wsdd is Linux daemon for ONVIF WS-Discovery service (server side)
wsdd is Linux daemon for ONVIF WS-Discovery service (server side).
ONVIF official website: https://www.onvif.org and their github presence.
The web services data binding is generated using gSOAP
For more details about it see the gSOAP WS-Discovery plugin official manual.
Most Linux systems for building this project require the following packages to be installed: make m4 flex bison byacc yacc
If you need support for encryption and WS-Security then you also need: openssl zlib libcrypto
For example, on ubuntu 22.04, you needed to install:
sudo apt install flex bison byacc make cmake m4
#for support encryption and WS-Security
sudo apt install openssl libssl-dev zlib1g-dev libcrypto++8
For build use cmake for CMakeLists.txt:
You have 4 build variants:
Makefile
)
We build our own version of gSOAP
and use it (see build_gsoap.cmake).
At the same time, we compile the necessary gSOAP
functions with the project.cd repo_dir
cmake -B build .
cmake --build build
gSOAP
(we link it)cd repo_dir
cmake -B build . -DUSE_GSOAP_STATIC_LIB=1
cmake --build build
gSOAP
, for this we use the search module(FindgSOAP.cmake),
this module should find the gSOAP
in the system that we will use.cd repo_dir
cmake -B build . -DUSE_SYSTEM_GSOAP=1
cmake --build build
For example, in Ubuntu 22.04, to install gSOAP
, you need to install the following packages:
sudo apt install gsoap libgsoap-dev
gSOAP
system libraries.cd repo_dir
cmake -B build . -DUSE_SYSTEM_GSOAP=1 -DUSE_GSOAP_STATIC_LIB=1
cmake --build build
To start the daemon, you have to give him the parameters that are needed for work:
./wsdd --if_name eth0 --type tdn:NetworkVideoTransmitter --xaddr http://%s:1000/onvif/device_service --scope "onvif://www.onvif.org/name/Unknown onvif://www.onvif.org/Profile/Streaming"
For more details see help:
./wsdd --help
Or you can use S90wsdd script to start the daemon (for old init.d script style):
./start_scripts/S90wsdd start
If You use systemd see: wsdd.service
For testing daemon you need client application.
Note: ONVIF Device Tool has a self wsdd demon and at the start and close of the application makes a call
killall wsdd
, which also is reflected in our demon.
Copyright (C) 2016 Koynov Stas - [email protected]