Axis Cgi Mjpg Site
| Endpoint | Purpose | |----------|---------| | /axis-cgi/jpg/image.cgi | Single JPEG snapshot | | /axis-cgi/com/ptz.cgi | Pan, tilt, zoom control | | /axis-cgi/param.cgi | Read or set configuration | | /axis-cgi/io/port.cgi | Control digital I/O ports | | /axis-cgi/operator/search.cgi | Search recorded video |
http://<camera-ip>/axis-cgi/mjpg/video.cgi Most Axis cameras require digest or basic authentication. You must pass credentials either in the URL or in the HTTP headers: axis cgi mjpg
| Parameter | Description | Example | |-----------|-------------|---------| | resolution | Width x Height | resolution=640x480 | | fps | Frames per second (camera max allowed) | fps=15 | | compression | JPEG quality (0-100, 100=best) | compression=30 | | camera | Select camera (for multi-sensor or PTZ) | camera=1 | | clock | Overlay timestamp | clock=1 | | text | Custom text overlay | text=My%20Stream | | date | Show date | date=1 | | quad | Apply quad view if supported | quad=1 | | rect | Crop region (x,y,w,h) | rect=100,100,400,300 | | rotation | Rotate image (0, 90, 180, 270) | rotation=90 | | mirror | Mirror image | mirror=1 | http://192.168.1.100/axis-cgi/mjpg/video.cgi?resolution=1280x720&fps=10&compression=25&clock=1&text=Front%20Door This will generate an MJPEG stream at 720p, 10 fps, medium compression, with a timestamp and custom text. Part 3: How to Consume the MJPEG Stream Method 1: HTML <img> Tag (Simplest) The most surprising fact: you can embed an Axis MJPEG stream directly in a web page using a static image tag. h) | rect=100