Skip to content

ioBroker/ioBroker.js-controller

Repository files navigation

Logo

ioBroker.js-controller

Number of Installations Number of Installations NPM version

Test and Release Downloads

The ioBroker.js-controller is the heart of any ioBroker installation. The controller is owning the central configuration of the ioBroker installation and controls and monitors all adapter processes for the current host.

Please check the js-controller compatibility information below which version runs on your Node.js version

Overview

Compatibility

  • js-controller 7.x (Lucy) works with Node.js 18.x, 20.x and probably 22.x
  • js-controller 6.x (Kiera) works with Node.js 18.x, 20.x and probably 22.x
  • js-controller 5.x works with Node.js 16.x, 18.x and probably 20.x
  • js-controller 4.x works with Node.js 12.x, 14.x, 16.x (incl. up to NPM 8) and probably 18.x
  • js-controller 3.x works with Node.js 10.x, 12.x, 14.x and probably 16.x (first tests look good, NPM 7 still has some issues, so NPM6 is best)
  • js-controller 2.x works with Node.js 8.x, 10.x, 12.x and probably 14.x (untested)
  • js-controller 1.x works with Node.js 4.x, 6.x, 8.x and probably 10.x (untested)

Please try to stay current with your Node.js version because the support is limited in time. As of now (May 2024) all Node.js versions below 18.x are no longer supported by Node.js and considered EOL (End Of Life). To upgrade your Node.js version and ioBroker, please follow https://forum.iobroker.net/topic/44566/how-to-node-js-f%C3%BCr-iobroker-richtig-updaten-2021-edition!

As it is hard to keep a lot of the decentralized adapters up-to-date, up from controller version 6.0.4 the js-controller will override the @iobroker/adapter-core dependency of single adapters to ensure compatibility with the current js-controller version.

  • js-controller 6.x (Kiera) specifies this version as ^3.1.6.

Links


Usage

Example how to install on a Debian-based system:

curl -sLf https://iobroker.net/install.sh | bash -

Install ioBroker

See Linux instructions, Windows instructions and

after that, ioBroker should be running and available in the browser under http://<ip>:8081/.

Start ioBroker controller

Linux

  • run iobroker start to start the ioBroker controller in the background
  • watch the logfile iobroker logs --watch

or

  • run node node_modules/iobroker.js-controller/controller.js in the ioBroker directory to start the ioBroker controller in foreground and watch the log on console.

Windows

  • run iobroker start in the ioBroker directory to start the ioBroker controller as service. The name of the service is "iobroker()"
  • check the logfile log/iobroker.log

or

  • run node node_modules/iobroker.js-controller/controller.js in the ioBroker directory to start the ioBroker controller in foreground and watch the log on console

Configuration

The main configuration is stored in iobroker-data/iobroker.json. Normally, there is no need to edit this file because the ioBroker CLI commands can control most of the settings.

Feature Overview

Admin UI

Feature status: stable

The admin adapter is installed automatically and starts a web-server that hosts the Admin UI. Default port is 8081, so just open http://<iobroker-ip>:8081/

If port 8081 is occupied, you can install a second Admin UI on an alternate port and change the port for the first admin UI. To do so, run iobroker add admin --enabled --port 8090 and go to the http://<iobroker-ip>:8090/. Of course you can change port 8090 to a different one.

Automatic adapter upgrade

Feature status: New in 6.0.0

Whenever the repository changes, the controller will perform an automatic upgrade of the adapters, w.r.t. the auto-upgrade policy. The policy can be configured system-wide and per adapter. Whenever there is no policy on adapter-level the system-wide policy is used as a fallback.

Technically, the system-wide policy is configured in the system.config object in common.adapterAutoUpgrade.defaultPolicy. The policy is only active for the repositories which are set to true in common.adapterAutoUpgrade.repositories. On adapter level, the policy is configured in common.automaticUpgrade of each system.adapter.<adapterName> object.

Valid values for the policy are none, patch, minor and major. These relate to the version ranges, which will be automatically upgraded. It is strongly recommended to not configure major upgrades to be performed automatically, as these do often contain breaking changes and need manual intervention by the user.

A successful as well as a failed auto-upgrade will generate a notification in the ioBroker notification system (see Notification System).

