This is the source repository for the NervesHub firmware update and device management server. Container images are available on ghcr over here. Issue reports, Pull Requests and feature requests are very welcome.
- Delivery of signed firmware to authenticated Nerves devices
- Robust and reliable, confirmed to work at a scale of hundreds of thousands of devices
- Hardware device certificate authentication using NervesKey
- Shared secret authentication for easy onboarding and simpler setups
- Self-hostable with minimal infrastructure, Dockerfile provided
- Remote IEx terminal for debugging and device recovery
- and more...
Now that NervesHub 2.x is released we will refer to it simply as NervesHub. The 1.x version is now Legacy NervesHub (maint-v1.0
branch) and is under very limited maintenance and migration is strongly encouraged. The people that develop NervesHub no longer have 1.x environments running. See notes on migrating below.
Migration should be quite straight-forward, there should not be any breaking changes. It is still the same application and NervesHubLink should stay largely compatible. You may find you no longer need a lot of the AWS services that was relied on by the 1.x version. We recommend decomissioning those if they aren't used for other things. Version 2.x requires an application server to run on, an S3-compatible object storage and a Postgres database. It also requires some control over how ingress is done for custom SSL handling. This should all be less than the requirements of Legacy NervesHub.
For best compatibility with Erlang SSL versions, we use Erlang/OTP 27.0.1.
The .tool-versions
files contains the Erlang, Elixir and NodeJS versions.
Install asdf-vm and run the following for quick setup:
cd nerves_hub_web
asdf plugin-add nodejs
bash ~/.asdf/plugins/nodejs/bin/import-release-team-keyring # this requires gpg to be installed
asdf install
Modify the .tool-versions
if you want to use a later version of Erlang.
You'll also need to install fwup
and xdelta3
. See the fwup installation
instructions and the xdelta3
instructions.
On Debian/Ubuntu, you will also need to install the following packages:
sudo apt install inotify-tools
Local development uses the host nerves-hub.org
for connections and cert
validation. To properly map to your local running server, you'll need to add a
host record for it:
echo "127.0.0.1 nerves-hub.org" | sudo tee -a /etc/hosts
-
Setup database connection
NervesHub currently runs with Postgres 10.7. For development, you can use a local postgres or use the configured docker image:
Using local postgres
- Make sure your postgres is running
- If you need to edit the
DATABASE_URL
, create a.env.dev.local
and.env.test.local
to adjust to your local postgres connection
-
Fetch dependencies:
mix do deps.get, compile
-
Initialize the database:
mix ecto.reset
-
Compile web assets (this only needs to be done once and requires python2 or a symlink for python3):
mix assets.install
mix phx.server
- start the server processiex -S mix phx.server
- start the server with the interactive shell
Note: The whole app may need to be compiled the first time you run this, so please be patient
Once the server is running, by default in development you can access it at http://localhost:4000
In development you can login into a pre-generated account with the email
[email protected]
and password nerveshub
.
- Make sure you've completed your database connection setup
- Fetch and compile
test
dependencies:MIX_ENV=test mix do deps.get, compile
- Initialize the test databases:
MIX_ENV=test mix ecto.migrate.reset
- Run tests:
make test