CitrineOS is an open-source project aimed at providing a modular server runtime for managing Electric Vehicle (EV) charging infrastructure. This README will guide you through the process of installing and running CitrineOS.
This is the main part of CitrineOS containing the actual charging station management logic, OCPP message routing and all modules.
All other documentation and the issue tracking can be found in our main repository here: https://github.com/citrineos/citrineos.
CitrineOS is developed in TypeScript and runs on NodeJS
with ws and fastify.
The system features:
- Dynamic OCPP 2.0.1 message schema validation, prior to transmission using
AJV
- Generated OpenAPIv3 specification for easy developer access
- Configurable logical modules with decorators
@AsHandler
to handle incoming OCPP 2.0.1 messages@AsMessageEndpoint
to expose functions allowing to send messages to charging stations@AsDataEndpoint
to expose CRUD access to entities defined in10_Data
- Utilities to connect and extend various message broker and cache mechanisms
- Currently supported brokers are
RabbitMQ
and Google CloudPubSub
- Currently supported caches are
In Memory
andRedis
- Currently supported brokers are
For more information on the project go to citrineos.github.io.
Before you begin, make sure you have the following installed on your system:
- Node.js (v18 or higher): Download Node.js
- npm (Node Package Manager): Download npm
- Docker (Optional). Version >= 20.10: [Download Docker] (https://docs.docker.com/get-docker/)
-
Clone the CitrineOS repository to your local machine:
git clone https://github.com/citrineos/citrineos-core
-
Navigate to the CitrineOS Server directory:
cd citrineos-core/50_Server
-
Install project dependencies:
./unix-init-install-all.sh
-
Start the server and its supporting infrastructure with:
docker-compose up -d
CitrineOS requires configuration to allow your OCPP 2.0.1 compliant charging stations to connect.
We recommend running and developing the project with the docker-compose
set-up.
To change necessary configuration for execution outside of docker-compose
, please adjust the configuration file at 50_Server/src/config/envs/local.ts
. Make sure any changes to the local configuration do not make it into your PR.
To start the CitrineOS server, run the following command:
npm run start-unix:local
This will launch the CitrineOS server with the specified configuration.
You can now connect your OCPP 2.0.1 compliant charging stations to the CitrineOS server. Make sure to configure the charging stations to point to the server's IP address and port as specified in the config.json file.
You need to install docker (>= 20.10) and docker-compose. Furthermore, Visual Studio Code might be handy as a common integrated development environment.
Once Docker is running, the following services should be available:
- CitrineOS (service name: citrineos) with ports
8080
: websocket server tcp connection8081
: webserver http - Swagger
- RabbitMQ Broker (service name: amqp-broker) with ports
5672
: amqp tcp connection15672
: RabbitMQ management interface
- PostgreSQL (service name: ocpp-db), PostgreSQL database for persistence
5432
: sql tcp connection
- Directus (service name: directus) on port 8055 with endpoints
:8055/admin
: web interface (login = admin@citrineos.com:CitrineOS!)
These three services are defined in 50_Server/docker-compose.yml
and they
live inside the docker network docker_default
with their respective
ports. By default these ports are directly accessible by using
localhost:8081
for example.
So, if you want to access the amqp-broker default management port via your
localhost, you need to access localhost:15672
.
We welcome contributions from the community. If you would like to contribute to CitrineOS, please follow our contribution guidelines.
CitrineOS and its subprojects are licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. See LICENSE for the full license text.
If you have any questions or need assistance, feel free to reach out to us on our community forum or create an issue on the GitHub repository.
A more detailed roadmap is coming soon.
- Support for Kafka Streams
- Support for OCPP 2.0.1 Core Profile
- OCA Certification (OCPP 2.0.1 Core Profile)
- Adding plugin management
- Implementing ISO15118 Plug and Charge (PnC)
- Adding OCPP inspector for debugging
- Adding OCPI 3.0 reference implementation