Trying to connect an IP camera to my school's network
For a school face recognition project, I bought a DLINK DCS-5000L IP Camera.
I had the staff - theoretical - approval beforehand, but now that I am trying to install it, they are making it more difficult than expected.
Initially, the setup planned (assuming approval on all levels) was:
- install the camera in the classroom
- configure port forwarding on the school's router in order to access the data from outside
- configure surveillance station to store that data on my home Synology NAS
However, things are not turning as easy as expected: they are ok for me to set it up as long as it doesn't involve touching the school's router. Instead, they suggested that I bring my own.
So my question is:
How can I setup the recording of the video stream without physical access to their router?
If needed, I can bring from home:
- a DSL router (incidentally, also a D-LINK)
- a cheap wifi extender that has an ethernet port
- an external hard drive (in case remote access is not a possibility at all)
To make my questions more specific:
- can I create a subnetwork with my DSL router (or range extender), and connect it to the School's network? (ethernet or wifi accesses are available)
- how can I setup the recording of the video stream to a device outside the school? (or if not possible on a hard drive connected to the router)
Your patience will be appreciated as I have no experience setting up a surveillance camera or a subnetwork.
Thanks very much
networking wireless-networking wireless-router nas ip-camera
New contributor
add a comment |
For a school face recognition project, I bought a DLINK DCS-5000L IP Camera.
I had the staff - theoretical - approval beforehand, but now that I am trying to install it, they are making it more difficult than expected.
Initially, the setup planned (assuming approval on all levels) was:
- install the camera in the classroom
- configure port forwarding on the school's router in order to access the data from outside
- configure surveillance station to store that data on my home Synology NAS
However, things are not turning as easy as expected: they are ok for me to set it up as long as it doesn't involve touching the school's router. Instead, they suggested that I bring my own.
So my question is:
How can I setup the recording of the video stream without physical access to their router?
If needed, I can bring from home:
- a DSL router (incidentally, also a D-LINK)
- a cheap wifi extender that has an ethernet port
- an external hard drive (in case remote access is not a possibility at all)
To make my questions more specific:
- can I create a subnetwork with my DSL router (or range extender), and connect it to the School's network? (ethernet or wifi accesses are available)
- how can I setup the recording of the video stream to a device outside the school? (or if not possible on a hard drive connected to the router)
Your patience will be appreciated as I have no experience setting up a surveillance camera or a subnetwork.
Thanks very much
networking wireless-networking wireless-router nas ip-camera
New contributor
add a comment |
For a school face recognition project, I bought a DLINK DCS-5000L IP Camera.
I had the staff - theoretical - approval beforehand, but now that I am trying to install it, they are making it more difficult than expected.
Initially, the setup planned (assuming approval on all levels) was:
- install the camera in the classroom
- configure port forwarding on the school's router in order to access the data from outside
- configure surveillance station to store that data on my home Synology NAS
However, things are not turning as easy as expected: they are ok for me to set it up as long as it doesn't involve touching the school's router. Instead, they suggested that I bring my own.
So my question is:
How can I setup the recording of the video stream without physical access to their router?
If needed, I can bring from home:
- a DSL router (incidentally, also a D-LINK)
- a cheap wifi extender that has an ethernet port
- an external hard drive (in case remote access is not a possibility at all)
To make my questions more specific:
- can I create a subnetwork with my DSL router (or range extender), and connect it to the School's network? (ethernet or wifi accesses are available)
- how can I setup the recording of the video stream to a device outside the school? (or if not possible on a hard drive connected to the router)
Your patience will be appreciated as I have no experience setting up a surveillance camera or a subnetwork.
Thanks very much
networking wireless-networking wireless-router nas ip-camera
New contributor
For a school face recognition project, I bought a DLINK DCS-5000L IP Camera.
I had the staff - theoretical - approval beforehand, but now that I am trying to install it, they are making it more difficult than expected.