Command Line Interface

Feature status: stable

The command line interface is described at https://www.iobroker.net/#de/documentation/config/cli.md

Adapter Upgrade with Webserver

Feature status: New in 5.0.0

Feature Flag for detection: ADAPTER_WEBSERVER_UPGRADE

An adapter can be upgraded via sendToHost. The adapter sends parameters to the js-controller which contain the information of the adapter to upgrade as well as information to start a webserver. The webserver can be polled by a UI, even if the adapter itself is stopped during upgrade or does not know of the upgrade.

Example:

sendToHostAsync('system.host.test', 'upgradeAdapterWithWebserver', { 
    version: '1.0.5', 
    adapterName: 'hm-rpc', 
    useHttps: true, 
    port: 8081, 
    certPrivateName: 'defaultPrivate',
    certPublicName: 'defaultPublic' 
});

In this example the controller will upgrade the adapter hm-rpc to version 1.0.5. During the upgrade, the log and status information is provided by a webserver running on port 8081, and using https with the given certificates.

During the update, you can perform a GET request against the webserver to get the current status of the upgrade.

The webserver response is defined as following:

interface ServerResponse {
    /** If the update is still running */
    running: boolean;
    /** Stderr log during the upgrade */
    stderr: string[];
    /** Stdout log during the upgrade */
    stdout: string[];
    /** If installation process succeeded */
    success?: boolean;
}

Controller UI Upgrade

Feature status: New in 5.0.0

Feature Flag for detection: CONTROLLER_UI_UPGRADE

The controller can be updated via sendToHost. This feature is used by Admin UI to allow upgrades without usage of CLI. The controller will start a detached process, and host a web server on the same port as the provided Admin instance.

Example:

sendToHostAsync('system.host.test', 'upgradeController', { version: '5.0.5', adminInstance: 0 });

In this example, the controller will be upgraded to version 5.0.5 and the web server will take the configuration (http/s, port, certificates) of system.adapter.admin.0. During the update, you can perform a GET request against the webserver to get the current status of the upgrade.

The webserver response is defined as following:

interface ServerResponse {
    /** If the update is still running */
    running: boolean;
    /** Stderr log during the upgrade */
    stderr: string[];
    /** Stdout log during the upgrade */
    stdout: string[];
    /** If installation process succeeded */
    success?: boolean;
}

Managing node modules

Feature status: New in 6.0.0

In the past, adapters which needed additional user-defined node modules directly interacted with npm to install them. With the ongoing development of npm it turned out to be problematically as additional packages get removed during other npm operations.

Hence, the controller now provides convenience methods to manage additional node modules.

To install a node module, execute:

const result = await adapter.installNodeModule('axios', { version: '1.0.0' });

if (result.success) {
    // successfully installed
}

Instead of specifying a module name you can also specify a URL to e.g. install a package from GitHub. To use the installed node module, you can import it:

const module = await adapter.importNodeModule('axios');

Note, that the behavior mimics the one of JavaScript's "import" operator.

If you are just interested in the default export, use the example below.

const module = (await adapter.importNodeModule('axios')).default;
// now we can call axios specific methods
const result = await module.get('https://www.iobroker.net/');

NOTE: Always use the provided adapter method to import the module, importing the module directly with import or require statements will not work!

To remove a no longer needed module:

const result = await adapter.uninstallNodeModule('axios');

if (result.success) {
    // successfully uninstalled
}

To list all installed node modules by your adapter:

const installedNodeModules = await adapter.listInstalledNodeModules();

adapter.log.info(`Installed modules are: ${installedNodeModules.join(', ')}`);

To get the adapter scoped package identifier you can use:

// e.g. @iobroker-javascript.0/axios
const packageIdentifier = adapter.getAdapterScopedPackageIdentifier('axios');

Per host adapter objects

Feature status: New in 6.0.0

Previous to js-controller 6.0.0 all adapter objects were only created as system.adapter.<adapterName>. This had the downside, that it was not possible to determine if an adapter is installed on a specific host on database level. Furthermore, in multihost environments the content of system.adapter.<adapterName> was filled with the last uploaded version of this adapter. Thus having different versions of an adapter on different hosts lead to an inconsistent object.

Up from controller 6.0.0 the objects of type adapter are additionally created under system.host.<hostName>.adapter.<adapterName>. If you need to interact with objects of type adapter, please use them from there. For now the objects are additionally created under their previous system.adapter.<adapterName> structure to ensure backward compatibility.

