Our easy-to-use security cameras process information in real-time, intelligently picking out human and vehicle shaped objects. Select models in our camera range also include integrated Ai, meaning detection is faster, requires less bandwidth and is subscription-free.

Initially, D-Link quickly filled their inventory with a wide variety of options, similar to what we saw from other brands like the Swann Security System we unpacked not long ago and Samsung from our Samsung camera review. But as of 2023, D-Link trimmed the fat and reduced its offering to just six cameras, including the two we tested for this review.


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FYI: For a more camera-focused home security experience, we still recommend the big names simply because we know the products inside and out, and we trust their reliability. Visit our handy home security comparison guide to see how D-Link stacks up to other security brands in the industry.

Here, we started receiving person and sound notifications that matched what we had set up in our rules and automations tab, and the app began interacting with the camera, giving us more ways to see what this device could do.

So this was a smooth experience. But, going a step further, we wondered if the camera would use its pan-tilt functionality to automatically follow an object or person, rather than merely let us follow it manually, like a joystick in an old video game (also really cool!).

What we think the camera lacks, though, is the waypoint feature. We saw this when we tested the Wyze Cam Pan, where basically, the camera would pan around at a set interval to monitor different areas. With D-Link, the camera has a fixed view until you move it manually or it tracks a moving object.

We took note, first, of the basic plan, which at $2.49 per month gives us a decent amount of recording time and video storage. Since we only had two cameras, it looked like the basic plan would suit us well.

Is there a way to directly access a IP camera. Know there is a block that can input the password and user name but I don't know what it is. Can someone explain to how I can directly access an IP Camera in addition to what that block is called.

I assume you are trying to access the camera either through MAX or LabVIEW. This would require the use of our NI-IMAQdx driver. Unfortunately, our IMAQdx IP camera support is limited to cameras manufactured by Basler and Axis. Please take a look at the following link for further clarification.

i am using D link dcs 932L network camera. It is there any method to integrate the camera with the labview. Iam interested in using for labview robotic starter kit 1.0. i'll try using MAX but it's not helping.Could you guys please

Hello, I can't remember any specifics, at the time I created this thread I was working on my senior project in college, and I am since graduated and working with a company that I do not use any labview at. What I can tell you is that in order for us to get it working was we had a TCP/IP camera from DLINK (one of the ones that DLInk provides that allows you to log in to and view the camera the Internet). And in labview I essentially made a browser window to access the internet. I set the DLINK site as my homepage for the labview broswer, that way when I started my labview the browser would automatically be ready to be logged into on the DLINK website. At the time, if you DID NOT want to use a browser window, there were only 2 cameras that will work directly to Labview. LAbview has a block that you can use to accept a camera feed directly, but I have not experimented with it as the browser window is much more conveinant. I'll be glad to convey any other knowledge that I still have, but like I said there isn't many specifics as to labview that I remember.

If you are using the D-Link IP Camera, it seems that it is not supported hardware. The workaround suggested by Andrew was to use a web browser in LabVIEW to log into the camera and pull images from that. Here is a basic browser example: -2042

thank you for your reply. So I can not accessing the d-link ip camera. but I have another question, if I cannot connect to the internet, when I use a web browser in LabVIEW to log into the camera.How should I do?

If you can view the camera in another browser, such as Internet Explorer or Google Chrome, you should be able to do the same with the LabVIEW ActiveX browser, by connecting directly to the camera's IP address.

That log shows the camera is asking for login credentials for the getdatetime onvif request. That is a breach of the onvif standard that states it should not be password protected. The date and time is used as additional protection and is needed. You should report this to the manufacturer after checking for newer firmware.

Hi

I need help to switch on and off my D-link camera DCS-8627LH based on triggers in a flow (i.e. if alarm on, then camera on). I see the camera is not supported in the D-link app (is it possible to have this?) and was hoping for IFTTT. I find descriptions how IFTTT can trigger Homey through web hook, but not the other way arround, how can a Homey flow trigger IFTTT?

