Skip to content

Transfer systemctl state to mqtt and optionally to home assistant

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

miaucl/systemctl2mqtt

Repository files navigation

systemctl2mqtt - Deliver systemctl status information over MQTT

Mypy Ruff Markdownlint Publish

This program uses journalctl and systemctl to watch for changes in your services, and top for metrics about those services, and delivers current status to MQTT. It will also publish Home Assistant MQTT Discovery messages so that (binary) sensors automatically show up in Home Assistant.

The focus lies on long-running services with continuous uptime, instead of single or one-shot services, as the stats being reported as well as the child PIDs being refreshed every stats_record_seconds. For services with a lifespan comparable to this interval, the reported stats will not be accurate. Further, as the library uses top and matches the services with their respective PIDs, including child PIDs from subprocesses, it is also not suited for monitoring services which spawn regularly new threads.

This is part of a family of similar tools:

Installation and Deployment

It is available as python package on pypi/systemctl2mqtt.

Pypi package

PyPI version

pip install systemctl2mqtt
systemctl2mqtt --name MySystemName --events -vvvvv

Usage

from systemctl2mqtt import systemctl2Mqtt, DEFAULT_CONFIG

cfg = Systemctl2MqttConfig({ 
  **DEFAULT_CONFIG,
  "host": "mosquitto",
  "enable_events": True
})

try:
  systemctl2mqtt = Systemctl2Mqtt(cfg)
  systemctl2mqtt.loop_busy()

except Exception as ex:
  # Do something

Default Configuration

You can use environment variables to control the behavior.

Config Default Description
log_level INFO Set to DEBUG,INFO,WARN,ERROR,CRITICAL to enable different levels of verbosity.
systemctl2mqtt_hostname systemctl2mqtt Hostname The hostname of your host, if you want to overwrite it.
homeassistant_prefix homeassistant The prefix for Home Assistant discovery. Must be the same as discovery_prefix in your Home Assistant configuration.
mqtt_client_id mqtt2discord The client id to send to the MQTT broker.
mqtt_host localhost The MQTT broker to connect to.
mqtt_port 1883 The port on the broker to connect to.
mqtt_user The user to send to the MQTT broker. Leave unset to disable authentication.
mqtt_password The password to send to the MQTT broker. Leave unset to disable authentication.
mqtt_timeout 30 The timeout for the MQTT connection.
mqtt_topic_prefix systemctl The MQTT topic prefix. With the default data will be published to systemctl/<hostname>.
mqtt_qos 1 The MQTT QOS level
service_whitelist Define a whitelist for services to consider, if empty, everything is monitored. The entries are either match as literal strings or as regex.
service_blacklist Define a blacklist for services to consider, takes priority over whitelist. The entries are either match as literal strings or as regex.
destroyed_service_ttl 86400 How long, in seconds, before destroyed services are removed from Home Assistant. Services won't be removed if the service is restarted before the TTL expires.
stats_record_seconds 30 The number of seconds to record state and make an average
enable_events 0 1 Or 0 for processing events
enable_stats 0 1 Or 0 for processing statistics

Consuming The Data

Data is published to the topic systemctl/<hostname>/events using JSON serialization. It will arrive whenever a change happens and its type can be inspected in type_definitions.py or the documentation.

Data is also published to the topic systemctl/<hostname>/stats using JSON serialization. It will arrive every STATS_RECORD_SECONDS seconds or so can be inspected in type_definitions.py or the documentation.

Home Assistant

Once systemctl2mqtt is collecting data and publishing it to MQTT, it's rather trivial to use the data in Home Assistant.

A few assumptions:

  • Home Assistant is already configured to use a MQTT broker. Setting up MQTT and HA is beyond the scope of this documentation. However, there are a lot of great tutorials on YouTube. An external broker (or as add-on) like Mosquitto will need to be installed and the HA MQTT integration configured.
  • The HA MQTT integration is configured to use homeassistant as the MQTT autodiscovery prefix. This is the default for the integration and also the default for systemctl2mqtt. If you have changed this from the default, use the --prefix parameter to specify the correct one.
  • You're not using TLS to connect to the MQTT broker. Currently systemctl2mqtt only works with unencrypted connections. Username / password authentication can be specified with the --username and --password parameters, but TLS encryption is not yet supported.

After you start the service (binary) sensors should show up in Home Assistant immediately. Look for sensors that start with (binary_)sensor.systemctl. Metadata about the container will be available as attributes for events, which you can then expose using template sensors if you wish.

Screenshot of Home Assistant sensor showing status and attributes.

Documentation

Using mkdocs, the documentation and reference is generated and available on github pages.

Dev

Setup the dev environment using VSCode, it is highly recommended.

python -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements_dev.txt

Install pre-commit

pre-commit install

# Run the commit hooks manually
pre-commit run --all-files

Following VSCode integrations may be helpful:

Releasing

It is only possible to release a final version on the master branch. For it to pass the gates of the publish workflow, it must have the same version in the tag, the setup.cfg, the bring_api/__init__.py and an entry in the CHANGELOG.md file.

To release a prerelease version, no changelog entry is required, but it can only happen on a feature branch (not master branch). Also, prerelease versions are marked as such in the github release page.

Credits

This is inspired from my other repo docker2mqtt.