From 3b654a3b65540f7b152ecf1c4ad006f10e40e7c3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: nbred Date: Sat, 9 Sep 2023 13:26:57 -0300 Subject: [PATCH] Delete README.md --- README.md | 134 ------------------------------------------------------ 1 file changed, 134 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 README.md diff --git a/README.md b/README.md deleted file mode 100644 index 1e08369..0000000 --- a/README.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,134 +0,0 @@ -# AMRIDM2MQTT: Send AMR/ERT Power Meter Data Over MQTT - -##### Copyright (c) 2018 Ben Johnson. Distributed under MIT License. - -Using an [inexpensive rtl-sdr dongle](https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?field-keywords=RTL2832U), it's possible to listen for signals from ERT compatible smart meters using rtlamr. This script runs as a daemon, launches rtl_tcp and rtlamr, and parses the output from rtlamr. If this matches your meter, it will push the data into MQTT for consumption by Home Assistant, OpenHAB, or custom scripts. - -TODO: Video for Home Assistant - - -## Docker - -If you use Docker and would rather launch this under a container see . - -## Requirements - -Tested under Raspbian GNU/Linux 9.3 (stretch) - -### rtl-sdr package - -Install RTL-SDR package - -`sudo apt-get install rtl-sdr` - -Set permissions on rtl-sdr device - -/etc/udev/rules.d/rtl-sdr.rules - -`SUBSYSTEMS=="usb", ATTRS{idVendor}=="0bda", ATTRS{idProduct}=="2838", MODE:="0666"` - -Prevent tv tuner drivers from using rtl-sdr device - -/etc/modprobe.d/rtl-sdr.conf - -`blacklist dvb_usb_rtl28xxu` - -### git - -`sudo apt-get install git` - -### pip3 and paho-mqtt - -Install pip for python 3 - -`sudo apt-get install python3-pip` - -Install paho-mqtt package for python3 - -`sudo pip3 install paho-mqtt` - -### golang & rtlamr - -Install Go programming language & set gopath - -`sudo apt-get install golang` - -https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/SettingGOPATH - -If only running go to get rtlamr, just set environment temporarily with the following command - -`export GOPATH=$HOME/go` - - -Install rtlamr https://github.com/bemasher/rtlamr - -`go get github.com/bemasher/rtlamr` - -To make things convenient, I'm copying rtlamr to /usr/local/bin - -`sudo cp ~/go/bin/rtlamr /usr/local/bin/rtlamr` - -## Install - -### Clone Repo -Clone repo into opt - -`cd /opt` - -`sudo git clone https://github.com/ragingcomputer/amridm2mqtt.git` - -### Configure - -Copy template to settings.py - -`cd /opt/amridm2mqtt` - -`sudo cp settings_template.py settings.py` - -Edit file and replace with appropriate values for your configuration - -`sudo nano /opt/amridm2mqtt/settings.py` - -### Install Service and Start - -Copy armidm2mqtt service configuration into systemd config - -`sudo cp /opt/amridm2mqtt/amridm2mqtt.systemd.service /etc/systemd/system/amridm2mqtt.service` - -Refresh systemd configuration - -`sudo systemctl daemon-reload` - -Start amridm2mqtt service - -`sudo service amridm2mqtt start` - -Set amridm2mqtt to run on startup - -`sudo systemctl enable amridm2mqtt.service` - -### Configure Home Assistant - -To use these values in Home Assistant, -``` -sensor: - - platform: mqtt - state_topic: "readings/12345678/meter_reading" - name: "Power Meter" - unit_of_measurement: kWh - - - platform: mqtt - state_topic: "readings/12345678/meter_rate" - name: "Power Meter Avg Usage 5 mins" - unit_of_measurement: W - ``` - -## Testing - -Assuming you're using mosquitto as the server, and your meter's id is 12345678, you can watch for events using the command: - -`mosquitto_sub -t "readings/12345678/meter_reading"` - -Or if you've password protected mosquitto - -`mosquitto_sub -t "readings/12345678/meter_reading" -u -P `