A tool to manage all of your openHASP device configs in a centralized place.
Project description
openhasp-config-manager
A cli tool to manage all of your openHASP device configs in a centralized place.
Features
- unlimited multi-device management
- shared configuration between devices
- jsonl preprocessing, which allows for
-
//
comments within jsonl files - line breaks wherever you like
- jinja2 templating within object values
- local and globally scoped variables
-
- validation of common mistakes for
- jsonl objects
- cmd files
- simple configuration upload to the device(s)
- automatic diffing to only update changed configuration files
- git-style diff output for changed lines
- API client (Web + MQTT)
- execute commands on a plate
- listen to events and state updates
> openhasp-config-manager -h
Usage: openhasp-config-manager [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
Options:
--version Show the version and exit.
-h, --help Show this message and exit.
Commands:
cmd Sends a command request to a device.
deploy Combines the generation and upload of a configuration.
generate Generates the output files for all devices in the given...
help Show this message and exit.
listen Sends a state update request to a device.
logs Prints the logs of a device.
screenshot Requests a screenshot from the given device and stores it...
shell Connects to the telnet server of a device.
state Sends a state update request to a device.
upload Uploads the previously generated configuration to their...
vars Prints the variables accessible in a given path.
Disclaimer
TL;DR: This project is still experimental.
I do use openhasp-config-manager exclusively to configure all of my openHASP devices. I am in the process of adding tests to everything to make it more reliable and have also added lots of features along the way. However, there are definitely still a couple of things that do not yet work as intended. Error logs might need some love to be able to figure out what you did wrong. If you like the project, feel free to open an issue or PR to help me out.
How to use
Docker
docker run -it --rm \
--name openhasp-config-manager \
--user 1000:1000 \
-v "./openhasp-configs:/app/openhasp-configs" \
-v "./output:/app/output" \
ghcr.io/markusressel/openhasp-config-manager
Installation
Since openhasp-config-manager needs some dependencies (see here) it is recommended to install it inside a virtualenv.
venv-install
venv-install is a little helper tool to eas the installation, management and usage of python cli tools in venvs.
venv-install openhasp-config-manager openhasp-config-manager
openhasp-config-manager -h
Manual
mkdir -p ~/venvs/openhasp-config-manager
python3 -m venv ~/venvs/openhasp-config-manager
source ~/venvs/openhasp-config-manager/bin/activate
pip3 install openhasp-config-manager
And to use it:
source ~/venvs/openhasp-config-manager/bin/activate
openhasp-config-manager -h
openhasp-config-manager analyze -c "./openhasp-configs"
...
Uninstall
deactivate
rm -rf ~/venvs/openhasp-config-manager
Configuration
openhasp-config-manager is first and foremost a configuration management system. Simply follow the basic folder structure and config deployment will become trivial. Please read all of this, as it is very important to understand the basic structure on which everything relies.
Folder Structure
The following folders should reside inside a single parent
folder, f.ex. named openhasp-configs
. This folder can be
located anywhere you like, but must be accessible to
openhasp-config-manager when executing.
common
: Thecommon
subdirectory can be used for files that should be included on all device. This folder is optional.devices
: Thedevices
folder is required. It must contain one subfolder for each openHASP device you want to configure using openhasp-config-manager. It is recommended to name subfolders according to the physical devices associated with them.touch_down_1
(example device folder)- A device folder contains
*.jsonl
,*.cmd
and other files which should only be uploaded to that particular device. - You can create arbitrary nested folder structures for organizing the files. There is a limit to the file name length though, see FAQ
- You must provide a
config.json
file, see config.json for more info.
- A device folder contains
A more advanced configuration layout could look something like this:
openhasp-configs
├── common
│ ├── content
│ │ └── card.jsonl
│ ├── dialog
│ │ ├── connected.jsonl
│ │ └── offline.jsonl
│ ├── navigation_bar.jsonl
│ └── page_header.jsonl
└── devices
└── touch_down_1
├── 0_home
│ ├── 0_header.jsonl
│ ├── 1_content.jsonl
│ └── page.cmd
├── 5_about
│ ├── 0_header.jsonl
│ ├── 1_content.jsonl
│ └── page.cmd
├── boot.cmd
├── config.json
├── offline.cmd
└── online.cmd
config.json
openhasp-config-manager makes use of the config.json
on your plate. It can extract information
from it to detect things like screen orientation, and also allows you to deploy changes within the
config.json
file. Since the official API does not support
uploading the full file, only settings
which can also be set through the web ui on the plate itself are currently supported.
To retrieve the initial version of the config.json
file you can use the
built-in file browser integrated into the webserver of your openHASP plate, see
official docs.
The official config.json
file doesn't provide enough info for openhasp-config-manager
to enable all of its features though. To fix that simply add a section to the
file after downloading it:
{
"openhasp_config_manager": {
"device": {
"ip": "192.168.5.134",
"screen": {
"width": 320,
"height": 480
}
}
},
"wifi": {
"ssid": "Turris IoT",
...
}
Config File Preprocessing
openhasp-config-manager runs all configuration files through various preprocessors, which allow us to use features the original file formats do not support by themselves, like f.ex. templating.
