ezmqtt

0.1.22021 • Public • Published

ezmqtt

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ezmqtt is a gateway between Ezlo hubs and MQTT brokers. It enables you to use your Ezlo hub with MQTT-compatible subsystems and applications like Node-RED and others. It monitors the hub for state changes and publishes them as MQTT topics.

ezmqtt/tele/device/83827728388438a/item/dimmer 50         # published when dimmer set to 50%
ezmqtt/set/device/83827728388438a/item/dimmer 0           # changes the dimmer to off (0%)
ezmqtt/tele/device/3789348572888a0/item/freeze_alarm freeze_detected      # published when freeze sensor is tripped
ezmqtt/cmd/hub/reboot     # commands the hub to reboot
  • All devices and items are published.
  • House mode changes, including pending change, are published.
  • Hub state changes are published.
  • Devices may be commanded by setting item values (the Ezlo model) through published topics.
  • Any Ezlo API method can be run through a published topic.
  • Connects to API through local interface or Ezlo cloud relay (configurable).
  • Works with Ezlo Plus, Secure, Atom, and PlugHub.

This is a community supported project. If you find ezmqtt useful, please consider making a donation at https://www.toggledbits.com/donate (PayPal, BTC), and thank you in advance for your support. I am not affiliated with Ezlo Innovation, just a long-time independent developer in the IoT space who likes to make cool tools.

Installation

ezmqtt is available for local installation via npm (Node Package Manager) from npmjs.com, or as a Docker container using official images from the toggledbits repository at hub.docker.com. These are the only official sources for ezmqtt. Be wary of other sources, as these may contain malware and other unverified software.

Via NPM

To install using npm, you will need to have nodejs version 16.13 (LTS) or higher installed. Then:

npm i -g ezmqtt

Then, go into the directory (you may need to create one) where you'd like to keep the ezmqtt configuration, logs and data files. Then do an initial run:

ezmqtt

ezmqtt will run briefly and then stop if it has never run before and is not fully configured. You should see output similar to the following:

ezmqtt (C) 2021 Patrick H. Rigney, All Rights Reserved
Please see license at https://github.com/toggledbits/ezmqtt
Version xxxxx in <current-dir> from <install-dir>
ezmqtt: configuration path <current-dir>/ezmqtt-config.yaml
ezmqtt: configuration required; please refer to the README

The configuration file ezmqtt-config.yaml will then need to be edited. Proceed to Configuration below.

Via DockerHub (Docker image/container)

Docker images for various architectures are available (officially) from the toggledbits DockerHub repository.

When creating a container from the image, you need to create a bind mount at /var/ezmqtt to a directory of your choice outside the container. It is here that the ezmqtt configuration file will live, and any data dump and log files will be written. For example:

docker run --name ezmqtt -d --restart on-failure \
    --mount type=bind,src=/home/username/ezmqtt,target=/var/ezmqtt \
    --mount type=bind,src=/etc/localtime,target=/etc/localtime \
    toggledbits/ezmqtt:latest-generic-amd64

It is possible, perhaps even recommended, to run ezmqtt with docker-compose. The following is a pro-forma compose file for that purpose:

# ezmqtt template docker-compose.yml (version 21357)
#
# Change the lines indicated by "DO"...
#
version: '3'

services:
  web:
    container_name: ezmqtt
    environment:
      # DO change the TZ: line to set your local time zone.
      # See valid TZ list: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones
      TZ: America/New_York
      #
      # DO NOT change this path. Your directory location is in "source" below.
      EZMQTT_VAR: /var/ezmqtt

    # DO change the image below to the one you are using, if necessary.
    image: toggledbits/ezmqtt:latest-generic-amd64

    restart: "on-failure"

    volumes:
      - /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro
      # DO change the /home/username/ezmqtt below to the directory you created for
      # your local configuration and data; DO NOT change the /var/ezmqtt part.
      - /home/username/ezmqtt:/var/ezmqtt
    tmpfs: /tmp

The logs are viewable using the docker logs [-f] <container-name> command.

Configuration

The configuration file ezmqtt-config.yaml is a YAML file containing two sections (as objects): the mqtt section configures the MQTT broker connection, and the ezlo_hub section configures the Ezlo hub connection.

Configuring the MQTT Broker Connection

The only configuration key needed for the MQTT broker connection is mqtt, the value of which is the URL to connect to your MQTT broker. If not set, the default mqtt://127.0.0.1:1883 is used (ezmqtt attempts to find the broker on localhost, the host in which ezmqtt is also running).

Configuring the Ezlo Hub Connection

By default, Ezlo hubs require an access token, obtained from the Ezlo cloud services, to access the API on the hub (needed for ezmqtt). Once an access token is acquired, the hub can then be accessed via its local API (recommended), or using the cloud relay (the only option available for older Atom and PlugHub hubs, which don't have local API access). The access token expires periodically and needs to be refreshed, which occurs automatically.