Furthermore, instances and their states will not move to another structure and will stay at system.adapter.<adapterName>.<instanceNumber>. Note, that instances are unique across the whole system and are thus not affected by the described problem. Also objects of type instance have a common.host attribute to find the corresponding host.

Ignoring specific adapter version

Feature status: New in 6.0.0

If you know, that a specific version of an adapter is not suitable for you, you may want to ignore this update to avoid accidentally installing it. You can do so by using the cli command iobroker version <adapter> --ignore <version> and to recognize all updates again use iobroker version <adapter> --recognize. If a version of an adapter is ignored, you will not be able to update to this specific version on this ioBroker host. If you use a multihost environment you might need to execute the commands once per host.

Internally this will set common.ignoreVersion to the specified version on the system.host.<hostName>.adapter.<adapterName> object. The version to be ignored can be specified via a semver range. So an absolute version is fine if you only want to ignore one specific update, e.g. 1.5.1. Another example, if you want to ignore all updates in the 1.5.x range, you can specify ~1.5.0.

Operating system package management

Feature status: New in 6.0.0

Feature Flag for detection: CONTROLLER_OS_PACKAGE_UPGRADE

The controller can upgrade OS packages on Linux via yum and apt. To upgrade a package, you have to send a message to the controller with the following this example:

sendToHostAsync('system.host.test', 'upgradeOsPackages', {
    packages: [{
      // the package name
      name: 'google-chrome-stable',
      // the optional version
      version: '120.0.6099.199-1' 
    }],
    // if the controller should be restarted afterwards
    restart: true,
});

Note, that specifying a version is optional. The answer by the controller has the property success which is true, if the upgrade was successful for all packages. If a package fails, the response will have a value of false for success and an additional property error which contains the error message as a string.

Currently only upgrading of packages is supported. If you need a specific OS dependency for your adapter, you can specify it inside io-package.json with the field osDependencies.

Custom install logic

Feature status: New in 5.0.0

If an adapter needs to execute custom install logic, one possibility is to use the scripts attribute of package.json. However, often adapters already want to interact with the ioBroker databases during the installation logic.

Hence, you can set ioPackage.common.install flag to true, to indicate that the js-controller should perform an installation run with your adapter after the npm installation is successfully done. During the installation run, the install instead of the ready event will be emitted. Alternatively, you can also pass an install function to the constructor the same way as for ready.

this.on('install', () => {
    this.log.info('Performing installation logic ...')
    // Perform your installation logic
});

Hostname

Feature status: stable

By default, the hostname for the js-controller instance will be taken from the official hostname of the server ioBroker is running on. The hostname should not be changed after the first start of ioBroker on this host.

If changes are needed there are CLI commands available to update the hostname. Look under https://www.iobroker.net/#de/documentation/config/cli.md for the iobroker host ... commands

If you need to set a specific hostname before the first start of iobroker you can also edit the iobroker.json file:

{
  "system": {
    ...
    "hostname":"local",
    ...
  },

Adapter process memory limitation

Feature status: stable

By default, the memory management is done by Node.js automatically. A Garbage Collector (GC) will clean up unused objects automatically from time to time.

If needed, especially for low memory situations the memory limit for all adapter processes can be set in iobroker.json. Only set this if really needed, and you know what you are doing. Leave the value at 0 to not set a special memory limitation.

{
...
  "system": {
    ...
    "memoryLimitMB": 0,
    ...
  },
...
}

Directly executing TypeScript adapters

Feature status: Technology preview since js-controller 3.3.0

The js-controller is able to execute .ts files, which removes the need of compiling to JavaScript first. To use this feature, simply define the adapter main file as the required .ts file.

E.g. in package.json:

{
  "main": "src/main.ts"
}

Note, that the sources need to be presence on every installation and thus need to be included in the npm package. Vice versa, the build folder is no longer required and should not be published to npm any longer.

Technically, the sources are compiled with ESBuild at every startup; hence this feature should not be used on adapters consisting of many sources to prevent noticeably delayed adapter starts.

Statistics

Feature status: stable

The js-controller is collecting statistics for the host (system.host.hostname.*), running compact groups (system.host.hostname.compaczgroupX.*) and for each adapter (system.adapter.adaptername.*). The data contains memory usage, free memory, number of events and also the event loop lag of the Node.js process.

