WelterRocks / Netvue-Hacks

Hacking your Netvue Cloud cameras
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netvuehack.sh #4

Open pietrocostanzo opened 4 years ago

pietrocostanzo commented 4 years ago

hello i don't find netvuehack.sh file in sr root i make it ? mode? content? thnak you very mach

Fruity-ya-ya commented 3 years ago

Hello,

First of all thank you for creating this project. I'm new to all this and have really enjoyed playing with my NetVue device and learning how connect to & run Linux commands on it.

Sadly, I too cannot see the netvuehack.sh file post running the curl/prepare.sh on my device.

"The last one is named netvuehack.sh and should be placed into the root folder of the sd/tf card. Also it should have 755 permissions. The file is executed, 35 seconds after the systems rcS file has finished booting. By default, we use this file to stop the netvue main process from being executed and start our own peer to peer process."

It also does not appear to be in your repository to download either.

Could you please make it available as I would love to carry one learning/updating my camera?

Kind regards

AutomicPi commented 2 years ago

I've also taken the camera apart to get to the serial console (115200 Baud, 8N1, (no hardware flow control) ) via a 3.3v usb-serial adapter - the mainboard just has tiny through-holes, so a very small bit of copper wire will give you something to clip onto, if you do not want to solder on a header/serial port etc.) :) This works great, and it's just standard busybox , so you can enable telnetd manually by typing "telnetd" (full path /usr/sbin/telnetd) once on, you can do everything remotely. user root, no passwd - google busybox if you want to secure that yourself :) - I also followed the instructions, but there is no manual link / command to download the netvuehack.sh , and the prepare.sh does not download/install it either. I've googled around and can't find anyone else's link to it, which is sad, as obviously the original poster spent some time making it :) In my case, I'd like to find the camera source so I can set up an RTSP feed from it , to my own NVR, as I like to keep everything offline, especially cameras :)

Nubstex commented 2 years ago

I've also taken the camera apart to get to the serial console (115200 Baud, 8N1, (no hardware flow control) ) via a 3.3v usb-serial adapter - the mainboard just has tiny through-holes, so a very small bit of copper wire will give you something to clip onto, if you do not want to solder on a header/serial port etc.) :) This works great, and it's just standard busybox , so you can enable telnetd manually by typing "telnetd" (full path /usr/sbin/telnetd) once on, you can do everything remotely. user root, no passwd - google busybox if you want to secure that yourself :) - I also followed the instructions, but there is no manual link / command to download the netvuehack.sh , and the prepare.sh does not download/install it either. I've googled around and can't find anyone else's link to it, which is sad, as obviously the original poster spent some time making it :) In my case, I'd like to find the camera source so I can set up an RTSP feed from it , to my own NVR, as I like to keep everything offline, especially cameras :)

Did you make it to work? I have two vigils and i want to connect stream to my Home Assistant server.

AutomicPi commented 2 years ago

Hiya - sadly gave up on this one (didn't have time to go further, with working lots of hours, and then family commitments the rest of the time) I'll be selling this camera with a job lot of other new ones that I've not had time to work on, and probably sticking to cameras with ONVIF. I'm also using home assistant, but planning on moving the cameras to a separate frigate/deepstack/coral setup, and have that tied into HA instead of using them directly. Good luck with your vigils if you carry on with this :)