  • serial — serial number of the hub to be connected
  • username and password — access credentials for the Ezlo cloud services. Set up a username and password in the Ezlo/Vera mobile application.
  • endpoint — (optional, but recommended) the IP address or websocket URL to which the data connection should be made. When specified, the value must be the local IP address of the hub or a complete WebSocket URL in the form wss://local-hub-ip-or-hostname:17000. If this key is specified, ezmqtt will use the Ezlo cloud relay.

The use of the cloud relay for "production" home automation is not recommended, as it creates a heavy, ongoing dependency on Internet access and the Ezlo cloud services availability. When the endpoint is specified, the cloud services are only used to acquire an access token, which is long-lived (relatively speaking) and can survive brief outages. In the long run, however, you may also want to consider setting up the hub for offline anonymous access, which allows ezmqtt to access the local API on the hub without an access token from the cloud (or any other authentication), removing the cloud dependency entirely. See the detailed discussion under Ezlo Offline Anonymous Access below for more information.

Logging Configuration

Detailed logging can be turned on or off by setting the debug key in the configuration to true or false, respectively. It is recommended that detailed logging only be used when troubleshooting or trying to discover device/item behaviors.

Docker users: the logs for the container can be viewed or captured with docker logs [-f] <container-name>.

Telemetry Topics Published

ezmqtt's telemetry topics are published when the Ezlo hub announces a change to an item or device. The following telemetry topics are currently defined to report changes to items (device states in most cases, but have many purposes in Ezlo firmware). The payload for each is the new item value. Refer to the Ezlo API Documentation for details on item values and types.

  • ezmqtt/tele/device/<device-id>/item/<item-name>
  • ezmqtt/tele/item/<item-id>

The reason for two equivalent messages is simply to give the end-user choice. It's harder to wrangle with the large number of item IDs (even just discovering them), and item IDs can be problematic if the device is reinventoried/reconfigured and the items purged and recreated (they change). It may seem inconsistent in the first topic to use item name with device ID rather than device name, but device names are not stable references to a device (you can change the name, wrecking your code/rules/conditions). Since device IDs are stable and far fewer in number than item IDs, this was deemed an acceptable, perhaps even desirable, trade-off.

When a device changes (i.e. its name, reachability, etc.), the ezmqtt/tele/device topic is published by ezmqtt. The payload is an object containing the full device data as reported by the hub, extended to include the current value of all items associated with the device (an object under the items key within the payload).

The ezmqtt/tele/mode/changing is sent when a house mode change is initiated. When the mode change completes or is cancelled, a ezmqtt/tele/mode/current topic is published with the then-current house mode ID and name (as on object, for example, { "id": 1, "name": "Home" }.

The ezmqtt/tele/hub/status topic is published when the hub reports a change in its gateway status.

All of the above topics except ezmqtt/tele/mode/changing are sent with QoS 1 and message retention requested. In this way, subscribers will get immediate updates upon subscription to the broker (if the broker is MQTT 3.1.1 compliant).

Commanding Devices (and Modifying Items)

Commanding devices on Ezlo hubs is generally done by setting item values. For example, if you want a dimmer set to 50%, you would use hub.item.value.set to set the device's dimmer item value to 50. The following topics are defined for this purpose and can be published by your applications:

  • ezmqtt/set/device/<device-id>/item/<item-name>
  • ezmqtt/set/item/<item-id>

Notice that the former uses the item name, and the latter uses the unique item ID. See Telemetry Topics for a review of why this apparent inconsistency was chosen.

If these topics are published with a payload, ezmqtt will attempt to set the target item's value to the payload. Payloads for simple (primitive) types, like numbers, booleans, and strings, are given directly as presented (e.g. the payload "50" would represent either the string "50" or the number 50). Because all MQTT payloads are strings at the protocol level, ezmqtt will attempt conversion of the payload to the type required by the item. Other types (arrays, objects) must be given in JSON form and are passed through directly with no conversion (so make sure the payload meets the requirements of the item).

If either of the above topics is sent with no payload, the current value of the item is published. This makes it possible to query an item.

Changing the House Mode

To change the house mode, send an ezmqtt/set/mode topic with either the mode ID (numeric) or the mode name (string) as the entire payload.

    ezmqtt/set/mode Away    <--- sets mode to Away
    ezmqtt/set/mode 4       <--- sets mode to Vacation

If you send the above topic with no payload, the current house mode is published.

Other API Access

A free-form topic allows you to run any method (Ezlo's term for a command to the hub) in their API:

ezmqtt/cmd/<method-name>

The method-name may be given in Ezlo's standard form (e.g. hub.device.setting.value.set to the topic would be ezmqtt/cmd/hub.device.setting.value.set), or in MQTT topic form (e.g. for the same method, ezmqtt/cmd/hub/device/setting/value/set). The payload must be a JSON string containing the contents of the params object to be sent on the request (i.e. the payload is the params that will be passed). If the method has no payload, the payload can be omitted/empty or an empty object (e.g. {}).

