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Hardware FAQ
This page summarizes how to get openHAB server running on specific ARM hardware.
ARM-based computers are a popular choice due to low cost, small size, low power consumption and fan-less operation. They are usually extensible with available add-on components and via programmable GPIO.
ONLY use the vendor forums recommended Wifi, SD card and power supply. These systems have little headroom in their specs and may be flaky with other devices. A lot of power supplies don't actually deliver what they claim, so again, go with a recommended model or you will get random flakiness and reboots. If you experience dropped or duplicated packets from a USB device (keyboard, wifi, Z-Wave), search the vendor's forums for "keyboard not working". You may need to upgrade firmware or use specific ports and settings for the USB devices.
System | Cores | Ghz | SoC/CPU | Gb RAM | IO | Storage | Primary OS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RaspPi 1/A | 1 | 0.7 | A5 | 0.5 | GPIO | SD | Raspbian |
RaspPi 2/B | 4 | 0.9 | A7 | 1.0 | GPIO | µSD | Raspbian |
RaspPi 3 64 Bit | 4 | 1.2 | A53 | 1.0 | GPIO | µSD | Raspbian |
Beagle Blk | 2 | 1.0 | A8 | 0.5 | GPIO | µSD, eMMC Slot | Ubuntu |
BananaPi /Pro | 2 | 1.0 | A20/A7 | 1.0 | GPIO | µ/SD SATA | Bananian |
BananaPi M3 | 8 | 1.2-1.8 | A83T/A7 | 2.0 | GPIO | µSD, eMMC, SATA via USB | Bananian |
BananaPi M64 64Bit | 4 | 1.2 | A64/A53 | 2.0 | GPIO | eMMC | Bananian |
ODROID C1+ | 4 | 1.5 | A5 | 1.0 | GPIO | µSD, eMMC Slot | Ubuntu |
ODROID C2 64Bit | 4 | 1.5 | A53 | 2.0 | GPIO | µSD, eMMC Slot | Ubuntu |
Cubieboard 3 CT | 2 | 1.0 | A20/A7 | 2.0 | GPIO | µSD, eMMC Slot, SATA 2.0 | Ubuntu |
Cubieboard 4 | 4 | 1.3 | A80/A7 | 2.0 | GPIO | µSD, eMMC Slot, USB3.0 | Ubuntu |
Cubieboard 5 CT+ | 8 | 1.3 | A80/A7 | 2.0 | GPIO | µSD, eMMC Slot, SATA via USB | Ubuntu |
- Complete compatibility with Raspberry Pi 1
A proven choice for small residential installations.
NOTE There have been issues with the zwave binding on the RPi. Refer to the z-wave binding for more information
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Install Raspbian Wheezy release 2014-01-07 or later. It includes Java 7 JRE that meets openHAB JVM requirements.
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Install openHAB - - as described in Linux-and-OS-X
Optionally, a complete JDK 7 or 8 for Linux ARM v6/v7 Hard Float ABI is available for download from Oracle or from Apt Repository.
Stay up to date with rpi-update (https://github.com/Hexxeh/rpi-update/)
This article has tracked down the reason for the high I/O load you may experience when running openHAB on devices which use a SD card as storage media for the root (and /tmp) filesystem. Because the forum article is in german, here is a short summary:
- The Apache Fileinstall Bundle is used to continuously check the $OPENHAB_HOME/addons folder in openHAB
- The bundle writes nearly continously to /tmp/fileinstall-...
- When uncommenting/setting RAMTMP=yes in /etc/default/tmpfs these I/O operations will be RAM access rather than slow SD card I/O
- (on Raspbian Jessie, RAMTMP is ignored - set this with "systemctl enable tmp.mount")
For headless, reduce memory down to 16, this can be done by using raspi-config
For headless, add these to /etc/rc.local:
# Limit GPU IRQs
fbset -xres 16 -yres 16 -vyres 16 -depth 8
/opt/vc/bin/tvservice -o
Overclocking does not seem to have a significant impact.
These systems work well with OpenHAB for relatively large installations.
