with sudo authority is recommended. | Debian, unlike Ubuntu, does not install sudo with the initial setup. While you can log in as root, a user with sudo authority is recommended. |
Revision as of 11:53, 28 September 2021
Updated 11AUG21 for Debian 11
Debian 11 Bullseye is being released with Zoneminder 1.34.23 and as usual for Debian the zm database needs to be created manually. This is not user friendly so I have created this install to use the Zoneminder-Buster packages from the zmrepo. Yes this works as I have installed this on my production server!
UpgradeThe original instructions were for Zoneminder 1.36.5. To upgrade to the current release do steps 2 and 4 below. Should I not update this instruction just use the released version numbers for the install and doc packages.
Note: The following is for amd64 version of Bullseye. If there are packages in the zmrepo for other Buster architectures this should work by substituting the install packages for your architecture.
Debian, unlike Ubuntu, does not install sudo with the initial setup. While you can log in as root, a user with sudo authority is recommended.
To enable sudo: In a terminal,become root with su. Enter your root password. Install sudo with:
apt install sudo
Add the user account to the group sudo with:
/sbin/adduser username sudo
where username is your user account. Exit root then log out and then log in with the same user.
Timezone: it is recommended you set your specific timesone with:
sudo timedatectl set-timezone America/New_York
Of course use your timezone in place of America/New_York.
Mariadb additional settings The default values for the database are adequate for initial setup. However, I recommend you make these changes before installing Zoneminder: Edit the Mariadb config file:
sudo nano /etc/mysql/mariadb.conf.d/50-server.cnf
Add the following in the [mysql] area:
innodb_file_per_table = ON innodb_buffer_pool_ size = 256M innodb_log_file_size - 32M
CTRL+o then [Enter] to save
CTRL+x to exit
Reatart Mariadb:
sudo service mysql restart
I recommend you install mysqltuner and run it from time to time and adjust the database settings as the number of saved events grows.
1. Install Debian 11 (Bullseye), desktop or server version, along with Apache2, PHP and your favorite database (Mariadb recommended). A quick way to install LAMP this is:
sudo apt install apache2 mariadb-server php libapache2-mod-php php-mysql
2. Download zoneminder-doc_1.36.5-buster_all.deb and zoneminder_1.36.5-buster_amd64.deb (Yes, these are the files for Buster but read on)
wget https://zmrepo.zoneminder.com/debian/release-1.36/buster/zoneminder-doc_1.36.7-buster_all.deb
wget https://zmrepo.zoneminder.com/debian/release-1.36/buster/zoneminder_1.36.7-buster_amd64.deb
3. Then secure Mariadb:
sudo mysql_secure_installation
4. Install Gdebi:
sudo apt install gdebi
5. Install Zoneminder:
sudo gdebi zoneminder_1.36.5-buster_amd64.deb zoneminder-doc_1.36.y_all.deb
6. Additional steps:
sudo systemctl enable zoneminder.service sudo systemctl start zoneminder sudo a2enconf zoneminder sudo a2enmod rewrite sudo service apache2 reload
9. Open Zoneminder http://(IP-Address)/zm and remember to change the Timezone in Options-Timezone