A bridge between the Rotex HPSU CAN bus and MQTT-based monitoring systems.
This is intended to be deployed on a device that has a physical CAN connection to a Rotex HPSU heating system. It polls a configurable set of registers via the Elster-Kromschröder protocol and forwards the received values via MQTT. It has only been tested with the following models:
- Rotex HPSU compact 508
Please contribute experiences with this or other models in an issue.
The application may be deployed from source or as a container. In both cases, make a copy of the default-config.toml
file, change the settings to suit your deployment scenario, and specify the custom configuration file when starting the program.
To deploy from source use poetry to install or build a wheel.
The program itself can started by specifying the run
command. The recommended usage is via the systemd unit file described below. Usually only the --config-file
option will have to be sepecified for it to use the correct mqtt settings:
Usage: py-hpsu-monitor run [OPTIONS]
Options:
--can-interface TEXT CAN bus interface to monitor [default:
can0]
--config-file FILE
--register-definition-file FILE
[default: /home/py-hpsu-
monitor/.local/lib/python3.9/site-packages/p
y_hpsu_monitor/elster_protocol/register_defi
nitions.toml]
--log-frames
--log-registers
--help Show this message and exit.
The commandline arguments and configuration file allows for parameterization of various aspects:
- the CAN connection
- the MQTT connection
- the Elster protocol registers to poll
The included Dockerfile
contains build instructions for an image based on Alpine Linux. The recommended way to build and deploy it is podman:
$ podman build --rm -t py-hpsu-monitor:latest .
If your OS uses [systemd] as the supervisor you can use the included systemd unit to let it supervise the container for you:
-
Copy
etc/py-hpsu-monitor.service
to~/.config/systemd/user/py-hpsu-monitor.service
and potentially adjust the path to the configuration file. -
Copy
etc/[email protected]
to/etc/systemd/system/[email protected]
. -
Enable both units:
sudo systemctl enable --now [email protected] systemctl --user enable --now py-hpsu-monitor.service
To manually start the container without any supervision, make sure the socketcan interface is up and run sometime like:
$ podman run \
--detach \
--cgroups=no-conmon \
--network=host \
--volume $(pwd)/my-config.toml:/home/py-hpsu-monitor/config.toml:ro \
localhost/py-hpsu-monitor:latest --config-file config.toml
I welcome requests, bug reports and PRs.
Small note: If editing the Readme, please conform to the standard-readme specification.