1. Install Linux distro
Recommended Linux distros:
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ODroid C1: Ubuntu 14.04
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BeagleBone Black: Ubuntu 14.04
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CubieBoard2 or CubieTruck - Use Cubiuntu
2. Install JAVA - see java installation
3. Install and setup OpenHAB - as described in Linux---OS-X
Recommended distro: raspbian.
All about performance tweaking from Rpi above is applicable for the bPi too, but the most important thing is the SATA Port which enables users to work around the poor I/O performance of the SD card subsystem.
The SATA connection is the key if you want to run an openhab server (also a not-so-small installation) on such board. You can switch from SD card to SATA disks like described here.
The following data is taken from the monitoring of my openhab server which has about 75 items, 50 rules and 80 sitemap-items.
Without changing anything else but the mass storage from SD card (Transcend SDHC UHC-I X600) to SSD (Crucial M500) overall cpu load dropped from 2.x to about 0.8.
Key to this was the reduction of I/O wait (writing to SD card) from 25% to below 5% in cpu utilization.
So far the combination of Banana Pi and SATA SSD can be highly recommended.
Be aware of power issues if you plan to use a normal (mechanical) hard disk. The bPi is only able to supply the 5V part of SATA power. Mechanical 3.5'' hard disks usually utilize 12V for the mechanical parts (disk spin motor, head control) and 5V for the electronical part. SATA SSD's and most 2.5'' HD's only use 5V and in general they do not require the 12V supply power to be present. For running an bPi with SATA SSD or 2.5'' HD the bPi-specific SATA/Power cable is sufficient in most cases.
ℹ Please find all documentation for openHAB 2 under http://docs.openhab.org.
The wiki pages here contain (outdated) documentation for the older openHAB 1.x version. Please be aware that a lot of core details changed with openHAB 2.0 and this wiki as well as all tutorials found for openHAB 1.x might be misleading. Check http://docs.openhab.org for more details and consult the community forum for all remaining questions.
- Classic UI
- iOS Client
- Android Client
- Windows Phone Client
- GreenT UI
- CometVisu
- Kodi
- Chrome Extension
- Alfred Workflow
- Cosm Persistence
- db4o Persistence
- Amazon DynamoDB Persistence
- Exec Persistence
- Google Calendar Presence Simulator
- InfluxDB Persistence
- JDBC Persistence
- JPA Persistence
- Logging Persistence
- mapdb Persistence
- MongoDB Persistence
- MQTT Persistence
- my.openHAB Persistence
- MySQL Persistence
- rrd4j Persistence
- Sen.Se Persistence
- SiteWhere Persistence
- AKM868 Binding
- AlarmDecoder Binding
- Anel Binding
- Arduino SmartHome Souliss Binding
- Asterisk Binding
- Astro Binding
- Autelis Pool Control Binding
- BenQ Projector Binding
- Bluetooth Binding
- Bticino Binding
- CalDAV Binding
- Chamberlain MyQ Binding
- Comfo Air Binding
- Config Admin Binding
- CUL Transport
- CUL Intertechno Binding
- CUPS Binding
- DAIKIN Binding
- Davis Binding
- DD-WRT Binding
- Denon Binding
- digitalSTROM Binding
- DIY on XBee Binding
- DMX512 Binding
- DSC Alarm Binding
- DSMR Binding
- eBUS Binding
- Ecobee Binding
- EDS OWSever Binding
- eKey Binding
- Energenie Binding
- EnOcean Binding
- Enphase Energy Binding
- Epson Projector Binding
- Exec Binding
- Expire Binding
- Fatek PLC Binding
- Freebox Binding
- Freeswitch Binding
- Frontier Silicon Radio Binding
- Fritz AHA Binding
- Fritz!Box Binding
- FritzBox-TR064-Binding