Initially, the setup planned (assuming approval on all levels) was:
- install the camera in the classroom
- configure port forwarding on the school's router in order to access the data from outside
- configure surveillance station to store that data on my home Synology NAS
However, things are not turning as easy as expected: they are ok for me to set it up as long as it doesn't involve touching the school's router. Instead, they suggested that I bring my own.
So my question is:
How can I setup the recording of the video stream without physical access to their router?
If needed, I can bring from home:
- a DSL router (incidentally, also a D-LINK)
- a cheap wifi extender that has an ethernet port
- an external hard drive (in case remote access is not a possibility at all)
To make my questions more specific:
- can I create a subnetwork with my DSL router (or range extender), and connect it to the School's network? (ethernet or wifi accesses are available)
- how can I setup the recording of the video stream to a device outside the school? (or if not possible on a hard drive connected to the router)
Your patience will be appreciated as I have no experience setting up a surveillance camera or a subnetwork.
Thanks very much
networking wireless-networking wireless-router nas ip-camera
networking wireless-networking wireless-router nas ip-camera
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New contributor
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asked 1 hour ago
sousben
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2 Answers
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Wireless IP security cameras may have two modes of operation. One would be a direct access mode where you connect directly to the IP address and capture a video stream via a number of supported, open protocols. Two would be a cloud based, central access provided by the manufacturer. In this case you and the camera connect to the server and you stream video via the third party server.
In the second case, you do not require port forwarding on the router. But you are constrained to the features the third party service provides, and your access to a direct video stream or recording may be limited. In the first case, you’ll need to port forward on the router but your access to the camera is at a lower level and you can typically do whatever you want with the video stream.
You’ll need to determine what modes your camera support and what exactly you need to do with the video stream.
As you have indicated, port forwarding is not an option. So if there is no cloud service available that suits your needs, you will need to setup connectivity internally at the school and do everything on-premise at the school.
What this looks like is, again, decided by your requirements. It’s entirely possible to simply hook up the camera to the network and stream the video to another network connected NAS, or PC.
There is one other possibility, and that is that your camera supports connecting “out” to some other device to write its video stream to. In this case, you could perform the port forwarding on your home router and have the camera send the data to you. However, there are several technical hurdles to this and security risks.
If this is a school project, assuming this is sanctioned by the school and instructor, and that it is for learning purposes, I would seek out the assistance and support of qualified staff members to complete your project. Butting heads with the support staff will not get you very far.
add a comment |
configure port forwarding on the school's router in order to access the data from outside
[…] they are ok for me to set it up as long as it doesn't involve touching the school's router. Instead, they suggested that I bring my own.
This was a useless suggestion. Routers are not magic; it does not matter what kind of device you connect to the school's router – whether it's a camera or a second router – it behaves the same with regards to port-forwarding. If it's impossible to connect from outside to your camera, then it'll remain equally impossible to connect from outside to your router.
(A subnetwork can be created – indeed that's what routers do – but it won't change the situation in any way.)
You can probably still use the camera and the surveillance station, but you'll be limited to outgoing connections only. For example, you could put the recording device in the same school network as the camera is – internal connections within a decently managed network do not need port-forwarding. (But if that doesn't work, then you can bring your own router/switch to connect the two directly.)
(The camera appears to support automatic NAT passthrough using D-Link's "mydlink" cloud service, but that's probably limited to access from the smartphone apps only.)
An alternative approach is to bring in a router or a raspberry pi that connects out to a VPN server (e.g. OpenVPN to your NAS) – and then your surveillance station will be able to connect in to the camera through the already-established VPN tunnel.
Thanks for replying, do you think the router mentioned in my question will allow connecting to the VPN? If so that would be a great solution
– sousben
25 mins ago
Search through its documentation. Some routers have VPN client features; yours probably does not. (But even if it was supported, it might not quite work in your situation; a plain Linux or OpenWRT or Mikrotik device would offer a bit more flexibility.)
– grawity
8 mins ago
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
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Wireless IP security cameras may have two modes of operation. One would be a direct access mode where you connect directly to the IP address and capture a video stream via a number of supported, open protocols. Two would be a cloud based, central access provided by the manufacturer. In this case you and the camera connect to the server and you stream video via the third party server.
