madscientist wrote: ↑Wed Sep 09, 2020 3:04 am
i am presently not using mdetect, full recording is required , 10fps
present everything is working except cpu load.....but for 200+ camera....i may have to think of using a standalone r810 with four socket 64 core, 128 gb server.......for storage i need to go for non ssd , sas 8tb hdd, if easily available and affordable......
but from where to start, standalone server or virtualization........which camera (presently hikvision) ........ that is the question.....starting point
Use mocord / modect on the substream and record or (nodect & linked monitors) on the high res stream. I'd say 7 or 8 FPS is enough, personally. Not all cameras need the full hi res stream. Storage areas on ZM 1.32 and newer means you can have multiple HDDs so there isn't going to be only 1 8TB HDD. You can have a number of 4TB HDDs, which seem to be affordable at the moment. Do not use virtualization. You want a UPS.
You must be careful which camera you choose. Getting one with a warranty and testing them out is required. Test in mocord mode. ZMA uses much more CPU than ZMC.
ZM Analysis /
ZM Camera Record. Mocord / Modect means ZMA runs. Hikvision is one option and should work well, but you need a warranty, if you have a lot of them. I had one fail on me out of the blue once. You can try different brands, if you want to diversify your risk or just play around. There are a number of solid name brand cameras out there that are worth testing. Hikvision (for the low end) is the general go to here, but if you are buying 250 cameras, you have room to experiment. Try a few Dahua, Arecont Vision, Honeywell, etc... Any known brand name that is Onvif compliant. If you can afford it, buy Axis (which is the go to for the high end here). Also consider the Axis companion cameras which should be lower cost. I'm testing one of these out right now. Of course, test all out first. I had a honeywell that required UDP, and probably an Arecont Vision too, but otherwise they work 100%.
What you don't want, is to end up with a camera that works 'most' of the time. That can be a nightmare. Or the same model cameras, where some of them work 100% and some of them drop out occasionally. The cameras should be rock-solid stable.
EDIT: If you think you don't need mocord, then you can go without it, but trying to track down events without motion / timeline is difficult, and I don't advise it. I would only omit motion detection on a camera by camera basis.