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Ecobee -> InfluxDB Connector

Ship your Ecobee runtime, sensor and weather data to InfluxDB.

Getting Started

  1. Register and enable the developer dashboard on your Ecobee account at https://www.ecobee.com/developers/
  2. Go to https://www.ecobee.com/consumerportal/index.html , navigate to Developer in the right-hand menu, and create an App.
  3. Create a config.json file similar to config.example.json above. This file should exist where your work_dir is defined.
  4. Build the project (see Build section).
  5. Run ecobee_influx_connector -list-thermostats -config $WORK_DIR/config.json at an interactive terminal; it'll provide a PIN. Make sure to you replace $WORK_DIR with your config path.
  6. Go to https://www.ecobee.com/consumerportal/index.html, navigate to My Apps in the right-hand menu, and click Add Application.
  7. Paste the PIN there and authorize the app.
  8. Return to the ecobee_influx_connector CLI and hit Enter.

You should then be presented with a list of thermostats in your Ecobee account, along with their IDs.

Configure

Configuration is specified in a JSON file. Create a file (based on the template config.example.json stored in this repository) and customize it:

  • api_key is created above in steps 1 & 2.
  • thermostat_id can be pulled from step 5 above; it's typically your device's serial number.
  • work_dir is where client credentials, config.json, and (yet to be implemented) last-written watermarks are stored.
  • Use the influx_* config fields to configure the connector to send data to your InfluxDB. If using tokens for bucket authentication, then leave the user and password config fields empty.
  • Use the write_* config fields to tell the connector which pieces of equipment you use.

Run via Docker or Docker Compose

A Dockerfile is provided. To build your Docker image, cd into the project directory and run docker build -t ecobee_influx_connector .

A Docker image is also provided that can be configured via environment variables. View it on Docker Hub, or pull it via docker pull cdzombak/ecobee_influx_connector.

To use the Docker container make sure the path to the config.json is provided as a volume with the path /config. This location will also be used to store the refresh token and config.json.

Important

Before building a persistent container, you will want to execute docker run --rm -it -v $HOME/ecobee:/config cdzombak/ecobee_influx_connector -config "/config/config.json" -list-thermostats so that you can get your token cached (/config/ecobee-cred-cache). This will give you a single key you can then use to authenticate with your ecobee api app. After auth you should see the thermostat_ids listed for all your devices.

If you build a persistent container before performing the above, the initial token request will loop and it will be hard to get the cached token.

Docker Compose

There is an example docker-compose.yml file above. Make sure to modify the volumes section so that it maps your /config folder to containers /config folder.

Example:

volumes:
  - $DOCKERAPPPATH/ecobee_influx_connector:/config

Docker Run

Example:

If using the image you built from Dockerfile, use:

docker run -d --name ecobeetest --restart=always -v ./config:/config -it ecobee_influx_connector

If using the Docker image, use:

docker run -d --name ecobeetest --restart=always -v ./config:/config -it cdzombak/ecobee_influx_connector:latest

Install on Debian via apt repository

Install my Debian repository if you haven't already:

sudo apt-get install ca-certificates curl gnupg
sudo install -m 0755 -d /etc/apt/keyrings
curl -fsSL https://dist.cdzombak.net/deb.key | sudo gpg --dearmor -o /etc/apt/keyrings/dist-cdzombak-net.gpg
sudo chmod 0644 /etc/apt/keyrings/dist-cdzombak-net.gpg
echo -e "deb [signed-by=/etc/apt/keyrings/dist-cdzombak-net.gpg] https://dist.cdzombak.net/deb/oss any oss\n" | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/dist-cdzombak-net.list > /dev/null
sudo apt-get update

Then install ecobee_influx_connector via apt-get:

sudo apt-get install ecobee-influx-connector

Build from source

make build

To cross-compile for eg. Linux/amd64:

env GOOS=linux GOARCH=amd64 go build -ldflags="-X main.version=$(./.version.sh)" -o ./ecobee_influx_connector .

Run via systemd on Linux

  1. Build the ecobee_influx_connector binary or install it per the instructions above.
  2. Copy it to /usr/local/bin or your preferred location.
  3. Create a work directory for the connector. (I put this at $HOME/.ecobee_influx_connector.)
  4. Run chmod 700 $YOUR_NEW_WORK_DIR. (For my work directory, I ran chmod 700 $HOME/.ecobee_influx_connector.)
  5. Create a configuration JSON file, per the Configure instructions above. (I put this at $HOME/.ecobee_influx_connector/config.json.)
  6. Customize ecobee-influx-connector.service with your user/group name and the path to your config file.
  7. Copy that customized ecobee-influx-connector.service to /etc/systemd/system.
  8. Run chown root:root /etc/systemd/system/ecobee-influx-connector.service.
  9. Run systemctl daemon-reload && systemctl enable ecobee-influx-connector.service && systemctl start ecobee-influx-connector.service.
  10. Check the service's status with systemctl status ecobee-influx-connector.service.

FAQ

Does the connector support multiple thermostats?

The connector does not directly support multiple thermostats. To support this use case, I'd recommend running multiple copies of the connector. Each copy will need its own working directory and config file, but you should be able to use the same API key for each connector instance.

(If deploying using the "systemd on Linux" instructions, give each connector's service file a unique name, like ecobee-influx-connector-1.service, ecobee-influx-connector-2.service, and so on.

License

Apache 2.0; see LICENSE in this repository.

Author

Chris Dzombak (GitHub: @cdzombak).