In the second case, you do not require port forwarding on the router. But you are constrained to the features the third party service provides, and your access to a direct video stream or recording may be limited. In the first case, you’ll need to port forward on the router but your access to the camera is at a lower level and you can typically do whatever you want with the video stream.
You’ll need to determine what modes your camera support and what exactly you need to do with the video stream.
As you have indicated, port forwarding is not an option. So if there is no cloud service available that suits your needs, you will need to setup connectivity internally at the school and do everything on-premise at the school.
What this looks like is, again, decided by your requirements. It’s entirely possible to simply hook up the camera to the network and stream the video to another network connected NAS, or PC.
There is one other possibility, and that is that your camera supports connecting “out” to some other device to write its video stream to. In this case, you could perform the port forwarding on your home router and have the camera send the data to you. However, there are several technical hurdles to this and security risks.
If this is a school project, assuming this is sanctioned by the school and instructor, and that it is for learning purposes, I would seek out the assistance and support of qualified staff members to complete your project. Butting heads with the support staff will not get you very far.
add a comment |
Wireless IP security cameras may have two modes of operation. One would be a direct access mode where you connect directly to the IP address and capture a video stream via a number of supported, open protocols. Two would be a cloud based, central access provided by the manufacturer. In this case you and the camera connect to the server and you stream video via the third party server.
In the second case, you do not require port forwarding on the router. But you are constrained to the features the third party service provides, and your access to a direct video stream or recording may be limited. In the first case, you’ll need to port forward on the router but your access to the camera is at a lower level and you can typically do whatever you want with the video stream.
You’ll need to determine what modes your camera support and what exactly you need to do with the video stream.
As you have indicated, port forwarding is not an option. So if there is no cloud service available that suits your needs, you will need to setup connectivity internally at the school and do everything on-premise at the school.
What this looks like is, again, decided by your requirements. It’s entirely possible to simply hook up the camera to the network and stream the video to another network connected NAS, or PC.
There is one other possibility, and that is that your camera supports connecting “out” to some other device to write its video stream to. In this case, you could perform the port forwarding on your home router and have the camera send the data to you. However, there are several technical hurdles to this and security risks.
If this is a school project, assuming this is sanctioned by the school and instructor, and that it is for learning purposes, I would seek out the assistance and support of qualified staff members to complete your project. Butting heads with the support staff will not get you very far.
add a comment |
Wireless IP security cameras may have two modes of operation. One would be a direct access mode where you connect directly to the IP address and capture a video stream via a number of supported, open protocols. Two would be a cloud based, central access provided by the manufacturer. In this case you and the camera connect to the server and you stream video via the third party server.
In the second case, you do not require port forwarding on the router. But you are constrained to the features the third party service provides, and your access to a direct video stream or recording may be limited. In the first case, you’ll need to port forward on the router but your access to the camera is at a lower level and you can typically do whatever you want with the video stream.
You’ll need to determine what modes your camera support and what exactly you need to do with the video stream.
As you have indicated, port forwarding is not an option. So if there is no cloud service available that suits your needs, you will need to setup connectivity internally at the school and do everything on-premise at the school.
What this looks like is, again, decided by your requirements. It’s entirely possible to simply hook up the camera to the network and stream the video to another network connected NAS, or PC.
There is one other possibility, and that is that your camera supports connecting “out” to some other device to write its video stream to. In this case, you could perform the port forwarding on your home router and have the camera send the data to you. However, there are several technical hurdles to this and security risks.
If this is a school project, assuming this is sanctioned by the school and instructor, and that it is for learning purposes, I would seek out the assistance and support of qualified staff members to complete your project. Butting heads with the support staff will not get you very far.
Wireless IP security cameras may have two modes of operation. One would be a direct access mode where you connect directly to the IP address and capture a video stream via a number of supported, open protocols. Two would be a cloud based, central access provided by the manufacturer. In this case you and the camera connect to the server and you stream video via the third party server.