Nodes for Node-RED

I have also published a set of Node-RED nodes as a more direct interface. Find that in the Node-RED Node Library.

Cautions

The Ezlo Innovations hubs run on new firmware that has been in development since 2018 and is not yet officially released. It's more like a perpetual beta. Currently, the login/authentication process for accessing the hub API is not documented (although the API itself is — why document the API if you don't document how to access it?). The process being used by this package and pretty much everything else was derived from direct conversations with their engineers and others in their community forums. It involves all of the things you don't want to see in a production environment: hard-coded URLs, well-known/publicly-exposed password salts, the use of a known-compromised hash, etc. It all works, though. For now. It could change at any time. Official documentation of a real process has been requested, and to date, those requests have gone unanswered. One possible mitigation strategy for a sudden outage caused by any future unannounced changes in the login process would be to run your hub without requiring authentication for the local API. See Ezlo Offline Anonymous Access below for further discussion.

Ezlo Offline Anonymous Access

Because the default configuration of an Ezlo hub requires that an authorization token be acquired from their cloud services to connect to the hub's API, it's possible that ezmqtt could find itself in a situation (like an Ezlo cloud service outage, or local Internet outage) in which the hub is up and running locally, but ezmqtt can't access it because it can't reach the cloud services to get a token. The result would be an inability of ezmqtt to follow the changes occurring to hub device and items, and this would downstream affect any applications or services relying on its published topics in response.

Ezlo's security intent here is a Good Thing, but it always comes with a trade-off. Only you can judge if the risk created by power failures, Internet outages, and lapses in uptime of Ezlo's cloud services is acceptable when weighed against the need of your home automation/application for accuracy and uptime. If you can't bear that risk, there is an option: offline anonymous access.

Enabling offline anonymous access on the hub allows an application (like ezmqtt) to access the hub without an authorization token, or any authentication of any kind. This eliminates the dependencies on both Internet access and Ezlo's cloud services, but comes with the trade-off that the security of the hub is degraded by the local API connection being fully open. It would be required of you, then, to take other approaches to securing the hub from unauthorized access. There are no free lunches, particularly in network security.

Note that since local API access is not a feature of early Atom and PlugHub models, authenticated or otherwise, this feature is not available to them and this section does not apply. These early models are highly cloud dependent, and in my opinion, a waste of money for any serious home automation.

If you wish to enable and use offline anonymous access, you can enable it yourself, if you know how, or you can let ezmqtt set it for you. It requires that secure, authenticated access be working to make the change. You must follow these instructions exactly. Make sure you follow each step, and do not skip any.

  1. Make sure your ezlo_hub configuration includes serial, username and password, and that ezmqtt can successfully access the hub with the given credentials. If not, you cannot complete this process — fix your account/cloud access first. Authenticated access is required to enable anonymous access.
  2. In the ezlo_hub section of the configuration file, add set_anonymous_access: true and restart ezmqtt. It will get a cloud token, access the hub (either locally or via the cloud relay, depending on your endpoint configuration setting), and then enable anonymous access. The hub will then reboot.
  3. When the hub finishes rebooting and the ezmqtt log shows that it has reconnected, stop ezmqtt.
  4. Comment out (or remove) the username and password lines from the configuration file.
  5. Make sure the endpoint configuration line is uncommented and its value is the local IP address (or WebSocket URL) for the hub.
  6. Start ezmqtt again and watch it connect to the hub.

When ezmqtt connects using an unauthenticated API connection, it will report that fact in its logs:

mqtt: connecting to Ezlo hub
ezlo: hub connection to 12345678 at wss://192.168.1.23:17000
mqtt: subscribed to ezmqtt/#
ezlo: hub websocket connected (wss://192.168.1.23:17000)
ezlo: unauthenticated hub websocket connected
ezlo: requesting hub info
...

If you later decide you want to turn anonymous access off anf go back to authenticated access, just add set_anonymous_access: false to your configuration (in the ezlo_hub section), restore/uncomment the username and password fields, and make sure they have valid values. Then restart ezmqtt. When the hub reboots, the setting is changed and you can then remove set_anonymous access: false from the configuration.

Note: Firmware updates of the hub may reset this setting, so from time to time, you may need to reset it. That's also troublesome for uptime, so disabling automatic updates of the hub is highly recommended.


Copyright and License

ezmqtt is Copyright (C) 2021, Patrick H. Rigney, All Rights Reserved.

This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 3 as published by the Free Software Foundation.

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.

Please see the License.md file for a copy of the license. You should have received this file/copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/.

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