Tiger Surveillance Integration Instructions
The user-friendly Tiger Surveillance Bridge software application allows stored footage from a local OpenEye Windows-based recorder to seamlessly connect to and back up your video on various cloud-based storage options, including Amazon S3, Azure, Google Cloud, IBM Cloud, Backblaze, Wasabi, and more. This is accomplished via an application installed on the local recorder called Surveillance Bridge, and this document will provide the steps to set up the Surveillance Bridge to back up all cameras or individual cameras, how to view the backed up data, and how to restore the data to a new recorder.
NOTE: This document assumes you already have a Tiger Surveillance account and license, and your desired storage option has already been configured and is available.
NOTE: Tiger Surveillance currently only supports Windows operating systems.
Installing Tiger Surveillance Bridge
- Visit https://license.tiger-technology.com and log in to your account.
- Click "Current Version" under the Download section on the left and click to download the Surveillance Bridge that is appropriate for your system.
- Install the Surveillance Bridge on the Windows-based recorder you are wanting to back up by running the installer and following the prompts as directed. On the "Please select VMS Profile" page choose "Other..."
- Once installation is complete, open the Surveillance Bridge application and log in with your Tiger Surveillance credentials.
Configuring Tiger Surveillance Bridge to Back Up All Cameras
- In the Surveillance Bridge, click Surveillance Bridge, then click Add Source.
- Use the File Explorer to navigate to the videostore folder located at the root of your recording volume and click Select Folder.
- Select your Surveillance Bridge Target and click OK.
- Click the newly created source and enter the connection information for the target.
- Repeat steps 1 through 4 for all desired recording volumes.
NOTE: You should record the exact source name in a secure location. In order to import the video into a new recorder, or recover the video in the case of a failure, you MUST know the exact source name.
- Click Storage Extension Settings and turn Storage Extension on, enable By Age, and configure it to be no less than 10 minutes.
- Click Surveillance Bridge, and then click Resume.
Configuring Tiger Surveillance Bridge to Back Up Individual Cameras
- In the server software, navigate to Settings > Cameras and select the camera that you would like to back up.
- In the URL bar, note the camera ID.
- In the Surveillance Bridge, click Surveillance Bridge, then click Add Source.
- In the File Explorer, open the videostore folder and select the folder with the same name as the camera ID, then click Select Folder.
- Select your Surveillance Bridge Target and click OK.
- Click the newly created source and enter the connection information for the target.
- If there are multiple recording volumes, repeat steps 3 through 6 for each storage volume present.
NOTE: You should record the exact source name in a secure location. In order to import the video into a new recorder or recover the video in the case of a failure, you MUST know the exact source name.
- If Surveillance Bridge is not already in a running state, click Surveillance Bridge, and then click Resume.
Configuring Tiger for Redundancy
- In the Tiger Surveillance Bridge, select Disaster Recovery Policy and enable it
- Click Apply
In this configuration, Tiger Surveillance Bridge will create an offsite copy of the video data, but will not remove the video from the local system. To restore the data to the local system after a drive failure, follow the steps under Importing Video into a New Recorder
Configuring Tiger and Apex Recording Software to Only Store a Set Number of Days of Video
It may be desired to have a certain number of days of recording on the local recorder, and then a certain number of days stored via Tiger Surveillance Bridge. For this scenario you will need to configure the Retention option in Apex.
Example Scenario: You would like to have 30 days of recording stored on the local system, and 90 days of recording stored via Tiger Surveillance Bridge, for a total of 130 days of recording. To accomplish this, you will need to configure the Retention Limit in Apex to 130 days, and then configure the Storage Extension setting in Tiger Surveillance Bridge to move recordings not accessed for more than 30 days. In this configuration, Tiger Surveillance Bridge will move video data that is older than 30 days offsite, and after 130 days Apex will tell Tiger Surveillance Bridge to delete the video data.
Verifying Replication Percentage and Status
As long as the server software is running, Tiger will never replicate 100% of the files on the disk. The server software creates one video file per camera per hour, and since it is constantly writing to the files we do not want to back them up to the cloud until the file is finalized. As such there will always be files that are open and Tiger will not replicate to storage source.
- In the Surveillance Bridge application, select the source. The percentage of files replicated will be shown next to Statistics.
Viewing Video That Has Been Backed Up Via Tiger Surveillance Bridge
In the server software, video that has been backed up via Tiger Surveillance Bridge is indistinguishable from video on the local disk. The video is shown in Search exactly as if the video was on the local disk, there are no additional steps needed to view it.
Note that video that has been backed up to an external location, like the cloud, does need to be downloaded from the external location in order to be played. This is done seamlessly by the Tiger Surveillance Bridge software, but if you have limited bandwidth available for the download then it may take longer for the video to play than normal.
Importing Video into a New Recorder
To import the video into a new recorder, or to the same recorder after a reimage, follow these steps:
- Install the Tiger Surveillance Bridge as in the Installing Tiger Surveillance Bridge section.
- In Windows, create all of the folders that were chosen as the sources when you configured Tiger Surveillance Bridge previously.
Example: If you previously backed up source D:\videostore\d52df813-e0ee-46fa-9232-b6c86a85b8ec, on the new system you must have a storage volume labeled D:, and you must create a folder labeled "videostore" and then create a folder labeled "d52df813-e0ee-46fa-9232-b6c86a85b8ec" in that folder.
- In Tiger Surveillance Bridge, follow the the same steps as in the Configuring Tiger Surveillance Bridge to Back Up All Cameras or Configuring Tiger Surveillance Bridge to Back Up Individual Cameras sections.
- Wait until Replication status percentage reaches 100%
- Restart the recorder.
- After the restart completes, the cameras will appear in the server software as Orphaned Cameras. Follow the steps in guide Recovering Orphaned Cameras to recover them.
Best Practices
- Ensure that your internet upload speed is no less than 125% of the average amount of data being written to the disk at any given time. Refer to the System Design Tool for calculating your average throughput.
- If you need to manually throttle the CPU or Bandwidth used by the Tiger Surveillance Bridge, contact Tiger Surveillance for assistance.
- Each source should have its own mount point or cloud bucket within your storage service.
- Ensure that there is enough local storage available for 2 to 3 days of recording in case of internet outages.
- You cannot have a source that is a sub-folder of an existing source. For example, you could not have a source of D:\Videostore and also D:\videostore\d52df813-e0ee-46fa-9232-b6c86a85b8ec
- If you have a large number of cameras and folders that you need to back up, Tiger Surveillance may be able to assist with automating the processes listed above. Please contact them for assistance.