In the second case, you do not require port forwarding on the router. But you are constrained to the features the third party service provides, and your access to a direct video stream or recording may be limited. In the first case, you’ll need to port forward on the router but your access to the camera is at a lower level and you can typically do whatever you want with the video stream.
You’ll need to determine what modes your camera support and what exactly you need to do with the video stream.
As you have indicated, port forwarding is not an option. So if there is no cloud service available that suits your needs, you will need to setup connectivity internally at the school and do everything on-premise at the school.
What this looks like is, again, decided by your requirements. It’s entirely possible to simply hook up the camera to the network and stream the video to another network connected NAS, or PC.
There is one other possibility, and that is that your camera supports connecting “out” to some other device to write its video stream to. In this case, you could perform the port forwarding on your home router and have the camera send the data to you. However, there are several technical hurdles to this and security risks.
If this is a school project, assuming this is sanctioned by the school and instructor, and that it is for learning purposes, I would seek out the assistance and support of qualified staff members to complete your project. Butting heads with the support staff will not get you very far.
answered 1 hour ago
Appleoddity
6,98121024
6,98121024
add a comment |
add a comment |
configure port forwarding on the school's router in order to access the data from outside
[…] they are ok for me to set it up as long as it doesn't involve touching the school's router. Instead, they suggested that I bring my own.
This was a useless suggestion. Routers are not magic; it does not matter what kind of device you connect to the school's router – whether it's a camera or a second router – it behaves the same with regards to port-forwarding. If it's impossible to connect from outside to your camera, then it'll remain equally impossible to connect from outside to your router.
(A subnetwork can be created – indeed that's what routers do – but it won't change the situation in any way.)
You can probably still use the camera and the surveillance station, but you'll be limited to outgoing connections only. For example, you could put the recording device in the same school network as the camera is – internal connections within a decently managed network do not need port-forwarding. (But if that doesn't work, then you can bring your own router/switch to connect the two directly.)
(The camera appears to support automatic NAT passthrough using D-Link's "mydlink" cloud service, but that's probably limited to access from the smartphone apps only.)
An alternative approach is to bring in a router or a raspberry pi that connects out to a VPN server (e.g. OpenVPN to your NAS) – and then your surveillance station will be able to connect in to the camera through the already-established VPN tunnel.
Thanks for replying, do you think the router mentioned in my question will allow connecting to the VPN? If so that would be a great solution
– sousben
25 mins ago
Search through its documentation. Some routers have VPN client features; yours probably does not. (But even if it was supported, it might not quite work in your situation; a plain Linux or OpenWRT or Mikrotik device would offer a bit more flexibility.)
– grawity
8 mins ago
add a comment |
configure port forwarding on the school's router in order to access the data from outside
[…] they are ok for me to set it up as long as it doesn't involve touching the school's router. Instead, they suggested that I bring my own.
This was a useless suggestion. Routers are not magic; it does not matter what kind of device you connect to the school's router – whether it's a camera or a second router – it behaves the same with regards to port-forwarding. If it's impossible to connect from outside to your camera, then it'll remain equally impossible to connect from outside to your router.
(A subnetwork can be created – indeed that's what routers do – but it won't change the situation in any way.)
You can probably still use the camera and the surveillance station, but you'll be limited to outgoing connections only. For example, you could put the recording device in the same school network as the camera is – internal connections within a decently managed network do not need port-forwarding. (But if that doesn't work, then you can bring your own router/switch to connect the two directly.)
(The camera appears to support automatic NAT passthrough using D-Link's "mydlink" cloud service, but that's probably limited to access from the smartphone apps only.)
An alternative approach is to bring in a router or a raspberry pi that connects out to a VPN server (e.g. OpenVPN to your NAS) – and then your surveillance station will be able to connect in to the camera through the already-established VPN tunnel.
Thanks for replying, do you think the router mentioned in my question will allow connecting to the VPN? If so that would be a great solution
– sousben
25 mins ago
Search through its documentation. Some routers have VPN client features; yours probably does not. (But even if it was supported, it might not quite work in your situation; a plain Linux or OpenWRT or Mikrotik device would offer a bit more flexibility.)
– grawity
8 mins ago
add a comment |
configure port forwarding on the school's router in order to access the data from outside
[…] they are ok for me to set it up as long as it doesn't involve touching the school's router. Instead, they suggested that I bring my own.
This was a useless suggestion. Routers are not magic; it does not matter what kind of device you connect to the school's router – whether it's a camera or a second router – it behaves the same with regards to port-forwarding. If it's impossible to connect from outside to your camera, then it'll remain equally impossible to connect from outside to your router.
(A subnetwork can be created – indeed that's what routers do – but it won't change the situation in any way.)
You can probably still use the camera and the surveillance station, but you'll be limited to outgoing connections only. For example, you could put the recording device in the same school network as the camera is – internal connections within a decently managed network do not need port-forwarding. (But if that doesn't work, then you can bring your own router/switch to connect the two directly.)
(The camera appears to support automatic NAT passthrough using D-Link's "mydlink" cloud service, but that's probably limited to access from the smartphone apps only.)
An alternative approach is to bring in a router or a raspberry pi that connects out to a VPN server (e.g. OpenVPN to your NAS) – and then your surveillance station will be able to connect in to the camera through the already-established VPN tunnel.
configure port forwarding on the school's router in order to access the data from outside
[…] they are ok for me to set it up as long as it doesn't involve touching the school's router. Instead, they suggested that I bring my own.
This was a useless suggestion. Routers are not magic; it does not matter what kind of device you connect to the school's router – whether it's a camera or a second router – it behaves the same with regards to port-forwarding. If it's impossible to connect from outside to your camera, then it'll remain equally impossible to connect from outside to your router.
(A subnetwork can be created – indeed that's what routers do – but it won't change the situation in any way.)
You can probably still use the camera and the surveillance station, but you'll be limited to outgoing connections only. For example, you could put the recording device in the same school network as the camera is – internal connections within a decently managed network do not need port-forwarding. (But if that doesn't work, then you can bring your own router/switch to connect the two directly.)
(The camera appears to support automatic NAT passthrough using D-Link's "mydlink" cloud service, but that's probably limited to access from the smartphone apps only.)
An alternative approach is to bring in a router or a raspberry pi that connects out to a VPN server (e.g. OpenVPN to your NAS) – and then your surveillance station will be able to connect in to the camera through the already-established VPN tunnel.
answered 1 hour ago
grawity
231k35487544
231k35487544
Thanks for replying, do you think the router mentioned in my question will allow connecting to the VPN? If so that would be a great solution
– sousben
25 mins ago
Search through its documentation. Some routers have VPN client features; yours probably does not. (But even if it was supported, it might not quite work in your situation; a plain Linux or OpenWRT or Mikrotik device would offer a bit more flexibility.)
– grawity
8 mins ago
add a comment |
Thanks for replying, do you think the router mentioned in my question will allow connecting to the VPN? If so that would be a great solution
– sousben
25 mins ago
Search through its documentation. Some routers have VPN client features; yours probably does not. (But even if it was supported, it might not quite work in your situation; a plain Linux or OpenWRT or Mikrotik device would offer a bit more flexibility.)
– grawity
8 mins ago
Thanks for replying, do you think the router mentioned in my question will allow connecting to the VPN? If so that would be a great solution
– sousben
25 mins ago
Thanks for replying, do you think the router mentioned in my question will allow connecting to the VPN? If so that would be a great solution
– sousben
25 mins ago
Search through its documentation. Some routers have VPN client features; yours probably does not. (But even if it was supported, it might not quite work in your situation; a plain Linux or OpenWRT or Mikrotik device would offer a bit more flexibility.)
– grawity
8 mins ago
Search through its documentation. Some routers have VPN client features; yours probably does not. (But even if it was supported, it might not quite work in your situation; a plain Linux or OpenWRT or Mikrotik device would offer a bit more flexibility.)
– grawity
8 mins ago
add a comment |
sousben is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
sousben is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
sousben is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
sousben is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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