A slightly convoluted way of getting your vehicle data from TeslaMate to ABRP.
For this to work, you need a working instance of TeslaMate with MQTT enabled. See the official TeslaMate doc as a reference on how this might look like.
Inside the ABRP (web)app, navigate to your car settings and use the "generic" card (last one at the very bottom) to generate your user token. Make a note of that token and keep it to yourself.
In your TeslaMate docker-compose.yml, add the teslamate-abrp service by adding the following lines in the "services:" section:
ABRP:
container_name: TeslaMate_ABRP
image: fetzu/teslamate-abrp:latest #NOTE: you can replace ":latest" with either ":beta" (pre-release version) or ":alpha" for the bleeding edge version (note: bleeding edge might be very unstable or even not work at all)
restart: always
# privileged: true
# NOTE: un-comment the previous line to run the container in privilege mode (necessary on RaspberryPi)
environment:
- MQTT_SERVER=mosquitto
- USER_TOKEN=y0ur-4p1-k3y
- CAR_NUMBER=1
- CAR_MODEL=s100d #NOTE: This is optional, see below
Make sure to adapt the following environment variables:
Then from the command line, navigate to the folder where your docker-compose.yml is located and run:
docker-compose pull ABRP
docker-compose up -d ABRP
If all goes well, your car should be shown as online in ABRP after a minute. Logging should show "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS: [INFO] Connected with result code 0. Connection with MQTT server established.".
If you want to follow dockers recommendations regarding secrets, you should not provide them as ENVIRONMENT VARIABLE
or command line parameters and instead use the build in secrets function. This will expose the secrets in the container to the file system at /run/secrets/
. Read the documentation carefully if you wish to use docker's secrets feature.
This is an example of a part of a docker-compose.yml file using:
version: '3'
services:
# [...Other services such as TeslaMate, postgres, Grafana and the MQTT broker go here...]
MQTT2ABRP:
container_name: TeslaMate_ABRP
image: fetzu/teslamate-abrp:latest #NOTE: you can replace ":latest" with ":beta" to use the bleeding edge version, without any guarantees.
restart: always
environment:
CAR_NUMBER: 1
MQTT_SERVER: your.server.tld # Replace with your server's service name or IP address
MQTT_PORT: 8883 # This is a TLS enabled server, and usually that is enabled on a different port than the default 1883
MQTT_USERNAME: myMQTTusername # Replace with your actually mqtt username
MQTT_TLS: True # Connect to the MQTT server encrypted
STATUS_TOPIC: teslamate-abrp # This will send status messages and a copy of the ABRP data to the topic "teslamate-abrp/xxx"
TM2ABRP_DEBUG: True # This will enable debug level logging
SKIP_LOCATION: True # Don't send location info to ABRP
TZ: "Europe/Stockholm"
secrets:
- USER_TOKEN # Instead of having your token in clear text, it's found in the file below
- MQTT_PASSWORD # Instead of having your password in clear text, it's found in the file below
secrets:
# These text files contains the token/passwords, and nothing else.
# They can be placed "anywhere" on the host system and protected by appropriate file permissions.
USER_TOKEN:
file: ./path/to/abrp-token.txt
MQTT_PASSWORD:
file: ./path/to/abrp-mqtt-pass.txt
To run it:
docker compose up -d
The script can also be run directly on a machine with Python 3.x. Please note that the machine needs to have access to your MQTT server on port 1883.
To install the requirements, run
pip install -r requirements.txt
To run, you can either use the CLI. Please note that USER_TOKEN, CAR_NUMBER, CAR_MODEL and MQTT_SERVER are required arguments.
If you are using a MQTT server with username or authentication, pass the -l (to use MQTT_USERNAME only) or -p (for authentication with MQTT_USERNAME and MQTT_PASSWORD) options. Be aware that passing a username and password on an MQTT server not set for it will cause the connection to fail.
Usage:
teslamate_mqtt2abrp.py [-hdlpsx] [USER_TOKEN] [CAR_NUMBER] [MQTT_SERVER] [MQTT_USERNAME] [MQTT_PASSWORD] [MQTT_PORT] [--model CAR_MODEL] [--status_topic TOPIC]
Arguments:
USER_TOKEN User token generated by ABRP.
CAR_NUMBER Car number from TeslaMate (usually 1).
MQTT_SERVER MQTT server address (e.g. "192.168.1.1").
MQTT_PORT MQTT port (e.g. 1883 or 8883 for TLS).
MQTT_USERNAME MQTT username, use with -l or -p.
MQTT_PASSWORD MQTT password, use with -p.
Options:
-h Show this screen.
-d Debug mode (set logging level to DEBUG)
-l Use username to connect to MQTT server.
-p Use authentication (user and password) to connect to MQTT server.
-s Use TLS to connect to MQTT server, environment variable: MQTT_TLS
-x Don't send LAT and LON to ABRP, environment variable: SKIP_LOCATION
--model CAR_MODEL Car model according to https://api.iternio.com/1/tlm/get_CARMODELs_list
--status_topic TOPIC MQTT topic to publish status messages to, if not set, no publish will be done.
Note:
All arguments can also be passed as corresponding OS environment variables.
Note: All arguments can also be passed as corresponding OS environment variables. Arguments passed through the CLI will always supersede OS environment variables and docker secrets (in that order).
Based on/forked from letienne's original code, with improvement by various contributors (see commit history).
Licensed under the MIT license.