Which in-house camera is the easiest to integrate into the HA system (must meet the following 6 key criteria)?

Hi,

My 6 core criteria that absolutely must be met are:
1.) The camera should be readily available in Germany, e.g. from Amazon
2.) the camera should be easy to integrate into the HA system
3.) Registration with the camera manufacturer should not be necessary to use the camera in the HA system !!!
4.) the camera should not need a cloud connection
5.) The live camera image should be visible in the HA system and can also be accessed remotely via the smartphone (appHomeAssistant)
6.) the best is a (6.) camera with power supply ā€¦ because then when you are at home you can pull out the power supply and have more security that the camera will not continue to record secretly (a battery-operated camera is impractical ā€¦ because then you would have to fumble out the batteries every day)

It would be nice, but not absolutely necessary, are the following criteria:
a) the best is a camera with an Ethernet connection, i.e. a LAN cable is laid from the camera to the router ā€¦ because with a WLAN connection the transfer rate can be too low and new problems can arise
b) It would also be nice if the camera is supported by the HA system to such an extent that when an alarm is triggered, not only is the current camera image sent to the notification, but also, for example, a 30s video clip after the triggering via the smartphone remotely. You can then check remotely whether only a moth triggered the sensor or whether it was not a false alarm.
c) In terms of price, the camera should, if possible, still be in the double-digit ā‚¬ range

Which specific in-house camera should I use that meets these criteria?
And what would the yaml connection for the camera look like?

Thank you.
Many greetings, sten

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Greetings Sten,

Sounds like youā€™re describing most wired PoE powered ONVIF compatible cameras and an NVR solution ike BlueIris or UniFi Protect

(Except i think the UniFi solution violates your registry requirementā€¦ So you likely wonā€™t be interested)

The cameras (if you can find them, ive personally been on a waiting list for 6 UniFi cameras since mid year, thanks supply chain) you should expect the low end (something like a reolink IP camera that supports ONVIF at 5MP) to be more than 50$USD/ā‚¬43 each before youve chosen your NVR solution and youll need to make sure your network can distribute PoE to do it.

Basically id you want to cast away the back ends of companies like Nest/Ring/whomever you ise in Germany you have yo build your own storage/management solution. Thatā€™s what connects to HA and interprets the cameras. You can buy a full version of Blue Iris for about $60USD and then youll also need a machine to run it on. That machine needs to be flush with enough fast storage to record as much as your requirements demand.

So. Except the double digit euro requiremdnt everything else is pretty easy with ONVIF compatible IP cameras and your own NVR.

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Hi Nathan,

Thank you for your answer.

Network Video Recorder (NVR) Solution ā€¦ I was hoping that the HA system could do the recording of the video clips. If I need an extra computer for this that also has to run, then thatā€™s a size too big for me.
=> Point b) is then unfortunately omitted

Tip: Reolink IP camera that supports ONVIF at 5MP:

  • Reolink 5MP PTZ (Reolink E1 Zoom) ā€¦ I found it
  • should probably support: RTSP and Onvif protocol ā€¦ that would fit
  • open question:
    To use the camera for the first time, you have to install a manufacturer app and then go there
    register with the camera manufacturer?
    => if so, then NOT

Iā€™m looking for an in-house camera that can be easily integrated into the HA system without having to install a third-party app beforehand and without having to register with the camera manufacturer.

Thank you.

Many greetings,
Sten

Homeassistant wont store video this why you need an NVR.

Of you arent running an NVR you need a service. So either you roll a server or connect to a service. If you need to store video

Welcome to the forums !

The usual candidates come to mind: Hikvision, Dahua, Reolink or one of their OEMs. Almost all of them have ONVIF or at least RTSP support (that makes them cloud independent) and are powered through PoE. Theyā€™re all highly configurable. They also integrate into HA, but keep in mind that native HA support for cameras is not that great. Hereā€™s more info.

For my indoor cams (which I physically remove unless Iā€™m on vacation), I use the Hikvision 4MP cubecams. They have a clip on base, so you can leave the base screwed to your ceiling and clip the camera on only when needed. Theyā€™re about 100ā‚¬ here from an official distributor. They have both PoE LAN and wifi support. Iā€™m using a dedicated hardware NVR, but you can just as well use a software solution like Blue Iris or Frigate.

Only caveat with all IP cameras regardless of manufacturer (and especially Chinese ones), do not give them internet access. Keep them isolated on their own LAN or VLAN in their own subnet.

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Cheapest camera i could find, made into a doorbell, costed me ā‚¬30,-

Although i used Motioneye for integration and motion detection :yum:

Sorry, this is too complicated for me. I am not an IT network administrator.

Thatā€™s why this point is so important to me:
" Iā€™m looking for an in-house camera that can be easily integrated into the HA system without having to install a third-party app beforehand and without having to register with the camera manufacturer."

My problem here is:
I have read a lot of camera reviews on the Internet, but there is no information on this.

Are there maybe cameras that are definitely without registration, e.g .:

  • ā€œOpen Sourceā€ camera,
  • or ā€œOpen Hardwareā€ camera,
  • or a ā€œHome Assistantā€ camera?

Thank you.

