I’ve created a simple python script that runs every 60 seconds and sends several system data over MQTT. It uses the MQTT Discovery for Home Assistant so you don’t need to configure anything in Home Assistant if you have discovery enabled for MQTT
It currently logs the following data:
- CPU usage
- CPU temperature
- CPU Clock Speed
- Fan Speed
- Disk usage
- Memory usage
- Power status of the RPI
- Last boot
- Last message received timestamp
- Swap usage
- Wifi signal strength
- Wifi connected SSID
- Amount of upgrades pending
- Disk usage of external drives
- Hostname
- Host local IP
- Host OS distro and version
- CPU Load (1min, 5min and 15min)
- Network Download & Upload throughput
You need to have at least python 3.6 installed to use System Sensors.
- Clone this repo >> git clone https://github.com/Sennevds/system_sensors.git
cd system_sensors
sudo apt-get install python3-dev
sudo apt-get install python3-apt
pip3 install -r requirements.txt
- Edit settings_example.yaml in "~/system_sensors/src" to reflect your setup and save as settings.yaml:
Value | Required | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
mqtt | true | \ | Details of the MQTT broker |
mqtt:hostname | true | \ | Hostname of the MQTT broker |
mqtt:port | false | 1883 | Port of the MQTT broker |
mqtt:user | false | \ | The userlogin( if defined) for the MQTT broker |
mqtt:password | false | \ | the password ( if defined) for the MQTT broker |
tls | false | \ | Details of TLS settings broker |
tls:ca_certs | false | \ | TLS settings ( if defined) for the MQTT broker |
tls:certfile | false | \ | TLS settings ( if defined) for the MQTT broker |
tls:keyfile | false | \ | TLS settings ( if defined) for the MQTT broker |
client_id | true | \ | client id to connect to the MQTT broker |
ha_status | false | hass | Status topic for homeassistant, defaults to hass if not set |
timezone | true | \ | Your local timezone (you can find the list of timezones here: time zones) |
power_integer_state(Deprecated) | false | false | Deprecated |
update_interval | false | 60 | The update interval to send new values to the MQTT broker |
sensors | false | \ | Enable/disable individual sensors (see example settings.yaml for how-to). Default is true for all sensors. |
python3 src/system_sensors.py src/settings.yaml
- (optional) create a service to autostart the script at boot, copy the content of the
example_system_sensors.service
file into the editor:sudo systemctl edit --force --full system.sensors
- edit the path to your script path and settings.yaml. Also make sure you replace pi in "User=pi" with the account from which this script will be run. This is typically 'pi' on default raspbian system.
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl enable --now system.sensors.service
sudo systemctl status system.sensors.service
Before running this application in a docker container you'll need to add the following to the crontab
@reboot <git clone location>/src/bin/ip_pipe.sh
This little script will create a pipe and fetch the Host OS IP address and put it in the pipe.
The container will have the pipe mounted /tmp/system_sensor_pipe:/app/host/system_sensor_pipe:ro
so it can read the ip.
this is required sinds docker container can't and shouldn't access the host OS
Running in docker container is very symplistic:
docker-compose up -d
The only config you need in Home Assistant is the following:
mqtt:
discovery: true
discovery_prefix: homeassistant
I have used following custom plugins for lovelace:
- vertical-stack-in-card
- mini-graph-card
- bar-card
Config:
type: custom:vertical-stack-in-card
title: Deconz System Monitor
cards:
- type: horizontal-stack
cards:
- type: custom:mini-graph-card
entities:
- sensor.deconz_cpu_usage
name: CPU
line_color: '#2980b9'
line_width: 2
hours_to_show: 24
- type: custom:mini-graph-card
entities:
- sensor.deconz_temperature
name: Temp
line_color: '#2980b9'
line_width: 2
hours_to_show: 24
- type: custom:bar-card
entity: sensor.deconz_disk_use
name: HDD
positions:
icon: outside
name: inside
color: '#00ba6a'
- type: custom:bar-card
entity: sensor.deconz_memory_use
name: RAM
positions:
icon: outside
name: inside
- type: entities
entities:
- sensor.deconz_last_boot
- binary_sensor.deconz_under_voltage
Note: you need to change the friendly name for entities like last boot in the entity settings, the card prints the default entity string if no friendly name was defined.
Example: