This uses your Raspberry Pi and its camera to take a bunch of pictures every minutes and serves them via a small website. At the end of the day, it will generate a timelapse in mp4 format
Example: https://isitfoggy.com
There are configuration files for
Here is the list of the required dependencies
To take pictures
To generate the timelapse
To serve the site:
To setup your own DNS entry and SSL cert
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt install -y nginx git ffmpeg libomxil-bellagio-bin imagemagick dnsutils jq curl certbot
Create the isitfoggy user and home directories
sudo useradd -d /opt/isitfoggy -m -G video -s /bin/nologin isitfoggy
sudo chmod -R g+w /opt/isitfoggy
Add yourself to the isitfoggy group so you can write stuff in that dir
sudo usermod -G isitfoggy -a $USER
Logout and log in to get the new group ownership Clone the repo and edit the configuration file
git clone https://github.com:matfra/isitfoggy.today.git /opt/isitfoggy/isitfoggy.today
cd /opt/isitfoggy/isitfoggy.today
Edit the configuration file
cp conf/isitfoggy.conf.example conf/isitfoggy.conf
vim conf/isitfoggy.conf
Run the installer that will create a bunch of symlinks, services and stuff
sudo ./install.sh
sudo utils/certbot_init.sh
If you are serving this via your home broadband connection, It's highly recommended that you use a CDN to cache the static content. Once you bought a domain (via gandi.net or godaddy.com for example) you can use Cloudflare manage it. Cloudflare provide "protection" for your server but also caching which comes handy for timelapse videos. Users will send requests to publichostname.yourdomain.com and Cloudflare will send you the requests to privatename.yourdomain.com After you transfer your domain to Cloudflare, create the first A record for you public and private fqdn (full qualified domain names) And get an API key (in your profile section). Fill all this information in /etc/isitfoggy.conf and run utils/update_dns.sh
cd utils/update_dns.sh