Error Reporting via ioBroker Sentry

Feature status: stable since js-controller 3.0.0

Sentry.io is a way for developers to get an overview about errors from their applications. The js-controller uses this method to make sure application crashes are reported to us. With this, we can make sure to provide fixes for problems very fast.

Especially with the automatic restart behavior of ioBroker, some crashes happen and no one really realizes them. And so we also do not get bug reports for them. With this method the information is provided to us.

When the js-controller crashes or another Code error happens (and only then!), this error that also appears in the ioBroker log is submitted to our own Sentry server hosted in Germany. If you have allowed iobroker GmbH to collect diagnostic data, then also your anonymous installation ID (this is just a unique ID without any additional infos about you, email, name or such) is included. This allows Sentry to group errors and show how many unique users are affected by such an error. IP addresses are not stored with the crash report!

All of this helps me to provide an error-free smart home system that basically never crashes.

If you want to disable the error reporting, you can do this by setting the state "system.host.NAME.plugins.sentry.enabled" to false. You should see a log message stating that sentry was disabled. After disabling the plugin no crashes from your system are reported and so cannot be fixed without reporting them by yourself manually!

Notification System

Feature status: Stable since js-controller 5.0.0

The notification system in ioBroker allows setting, detecting and storing notifications per Host and allows querying the details.

Notifications need to be defined in the io-package.json of the adapter in the key notifications. Notifications are grouped in scopes and contain categories of different notification types. Notifications can contain a regex for automatic detection in strings or adapter exception texts. The definition also contains localized names and descriptions that can be used to display it to the users.

Registered notifications are stored per host and can be requested via messages to the host. They are also stored when the controller stops and loaded on next start. Additionally, a summary of the stored categories per scope with a number of stored notifications and the last added timestamp is available in the state system.host.hostname.notifications.scopeid as a JSON.

The js-controller defines in its io-package the system scope together with all details. You can use this as an example, and the JSON schema will help you validate your notifications.

{
  "notifications": [
    {
      "scope": "system",
      "name": {
        "en": "System Notifications",
        "de": "System-Benachrichtigungen",
        "ru": "Системные уведомления",
        "pt": "Notificações do sistema",
        "nl": "Systeemmeldingen",
        "fr": "Notifications système",
        "it": "Notifiche di sistema",
        "es": "Notificaciones del sistema",
        "pl": "Powiadomienia systemowe",
        "zh-cn": "系统通知"
      },
      "description": {
        "en": "These notifications are collected by the ioBroker system and point to issues you should check and fix.",
        "de": "Diese Benachrichtigungen werden vom ioBroker-System erfasst und weisen auf Probleme hin, die überprüft und behoben werden sollten.",
        "ru": "Эти уведомления собираются системой ioBroker и указывают на проблемы, которые вы должны проверить и исправить.",
        "pt": "Essas notificações são coletadas pelo sistema ioBroker e apontam para problemas que você deve verificar e corrigir.",
        "nl": "Deze meldingen worden verzameld door het ioBroker-systeem en wijzen op problemen die u moet controleren en oplossen.",
        "fr": "Ces notifications sont collectées par le système ioBroker et indiquent des problèmes que vous devez vérifier et résoudre.",
        "it": "Queste notifiche vengono raccolte dal sistema ioBroker e indicano problemi che dovresti controllare e correggere.",
        "es": "Estas notificaciones son recopiladas por el sistema ioBroker y señalan problemas que debe verificar y solucionar.",
        "pl": "Te powiadomienia są zbierane przez system ioBroker i wskazują problemy, które należy sprawdzić i naprawić.",
        "zh-cn": "这些通知由ioBroker系统收集,并指出您应检查并修复的问题"
      },
      "categories": [
        {
          "category": "memIssues",
          "name": {
            "en": "Issues with RAM availability",
            "de": "Probleme mit der Arbeitsspeicher-Verfügbarkeit",
            "ru": "Проблемы с доступностью оперативной памяти",
            "pt": "Problemas com disponibilidade de RAM",
            "nl": "Problemen met de beschikbaarheid van RAM",
            "fr": "Problèmes de disponibilité de la RAM",
            "it": "Problemi con la disponibilità della RAM",
            "es": "Problemas con la disponibilidad de RAM",
            "pl": "Problemy z dostępnością pamięci RAM",
            "zh-cn": "RAM可用性问题"
          },
          "severity": "alert",
          "description": {
            "en": "Your system is running out of memory. Please check the number of running adapters and processes or if single processes need too many memory.",
            "de": "Es steht nicht genug Arbeitsspeicher zur Verfügung. Die Anzahl der laufenden Adapter und Prozesse sollte geprüft werden, oder ob einzelne Prozesse zuviel Speicher benötigen.",
            "ru": "В вашей системе не хватает памяти. Пожалуйста, проверьте количество работающих адаптеров и процессов, или если отдельным процессам требуется слишком много памяти.",
            "pt": "Seu sistema está ficando sem memória. Verifique o número de adaptadores e processos em execução ou se processos únicos precisam de muita memória.",
            "nl": "Uw systeem heeft onvoldoende geheugen. Controleer het aantal actieve adapters en processen of als afzonderlijke processen te veel geheugen nodig hebben.",
            "fr": "Votre système manque de mémoire. Veuillez vérifier le nombre d'adaptateurs et de processus en cours d'exécution ou si des processus uniques nécessitent trop de mémoire.",
            "it": "Il tuo sistema sta esaurendo la memoria. Controllare il numero di adattatori e processi in esecuzione o se i singoli processi richiedono troppa memoria.",
            "es": "Su sistema se está quedando sin memoria. Verifique el número de adaptadores y procesos en ejecución o si los procesos individuales necesitan demasiada memoria.",
            "pl": "W Twoim systemie kończy się pamięć. Sprawdź liczbę działających adapterów i procesów lub czy pojedyncze procesy wymagają zbyt dużej ilości pamięci.",
            "zh-cn": "您的系统内存不足。请检查正在运行的适配器和进程的数量,或者单个进程是否需要太多内存。"
          },
          "regex": [
            "^Exception-Code: ENOMEM",
            "buffer allocation failed"
          ],
          "limit": 10
        }
      ]
    }
  ]
}