Many greetings,
Sten

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None of these RTSP/ONVIF capable cameras require any kind of ā€˜registrationā€™. Theyā€™re just cameras. They donā€™t come with an attached service of any kind. RTSP and ONVIF are open manufacturer independent protocols. You plug them into your router, open a web browser and point it to the cameras local IP on your LAN. Then you configure the camera, integrate it with your NVR and/or Home Assistant. Itā€™s all between your PC, your network and the little computer on board of the camera. No internet, no cloud and no manufacturer app involved.

The downside is that you need to know a little bit about how networking functions. No need for being an IT expert. Just basic home networking knowledge. But thereā€™s no way around that. Youā€™ll have to learn.

If you want a completely no skill required plugā€™nā€™play system, then youā€™ll have to use one of the crappy cloud cameras you donā€™t want.

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Hi,

Thanks for your explanations.

Iā€™m looking for a good youtube training video that shows:

  • How to put an ONVIF-ā€œin-house cameraā€ into operation without a cameraManufacturerApp and without registration,
  • and can be integrated into the HA-System via the ONVIF protocol
  • ideally in German, or in English
  • e.g. for the ā€œReolink E1 Zoomā€ (can ONVIF, has many good reviews)

Do you have a tip for me?

Nope. 10 charrrr

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Eh, personally I think UniFi Protect is just an expensive overhyped system with mediocre quality. They try to use their brand name to get people hooked into their overpriced camera / security ecosystem. I donā€™t know, maybe it makes more sense if youā€™re already fully invested into their ecosystem. But even then I would probably get something else cheaper with better image quality.

Have a look at this episode of The Hook Up where he compares Blue Iris, UniFi Protect and some entry level Reolink system. Especially the parts about picture quality and privacy. And price. Yeah I know they have super cheap entry level stuff too now, but the picture quality is just embarassingly bad.

Oh and this nice little incident from last year shows how well you can trust Ubiquiti in general.

Ubiquiti is accused of covering up a ā€˜catastrophicā€™ data breach ā€” and itā€™s not denying it

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I just bought some laview cameras after reading somewhere here that they were just hikvision inside and would work with the integration. My model was just not capable of broadcasting rstvp or onvif out of the box because it comes with no nvr which i guess is a requirement for these cameras. even if they did the company software doesnā€™t support linux which is my env.

Want to revive this thread because while i appreciate everyoneā€™s time responding, i didnā€™t find them very helpful. They made me think i could choose any camera with an IP address and led me towards buying the wrong thing and wasting a bunch of time.

Anyone here actually get a wifi camera to work with HA? like ACTUaLLY working and streaming in a dashboard without a cloud service? I am totally happy not storing all of the video for right now, so not sure a nvr is necessary at this stage but correct me if Iā€™m wrong

Have you tried to get it to work with MotionEye Add-On?

That works fine with my wifi cam
https://nl.aliexpress.com/item/4000349749492.html?srcSns=sns_Copy&spreadType=socialShare&bizType=ProductDetail&social_params=60081545210&aff_fcid=2d093b06f9bf46328ca4762d17871ade-1626891508946-06135-_veasPr&tt=MG&aff_fsk=_veasPr&aff_platform=default&sk=_veasPr&aff_trace_key=2d093b06f9bf46328ca4762d17871ade-1626891508946-06135-_veasPr&shareId=60081545210&businessType=ProductDetail&platform=AE&terminal_id=4e59e1cb08cc42e7842edb6c42cc9853&gatewayAdapt=glo2nld

For anyone following this thread, the claims made about Ubiquiti and this ā€œmassive data breachā€ turned out to be a massive hoax and the alleged whistleblower has been indicted for his part.

I am fully invested in Ubiquiti products and aside from them being a little pricey, they mostly ā€œjust workā€ and are of good quality. I use a number of their ā€œinstantā€ cameras and they are, certainly the newer generations, really good quality for the price.

For indoor cameras, I prefer the Amcrest pan-tilt (no zoom) IP4M-1041 cameras. You seriously cannot beat this price for the quality images and firmware. Dahua manufactures the hardware and provides the firmware, Amcrest re-brands and sells them.

I read that the amcrest cameras require a cloud service to connect. The free plan is 4 hours of continuous (or snapshot) recording. Is this correct? If I wanted to see something 8 hours ago, Iā€™d be out of luck unless I paid the subscription.

EDIT: Did some reading and looks like these can dump their recordings locally (FTP, etc), which is good, but Iā€™m still interested if a cloud account is required to connect to HA.

No, a cloud account is not necessary to connect to Home Assistant. Regarding ā€œfree planā€ and ā€œ8 hours agoā€, these are optional cloud features Amcrest provides, which are completely and totally unnecessary to setup and record from and monitor the cameras.

If you also use a video recording application (like Windows/Blue Iris or Linux/zoneminder or many others) you can record as many hours of video as your local storage drives can store.

Ah, nice.

So the desire/plan is this:

  • I have a Synology NAS, so configuring the integration on the NAS to store the recordings.
  • Configuring the integration on HA to handle the UI. I would like to control/access teh cameras via the HA UI, while the data is locally available on the NAS.

Sounds like everything will work and I should get these cameras.

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Or get at least one or two to start, and develop your configuration and storage needs using it. After youā€™ve got it setup to your satisfaction, then add more cameras.

another example is MotionEye, which happens to be available as add-on for HA :wink:

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