Would you folks be kind enough to let me know the minimum focus distance for those cameras? Like, how close can you get before text gets blurry, etc? I need a cheap, movable wi-fi camera for various things including the Glowforge and the ability to focus on close-up objects would be a very nice addition.

We have found that in order for the night vision functionality to work in pitch darkness you need to have a light source next to it. Moonlight is inadequate. That said, you can alter some of the camera settings to improve visibility and we still need to experiment with that.

Have you looked at Axis cameras? They have options for saving to internal SD card in the camera, or network storage with various security options. Here's a snip of the storage options from one of my lower-end Axis cams:

I was working on getting the DCS-930L camera support working several years back on the old forum, but eventually gave up due to USB issues that prevented the camera to work. Having a bunch of these cameras and with D-Link not having released a firmware for the last 5 years I decided to give this another shot, and after a ton of issues finally managed to get it working without requiring soldering a serial console to it. I know this is a 4/32 device and that support for these in general is going away, but hopefully there's still an opportunity to keep these working.

To fit the new firmware onto the small flash I had to slim it down considerably, but not having the 1MB kernel limit anymore it was not any issues building a firmware that is fully functional for it's intended use case. With networking + wireless, ssh and mjpg-streamer built in I still have about 500KB left for the JFFS2 partition. I have removed anything not strictly needed to run the camera part, like LUCI and also took out IPv6 support. I did the steps above on a second DCS-930 A1 device lacking serial console, and it worked fine there too.

Streaming works really well, it consumes 10-20% CPU only, doing a continuous stream over HTTP. I will stream to Zoneminder so I can do the motion detection there, but in the past I know people have successfully run motion on the camera as well. Oddly enough mjpg_streamer seems to do some sort of motion detection on it's own too:

Note that this image is over 5 years old (Barrier Breaker, r39854) and guaranteed to be full of security holes! It is only for getting OpenWrt onto the camera initially, don't run this image on any type of network that you don't fully trust. I have successfully flashed this one on two cameras of A1 and A3 HW revision respectively. To flash use a paperclip to hold in reset when powering on the camera, and then go to where you find the emergency web interface. I had some problems using it with a regular browser, instead I used curl as per another post:

If flashing works the camera should reboot after a minute (red and blue leds flashing). Once the front led starts blinking green the kernel has been successfully loaded and the camera is booting. When the light is steady green the camera should be reachable. Default network config will put it at 192.168.1.1. As mentioned ssh login does not work, but telnet does. Once logged in either scp in the next image, or set a password to allow scp from the outside.

Yep that's correct, it only seems to be a limitation in the emergency web interface, and I'm guessing probably also if trying to flash from D-Links upgrade interface when the camera is running. Once you have OpenWrt running it will happily support any kernel size, as long as the total image size does not become too big.

Seems like some good work has been done already at -link/d-link_dcs-5020l_a1, 8MB flash would make things a lot simpler I have a few DCS-930 B1 that I want to get working as well, and then also a DCS-933L A1.

Yep, so my plan (will probably not have time until the weekend though) is to try to get my 19.07 image booting on a A1 camera to begin with. It almost worked, only issue was that it could not find the partitions inside the firmware partition. When I gave up an compiled a version that was not slimmed down to

Luckily it was not stripped down to the point that network and ssh did not work (sending more than one ping from the host no longer worked as an example, so it is really crippled), so I could scp the 19.07.6 image to it that previously worked upgrading from the old Chaos Chalmer to the camera and sysupgrade it:

This one booted as expected. I have since tried this on another camera (A3 version) and it worked without issues there, not requiring any serial or anything else apart from just pressing the reset button and flashing it. Tried mjpg_streamer there too, and it works perfectly. Now that I can build working images I will try building one for B1 and test it as well.

However, checking with another relative who has assisted me by setting up the cameras in Thailand and he has no issues looking through the camera. So I've suspected the issue to be related to a firewall setting of some sort but I'm not quite sure where to look. e24fc04721

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