ebusd is a daemon for handling communication with eBUS devices connected to a 2-wire bus system ("energy bus" used by numerous heating systems).
The main features of the daemon are:
- use USB serial, TCP connected, or UDP device
- actively send messages to and receive answers from the eBUS
- passively listen to messages sent on the eBUS
- regularly poll for messages
- cache all messages
- scan for bus participants
- parse messages to human readable values and vice versa via message configuration files
- automatically pick message configuration files by scan result from the config web service at ebusd.eu (or alternatively local files)
- automatically check for updates of daemon and configuration files
- pick preferred language for translatable message configuration parts
- grab all messages on the eBUS and provide decoding hints
- log messages and problems to a log file
- capture messages or sent/received bytes to a log file as text
- dump received bytes to binary files for later playback/analysis
- listen for command line client connections on a dedicated TCP port
- optionally provide rudimentary HTML interface and allow data retrieval as JSON on HTTP port
- optionally publish received message data to MQTT topics and vice versa (if authorized)
- optional user authentication via ACL file for access to certain messages
Either pick the latest release package suitable for your system or build it yourself.
Building ebusd from the source requires the following packages and/or features:
- autoconf (>=2.63) + automake (>=1.11) or cmake
- g++ with C++11 support (>=4.8.1)
- make
- kernel with pselect or ppoll support
- glibc with argp support or argp-standalone
- libmosquitto-dev for MQTT support
To start the build process, run these commands:
./autogen.sh
make install
Usage instructions and further information can be found here:
The most important part of each ebusd installation is the message configuration. Starting with version 3.2, ebusd by default uses the config web service at ebusd.eu to retrieve the latest configuration files that are reflected by the configuration repository (follow the "latest" symlink there):
A Docker image using the config web service for retrieving the latest message configuration files is available on the hub. You can use it like this:
docker pull john30/ebusd
docker run -it --rm --device=/dev/ttyUSB0 -p 8888 john30/ebusd
For more details, see Docker Readme.
For bugs and missing features use github issue system.
The author can be contacted at [email protected] .