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Download and Install

You can download and install the latest release from the official website at https://www.dev47apps.com/droidcam/linux/, along with instructions on how to update the webcam resolution and other info.

Releases are also available here on GitHub at https://github.com/dev47apps/droidcam/releases

Raspberry-PI instructions can be found here: https://github.com/dev47apps/droidcam/wiki/Raspberry-PI

Building

Install the dependencies

Debian/ubuntu:
libavutil-dev libswscale-dev libasound2-dev libspeex-dev libusbmuxd-dev libplist-dev libturbojpeg0-dev

# Only needed for GUI client
libgtk-3-dev libappindicator3-dev


Fedora:
libavutil-free-devel libswscale-free-devel alsa-lib-devel speex-devel libusbmuxd-devel libplist-devel turbojpeg-devel

# Only needed for GUI client
gtk3-devel libappindicator-gtk3-devel

Run make, or make droidcam-cli if you skipped installing GTK+, to build the droidcam binaries.

To install, run sudo ./install-client

Note: Some distros are removing libappindicator in their latest versions (Ubuntu 21+, Fedora 33+, Debian Bullseye+), used for system tray icon. The new dependency (Ubuntu) is libayatana-appindicator3-dev

You can specify the indicator libary to make like so: APPINDICATOR=ayatana-appindicator3-0.1 make droidcam

V4L2 Loopback (Webcam driver)

DroidCam has its own version of v4l2loopback, v4l2loopback-dc, which makes the app a little more user-friendly. DroidCam works with the standard v4l2loopback module, so installing v4l2loopback-dc is optional.

The standard v4l2loopback module is already available on most distros as v4l2loopback-dkms. See v4l2loopback usage examples.

The main differences with v4l2loopback-dc are that:

To use v4l2loopback-dc, make sure you have these dependencies installed

linux-headers-`uname -r` gcc make

then run sudo ./install-video to build the module and install it.

Debian/Ubuntu and RHEL (Fedora/SUSE) based distros: If your system supports DKMS, you can instead use sudo ./install-dkms.

(note: you may need the deb-helper package)

Sound

DroidCam can use the Linux ALSA Loopback sound card for audio. There are many differences and quirks with audio on different Linux systems. It’s recommended you use a regular microphone and keep droidcam for video only.

Run sudo ./install-sound to load the Linux ALSA Loopback sound card which the Droidcam client will use for audio input.

To get the mic to show up in PulseAudio you can either run pacmd load-module module-alsa-source device=hw:Loopback,1,0 (you may need to adjust the last number), or by editing /etc/pulse/default.pa as described here. On some systems you need to do this after launching the droidcam client.

If the Loopback card takes over your line out, you can set the default PulseAudio sink as shown here: https://askubuntu.com/a/14083

To use DroidCam with Pipewire (Source)

FreeBSD

Initial considerations

Please make sure that you add your user to the webcamd group after the installation of the dependencies, this can be done by running doas pw groupmod webcamd -m $USER

You will also want to enable webcamd and the cuse module to load at boot for that you'll need to modify /etc/rc.conf and /boot/loader.conf with:

webcamd_enable="YES"

and

cuse_load="YES"

respectively.

Getting all the necessary dependencies

Run doas pkg install gmake gcc pkgconf libjpeg-turbo usbmuxd libusbmuxd alsa-lib v4l_compat speex ffmpeg webcamd libappindicator

Building and Installing

Run gmake, or gmake droidcam-cli if you wish to only build the command line version of droidcam.

To install, run doas ./install-client

Running

You'll need to run doas webcamd -B -c v4l2loopback before launching droidcam