- FS20 Binding
- Garadget Binding
- Global Caché IR Binding
- GPIO Binding
- HAI/Leviton OmniLink Binding
- HDAnywhere Binding
- Heatmiser Binding
- Homematic / Homegear Binding
- Horizon Mediabox Binding
- HTTP Binding
- IEC 62056-21 Binding
- IHC / ELKO Binding
- ImperiHome Binding
- Insteon Hub Binding
- Insteon PLM Binding
- IPX800 Binding
- IRtrans Binding
- jointSPACE-Binding
- KM200 Binding
- KNX Binding
- Koubachi Binding
- LCN Binding
- LightwaveRF Binding
- Leviton/HAI Omnilink Binding
- Lg TV Binding
- Logitech Harmony Hub
- MailControl Binding
- MAX!Cube-Binding
- MAX! CUL Binding
- MCP23017 I/O Expander Binding
- MCP3424 ADC Binding
- MiLight Binding
- MiOS Binding
- Mochad X10 Binding
- Modbus Binding
- MPD Binding
- MQTT Binding
- MQTTitude binding
- MystromEcoPower Binding
- Neohub Binding
- Nest Binding
- Netatmo Binding
- Network Health Binding
- Network UPS Tools Binding
- Nibe Heatpump Binding
- Nikobus Binding
- Novelan/Luxtronic Heatpump Binding
- NTP Binding
- One-Wire Binding
- Onkyo AV Receiver Binding
- Open Energy Monitor Binding
- OpenPaths presence detection binding
- OpenSprinkler Binding
- OSGi Configuration Admin Binding
- Panasonic TV Binding
- panStamp Binding
- Philips Hue Binding
- Picnet Binding
- Piface Binding
- PiXtend Binding
- pilight Binding
- Pioneer-AVR-Binding
- Plex Binding
- Plugwise Binding
- PLCBus Binding
- PowerDog Local API Binding
- Powermax alarm Binding
- Primare Binding
- Pulseaudio Binding
- Raspberry Pi RC Switch Binding
- RFXCOM Binding
- RWE Smarthome Binding
- Sager WeatherCaster Binding
- Samsung AC Binding
- Samsung TV Binding
- Serial Binding
- Sallegra Binding
- Satel Alarm Binding
- Siemens Logo! Binding
- SimpleBinary Binding
- Sinthesi Sapp Binding
- Smarthomatic Binding
- Snmp Binding
- Somfy URTSI II Binding
- Sonance Binding
- Sonos Binding
- Souliss Binding
- Squeezebox Binding
- Stiebel Eltron Heatpump
- Swegon ventilation Binding
- System Info Binding
- TA CMI Binding
- TCP/UDP Binding
- Tellstick Binding
- TinkerForge Binding
- Tivo Binding
- UCProjects.eu Relay Board Binding
- UPB Binding
- VDR Binding
- Velleman-K8055-Binding
- Wago Binding
- Wake-on-LAN Binding
- Waterkotte EcoTouch Heatpump Binding
- Weather Binding
- Wemo Binding
- Withings Binding
- XBMC Binding
- xPL Binding
- Yamahareceiver Binding
- Zibase Binding
- Z-Wave Binding
- Asterisk
- DoorBird
- FIND
- Foscam IP Cameras
- LG Hombot
- Worx Landroid
- Heatmiser PRT Thermostat
- Google Calendar
- Linux Media Players
- Osram Lightify
- Rainforest EAGLE Energy Access Gateway
- Roku Integration
- ROS Robot Operating System
- Slack
- Telldus Tellstick
- Zoneminder
- Wink Hub (rooted)
- Wink Monitoring
- openHAB Cloud Connector
- Google Calendar Scheduler
- Transformations
- XSLT
- JSON
- REST-API
- Security
- Service Discovery
- Voice Control
- BritishGasHive-Using-Ruby
- Dropbox Bundle
A good source of inspiration and tips from users gathered over the years. Be aware that things may have changed since they were written and some examples might not work correctly.
Please update the wiki if you do come across any out of date information.
- Rollershutter Bindings
- Squeezebox
- WAC Binding
- WebSolarLog
- Alarm Clock
- Convert Fahrenheit to Celsius
- The mother of all lighting rules
- Reusable Rules via Functions
- Combining different Items
- Items, Rules and more Examples of a SmartHome
- Google Map
- Controlling openHAB with Android
- Usecase examples
- B-Control Manager
- Spell checking for foreign languages
- Flic via Tasker
- Chromecast via castnow
- Speedtest.net integration