hkcam is an open-source implementation of an HomeKit IP camera.
It uses ffmpeg to access the camera stream and publishes the stream to HomeKit using hap.
The camera stream can be viewed in a HomeKit app. For example my Home+ app works perfectly with hkcam.

hkcam uses Go modules and therefore requires Go 1.11 or higher.
The fastest way to get started is to
git clone https://github.com/brutella/hkcam && cd hkcam
cmd/hkcam/main.go by running go run cmd/hkcam/main.go in Terminal001 02 003)These steps require git, go and ffmpeg to be installed. On macOS you can install them via Homebrew.
brew install git
brew install go
brew install ffmpeg
You can use a camera module or USB camera with a Raspberry Pi to create your own surveillance camera.

For example the ELP 1080P USB camera dome is great for outdoor use. It is IP66 waterproof and has built-in IR LEDs for night vision. This camera gets you good quality and great performance when running hkcam on the latest Raspberry Pi OS.
A cheaper alternative is a camera module attached via ribbon cable. You'll have to enable Legacy Camera Support when using a camera module on Raspberry Pi OS. That's why this option is not ideal in my opinion.
How to Install on a Raspberry Pi?
Follow these steps to install hkcam and all the required libraries on a Raspberry Pi OS Lite (32-bit).
Download and run the Raspberry Pi Imager from https://www.raspberrypi.com/software/

Choose OS → Raspberry Pi OS (other) → Raspberry Pi OS Lite (32-bit)

Insert a sd card into your computer and choose it as the storage

Click on the settings icon and enable SSH, Set username and password and configure wifi

Write the operating system on the sd card by clicking on Write

Insert the sd card in your Raspberry Pi
Connect to your Raspberry Pi via SSH (the first boot may take a while, so be patient)
ssh pi@raspberrypi.local (enter your previously configured password)
Install ffmpeg
apt-get install ffmpeg
Install v4l2loopback
apt-get install v4l2loopback-dkms
Enable v4l2loopback module at boot by creating a file /etc/modules-load.d/v4l2loopback.conf with the content
v4l2loopback
/etc/modprobe.d/v4l2loopback.conf with the contentoptions v4l2loopback video_nr=99
Restart the Raspberry Pi and verify that the file /dev/video99 exists
Install hkcam
Download the latest release from https://github.com/brutella/hkcam/releases
wget https://github.com/brutella/hkcam/releases/download/v0.1.0/hkcam-v0.1.0_linux_arm.tar.gz
tar -xzf hkcam-v0.1.0_linux_arm.tar.gzhkcam by executing the following command./hkcam -db=/var/lib/hkcam/data -multi_stream=true -verbose
Add the camera to HomeKit
Launch the Apple Home-app and tap + → Add Accessory
Tap More Options...


001-02-003 and Continue
If everything works as expected, you have to configure hkcam as a daemon – so that hkcam is automatically run after boot.
This can be done in different way – systemd is recommended,
How to install with Ansible?
I've made an Ansible playbook which configures your Raspberry Pi and installs hkcam. The following steps require ansible to be installed. On macOS you can install it via Homebrew.
brew install ansible
First install Raspberry Pi OS, as described above. Then create ssh key and copy them to the Raspberry Pi.
ssh-keygen
ssh-copy-id pi@raspberrypi.local
After that you can execute the playbook with the following command.
cd ansible && ansible-playbook rpi.yml -i hosts
Once the command finishes, your camera can be added to HomeKit.
Normally in HomeKit a camera stream can only be viewed by one device at a time. If a second device wants to to view the stream, the Apple Home app shows
Camera Not Available Wait until someone else in this home stops viewing this camera and try again.
hkcam allows multiple devices to view the same stream by setting the option -multi_stream=true. That's neat.
In addition to video streaming, hkcam supports Persistent Snapshots.
Persistent Snapshots is a way to take snapshots of the camera and store them on disk.
You can then access them via HomeKit.
Persistent Snapshots are currently supported by Home+, as you can see from the following screenshots.

Taking snapshots in automations is also supported.

I do get kernel panics when running hkcam with a ELP 1080P USB camera.
Updating /boot/config.txt with the following changes resolve those kernel panics.
arm_freq=800
arm_freq_max=900
arm_freq_min=700

I've also designed an enclsoure for the Raspberry Pi Zero W and standard camera module. You can use a stand to put the camera on a desk, or combine it with brackets of the Articulating Raspberry Pi Camera Mount to mount it on a wall. The 3D-printed parts are available as STL files here.
This enclosure is not waterproof and should not be used outside. Instead you should use an ELP 1080P camera and connect it via USB to a Raspberry Pi.
Matthias Hochgatterer
Website: http://hochgatterer.me
Github: https://github.com/brutella
Twitter: https://twitter.com/brutella
hkcam is available under the Apache License 2.0 license. See the LICENSE file for more info.
$ claude mcp add hkcam \
-- python -m otcore.mcp_server <graph>