My Webcamxp Server 8080 Secret32 Exclusive

For multi-camera setups, use:

http://127.0.0.1:8080/secret32/exclusive/cam1.jpg http://127.0.0.1:8080/secret32/exclusive/cam2.jpg 1. Reduced Latency for Home Automation Integrating WebcamXP with Home Assistant or Node-RED becomes trivial. Send a GET request to http://my-cam-pc:8080/secret32/exclusive/snapshot every 500ms to trigger motion alerts without the overhead of the full web UI. 2. Bypassing Browser Authentication Standard WebcamXP login can be cumbersome for embedded displays (like a Raspberry Pi dashboard). Because secret32 exclusive bypasses the auth layer, you can embed the feed directly into a <img> tag on any internal website. 3. Developer-Friendly API Use curl or PowerShell to script camera control: my webcamxp server 8080 secret32 exclusive

http://127.0.0.1:8080/secret32/exclusive/live.mjpg You should see a pure Motion JPEG stream. Unlike the default interface, there are no logos, no UI overlays, and no user authentication pop-ups—just raw video. For multi-camera setups, use: http://127

When you access http://localhost:8080 , you see the standard web interface. But the magic begins when you append hidden directives. In earlier builds of WebcamXP (versions 5.x through 7.x), developers embedded a series of "secret" URLs for debugging, performance tuning, and bypassing certain licensing restrictions. Secret32 is one such key. It is not a password or a user credential—rather, it is a command token that unlocks advanced API endpoints. When you access http://localhost:8080