I'm fairly experienced with Linux and even setup Zoneminder successfully about 8 years ago to monitor my cat at home, just as a fun project. I'm now looking to use Zoneminder for home security, and have thought through various aspects, but wanted to see if others have advice on anything here that doesn't make sense.
I live in a nice area, but there have been problems with occasional break-ins, partly because it's a nicer area. I live in a 2-story house, about 3K sq ft, built in 1998. There was actually a home invasion/assault a few years back a few miles away that was pretty scary, but I know they're pretty rare in general.
My goals/setup:
- 3-4 exterior cameras (front door, driveway, backyard) - to monitor prowling
- 2-3 interior cameras (kitchen, foyer) - I plan to pair with a security system (potentially connected to or powered by Home Assistant). It seems like having interior cameras is pretty useful to be able to know why the security system is going off if I'm not home, as opposed to just being in the dark.
- low-cost PoE IP cameras - make them easily replaceable, minimal wiring, low cost, accessible from mobile phone apps via SSH tunnel for simplicity. I've had success with one Foscam FI8910W camera used as a baby monitor, so leaning toward more of those, but not pan/tilt and PoE enabled.
- hire a audio/alarm installer to pull Cat6 cable and consult on exact placement of the cameras. We have a "network closet" where current wall plate Cat5 cable terminate, but I'm slightly worried about the number of drywall holes to pull wire. I may just go with exterior cameras.
- UPS to support the router, cameras, switch, and ZM machine in the event power is interrupted
- Computer - I'm leaning toward a 3-4 year old ex data center rack-mounted computer. My goal is adequate horsepower to support the number of cameras, reliability, and lower power usage.
- Easy disaster recovery - I'm pretty experienced in LAMP/Linux, but don't really enjoy spending my spare time diagnosing system issues. Is it easy to put ZM on a VM or Docker image that can be backed up and easily installed on another machine in the event of a hardware failure?
- Power usage - am I going in the right direction with going for reliable hardware that used to be in a data center? Is the power usage going to be reasonable? I have solar panels, but am generally looking to minimize my energy footprint wherever I can.
- IP vs analog - IP cams with PoE seems the easiest in terms of running wire and future replacement... is that right?
Is this overkill? Should I just buy an off the shelf solution? (I can kind of guess the answer here, given the audience. )
- Cameras: 5@ $100 each
- Computer: $300
- Switch + PoE injector: $50
- Installation: $500
- Cable: ?
- Total: $1400 ?
Am I in the right ballpark with approach and budget? I'm excited to get this built, as I"ve been thinking about it for some time, but want to get it done now in the next month.