- Dec 12, 2015
- 41
- 27
I am just starting to seriously research setting up a surveillance system for my house after having some stuff go missing recently. Anyways, I have ordered a Hikvision DS-2CD2032 to cut my teeth on and figure out camera angles and lenses but there are a bunch of unknowns I have with using Blue Iris.
My setup is more a resemblance of a small corporate network than a home setup. For power and network, I have a Dell Powerconnect 5524P which I am worried about as a single point of failure. It is in a stack with two other 5548 switches with a direct 10Gb and indirect secondary 10Gb link between the three switches. I am hoping to get away with using one of two existing Hyper-V servers to host the Blue Iris server with all access being remote preferably via web but I am not opposed to an excuse to upgrade or add hardware. Using the existing systems, it will either be a X5687 Xeon or E5-2620 V2 Xeon with the virtualized system running off a pure flash array, let's say 250GB dedicated to this system but that is flexible. I would prefer storage to be over SMB to one of two file servers and intend to allocate 10-20TB of 140TB combined storage but ISCSI is an option if SMB won't work. The storage system is one point I haven't found a definite answer on yet.
My theoretical implementation is 6-8 cameras, 3MP or better at a good bitrate via POE on a dedicated VLAN. If I use the current Hyper-V network connections, there is a 10Gb with 1Gb fallover which I hope is enough. I can setup a few dedicated 1Gb links if there is an advantage to that. The Blue Iris system would probably run Win7 but 8, 8.1, 10 and server OS's are a option with the server OS's licensing being covered by the host server, ie. free up to 2012r2 but I already have licenses for the others if they are better. One of my concerns of Blue Iris is how video files are stored. I have seen direct to disk thrown around many times but is this caching multiple feeds and writing in one streamlined feed or is this still multiple concurrent writes where I need to think about random I/O writes?
I am not too worried about remote access which will be via a PFsense firewall and a pathetic 300/20 connection but I am thinking about cut network connections. Can Blue Iris interface with a external input such as as 12v signal pulled high or low to force an immediate upload of a selected amount of video, say the last 5 minutes to a remote server. This could be FTP, SFTP or basically anything to a server in another state with a redundant WEB connection? I am just thinking hypothetically of someone trying to take stuff, noticing the cameras, getting through the security door, unbolting the servers from the rack and me not having access to the recordings. Actually, I could even put a third destination for recordings in a remote storage unit I have over a 1Gb line to.
My setup is more a resemblance of a small corporate network than a home setup. For power and network, I have a Dell Powerconnect 5524P which I am worried about as a single point of failure. It is in a stack with two other 5548 switches with a direct 10Gb and indirect secondary 10Gb link between the three switches. I am hoping to get away with using one of two existing Hyper-V servers to host the Blue Iris server with all access being remote preferably via web but I am not opposed to an excuse to upgrade or add hardware. Using the existing systems, it will either be a X5687 Xeon or E5-2620 V2 Xeon with the virtualized system running off a pure flash array, let's say 250GB dedicated to this system but that is flexible. I would prefer storage to be over SMB to one of two file servers and intend to allocate 10-20TB of 140TB combined storage but ISCSI is an option if SMB won't work. The storage system is one point I haven't found a definite answer on yet.
My theoretical implementation is 6-8 cameras, 3MP or better at a good bitrate via POE on a dedicated VLAN. If I use the current Hyper-V network connections, there is a 10Gb with 1Gb fallover which I hope is enough. I can setup a few dedicated 1Gb links if there is an advantage to that. The Blue Iris system would probably run Win7 but 8, 8.1, 10 and server OS's are a option with the server OS's licensing being covered by the host server, ie. free up to 2012r2 but I already have licenses for the others if they are better. One of my concerns of Blue Iris is how video files are stored. I have seen direct to disk thrown around many times but is this caching multiple feeds and writing in one streamlined feed or is this still multiple concurrent writes where I need to think about random I/O writes?
I am not too worried about remote access which will be via a PFsense firewall and a pathetic 300/20 connection but I am thinking about cut network connections. Can Blue Iris interface with a external input such as as 12v signal pulled high or low to force an immediate upload of a selected amount of video, say the last 5 minutes to a remote server. This could be FTP, SFTP or basically anything to a server in another state with a redundant WEB connection? I am just thinking hypothetically of someone trying to take stuff, noticing the cameras, getting through the security door, unbolting the servers from the rack and me not having access to the recordings. Actually, I could even put a third destination for recordings in a remote storage unit I have over a 1Gb line to.
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