Multiline JSONL files
While the JSONL file format requires each object to be on a single line, openhasp-config-manager allows you to add as many line breaks as you wish. This makes it much easier to edit, since a config like this:
{
"page": 0,
"id": 31,
"obj": "msgbox",
"text": "%ip%",
"auto_close": 5000
}
will be deployed like this:
{
"page": 0,
"id": 31,
"obj": "msgbox",
"text": "%ip%",
"auto_close": 5000
}
Comments
Neither JSON nor JSONL allows comments, but openhasp-config-manager does! You can mark comments by prefixing them with a double forward-slash:
// File description
{
// Object Description
"page": 0,
"id": 31,
// Property Description
"obj": "msgbox",
"text": "%ip%",
"auto_close": 5000
}
Templating
You can use Jinja2 templates inside all jsonl object values. To access the value of another object in a
template, you can use the pXbY
syntax established by openHASP, where X
is the page
of an object and
Y
is its id
. openhasp-config-manager even tries to resolve templates that lead to other templates.
Be careful not to create loops in this way though.
You can use the full functionality of Jinja2 like f.ex. math operations, function calls or type conversions.
{
"page": 1,
"id": 1,
"x": 0,
"y": 0,
...
}
{
"page": 1,
"id": 2,
"x": "{{ p1b1.x }}",
"y": "{{ p1b1.y + 10 }}",
...
}
Variables
Besides accessing other objects, you can also define custom variables yourself, which can then
be referenced inside of templates. Variables are defined using *.yaml
files. If you
decided to use a subfolder structure to organize your configuration files you can use these folders
to also set the scope of variables. More specific variable definitions (longer path) will override
less specific ones.
Global
Global variables can be specified by creating *.yaml
files inside the root config folder (f.ex. openhasp-configs
).
Example:
openhasp-configs/global.vars.yaml
about:
page_title: "About"
To access this variable, use a Jinja2 template:
openhasp-configs/common/about_page.jsonl
{
"page": 9,
"id": 1,
...
"title": "{{ about.page_title }}",
...
}
Device specific
Device specific variables can be specified by creating *.yaml
files inside any of the sub-folders
of a device
folder.
Note
Device specific variables will override global variables, given the same name.
Example:
openhasp-configs/device/my_device/device.vars.yaml
page_title: "My Device"
openhasp-configs/device/my_device/some_folder/some_page.jsonl
{
"page": 1,
"id": 1,
...
"title": "{{ page_title }}",
...
}
openhasp-configs/device/my_device/some_other_folder/some_page.jsonl
{
"page": 2,
"id": 1,
...
"title": "{{ page_title }}",
...
}
Printing variables
If you are not sure what variables are accessible in a given path, you can use the vars
command, which will give you a copy&paste ready output of all variables for a
given directory:
> openhasp-config-manager vars -c openhasp-configs -p devices/touch_down_1/home
common.navbar.first_page: 1
common.navbar.last_page: 4
...
header.title: Home
Deployment
To deploy your configurations to the already connected openHASP devices, simply use the
generate
, upload
or deploy
commands of openhasp-config-manager
.
Note openhasp-config-manager needs direct IP access as well as an enabled webservice on the plate to be able to deploy files to the device. To enable the webservice try:
openhasp-config-manager cmd -d plate35 -C service -p "start http"
Run commands
While openhasp-config-manager is first and foremost a config management system, it also allows you to run commands on a device by issuing MQTT messages without the need to install a separate MQTT client first. Note that the MQTT server still needs to be running and also has to be reachable from your local machine for this to work.
For a list of possible commands to send to a device, take a look at the official documentation: https://openhasp.haswitchplate.com/latest/commands/
> openhasp-config-manager cmd -c ./openhasp-configs -d plate35 -C backlight -p "{\"state\":\"on\",\"brightness\":128}"
FAQ
How do I see device logs?
Try the logs
command (this does require network access to the device):
> openhasp-config-manager logs -d plate35
If that doesn't work, open a terminal and run the following command with the device connected via USB cable:
bash -c "screen -q -L -Logfile device.log /dev/ttyUSB0 115200 &> /dev/null; tail -F device.log; killall screen"
Output file name length must not exceed 30 characters
If you want to organize your files (both common and device-specific ones) you can
simply create subfolders to achieve your desired structure. However, due to a technical
limitation openHASP does not support subfolder on the actual device. To overcome
this limitation openhasp-config-manager will automatically generate a file name for
files in subfolders before uploading them to the device. .json
or .cmd
files within subfolders
will be renamed by concatenating their full subpath using an underscore (_
) as a separator. So f.ex.
the file in the following structure:
openhasp-configs
└── devices
└── touch_down_1
└── 0_home
└── 0_header.jsonl
would be uploaded to the touch_down_1
device with the name 0_home_0_header.jsonl
.
Contributing
GitHub is for social coding: if you want to write code, I encourage contributions through pull requests from forks of this repository. Create GitHub tickets for bugs and new features and comment on the ones that you are interested in.
License
openhasp-config-manager is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU AFFERO GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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