home-assistant-glow
kube-config
home-assistant-glow | kube-config | |
---|---|---|
16 | 3 | |
991 | 13 | |
- | - | |
9.2 | 4.2 | |
8 days ago | 11 months ago | |
Shell | ||
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
home-assistant-glow
-
Home Assistant 2023.11
Seconding this. I was able to just run it with docker compose on a cheap mini PC and it chugs away happily, interfacing with all manner of devices (Phillips/Lifx/IKEA/Airpurifier/Bunnings brands). Only gets tricky to set up devices when you're dealing with some hostile cloud based gadget that doesn't want to play nice.
Unbelievable it can all be controlled offline using Siri on an iPhone, or other voice assistants.
It can even display your electricity consumption by counting the LED pulses on your smart electricity meter that fires every 1000th of a kw/h, only takes a cheap ESP32 and a photodiode: https://github.com/klaasnicolaas/home-assistant-glow
Such a wonderful project.
-
How can I monitor my energy usage? I.e. connect to home assistant? I live in a rental apartment and this is the main board.
You want to build this https://github.com/klaasnicolaas/home-assistant-glow
-
Selfhosted solution to measure energy consumption in an apartment
Alternatively if you want to measure your overall energy consumption and aren't too worried what is generating the load, then I would suggest looking into the Home Assistant Glow project on github (https://github.com/klaasnicolaas/home-assistant-glow) - assuming you have a suitable electricity meter - for a couple of pounds you can put together a light sensitive diode and an ESP8266 (or similar) to create a device to sit over the flashing light on the meter to calculate usage. I have found it pretty accurate - it seems to match my billed usage pretty closely (within 3-5kw per month).
- Energiezähler mit WLAN, aber ohne Cloud-Schmarrn
-
Power meter, where to put the pulse reader?
Check out Home Assistant Glow for a similar DIY device.
- Domotica: leggere contatori enel per home-assistant
-
My electricity provider’s consumption interface wasn’t flexible enough, so I went for the jugular and started retrieving real-time usage by attaching a photoresistor to my meter’s light that blinks 1000 times per kilowatt-hour.
If folks want to make one of these theirselves (themselves? whatever), the "home assistant glow" project makes it pretty straightforward: https://github.com/klaasnicolaas/home-assistant-glow (I can never find the link, so I might as well drop it here). It uses ESPHome + a config file + a photo-diode thingy. It's more or less the same thing with a photoresistor. The server-side works easiest with Home Assistant, but you can access the device on its own too.
- trying too setup the non invasive power meter got the diode reporting back the flashes per minute what do I need too do too convert this into a usable measurement I know the led on my meter flashes 3200 times for 1KWH
- Any off-the-shelf solution to measure electricity consumption from an electro-mechanical meter?
-
Beginner questions: How to integrate CustomComponents into the source tree, proper setup of dev-environment.
I have two questions: I already have my DIY MultiSensor hardware that was built around an ESP8266. It's main functionality is to count power pulses from my power meter via an LDR, and the hardware seems to run fine. I am aware of the Glow project, https://github.com/klaasnicolaas/home-assistant-glow , but for some reason this didn't play well with my self-created hardware. Also, I do think that my measure algorithm has a slight advantage, but that's not the point here :)
kube-config
-
Home Assistant 2023.11
Helm is an absolute mess in my experience.
I'm using zigbee2mqtt in K8s and just pinning the deployment to a node and mapping the device as a volume: https://github.com/LukeChannings/kube-config/blob/3b61c7607c...
Should work the same for Home Assistant, but I don't use HA for Zigbee directly, instead using z2m -> MQTT -> HA, which I've found to be very robust.
I'm waiting for a new K8s cluster (based on CM4) and when I re-implement all of this I'll get a network-based PoE Zigbee device (https://smlight.tech/manual/slzb-06/), that way I can un-pin the deployment and look at high availability Zigbee via MQTT (something Home Assistant doesn't support)
-
Do you have a personal Kubernetes cluster?
I run ArgoCD (which has been great), and keep all of my definitions (and encrypted secrets) in a public GitHub repo.
-
Who is running Kubernetes on bare metal?
Now I run k3s and use Argocd + git and everything is great, honestly. https://github.com/LukeChannings/kube-config
What are some alternatives?
esphome-water-meter - Measurement of water consumption directly from your water meter with a TCRT5000 like sensor and ESPHome.
liqo - Enable dynamic and seamless Kubernetes multi-cluster topologies
AI-on-the-edge-device - Easy to use device for connecting "old" measuring units (water, power, gas, ...) to the digital world
calico - Cloud native networking and network security
esphome-idasen-desk-controller - ESPHome component for Ikea Idasen desk control
cloud-native-platform - Repo for "How to build your own cloud-native platform on IaaS clouds in 2021"
esphome-dlms-meter - ESPHome component to read out DLMS smart meters via M-Bus
k8s-gitops - Kubernetes cluster powered by GitOps with FluxCD- Unified source of truth, automated workflows, declarative infrastructure, and cutting-edge DevOps practices.
chessclock
microk8s - MicroK8s is a small, fast, single-package Kubernetes for datacenters and the edge.
esphome-custom-component-examples
k3s_hetzner