How to define own scopes?

Each adapter can define its own "scopes" for own notifications with its own categories which then will be available in the system. You can use the name of your adapter as a scope, e.g. hm-rpc to avoid conflicts with other scopes. If you plan on using a general purpose scope, please contact the core development group so that scope names can be checked to stay unique. The same applies if you see the need to enhance the system scope by additional categories. Let's discuss the requirements that they can also be added officially into upcoming js-controller versions.

A scope and category definition needs to contain all relevant UI texts in the JSON.

How to register own notifications?

An adapter can use the method registerNotification to register own notifications to the system. To find out if the used controller version supports this feature, check if the method exists (or require at least js-controller 3.2.0).

This method takes the following parameters:

  • scope: scope to be addressed
  • category: category to be addressed, if a null message will be checked by regex of given scope
  • message: message to be stored/checked
  • options: Available with js-controller version 7.0. Additional options for the notification, currently you can provide additional contextData which is also stored with the notification information. Notification processing adapters can use this data

Note, that the structure of the contextData which can be stored via the options object is not defined by the controller. Adapters which handle messages can use individual data attributes. Currently, it is planned to support individual notification customization in the admin adapter. More information will be available in the admin adapter as soon as this feature is ready.

The top-level of contextData should not be populated with individual data. The only allowed key on top-level is the name of the adapter which consumes these data, e.g. contextData.admin for the admin adapter. The structure inside the adapter property needs to be defined by the consuming adapter itself and is not specified by the js-controller. Please consult the adapter docs of the corresponding adapter for these information.

When a regex is defined then console.error output from the adapter is always checked by the regex and notifications are registered automatically when the regex matches!

How to read notifications?

The host supports the message command getNotifications to query the stored notifications together with the localized names and descriptions.

The message needs to take the following parameters in the message object:

  • scope - scope of notifications
  • category - category of notifications
  • instance - instance of notifications

All three are optional and can be a string or null/undefined if omitted.

How to clear notifications?

The host supports the message command clearNotifications to clear specific notifications after they are handled.

Please only clear notifications that really were handled and displayed to the user especially for "system" scope!

The message needs to take the following parameters in the message object:

  • scope - scope of notifications
  • category - category of notifications
  • instance - instance of notifications

All three are optional and can be a string or null/undefined if omitted.

Disk space warnings

Feature status: New in 6.0.0

The js-controller will generate a notification of in the scope system and the category diskSpaceIssues on warning level, if your free disk space falls under a specified threshold. By default, this threshold is 5 % of disk space. Via the state system.host.<hostname>.diskWarning you can override this level to any level between 0 and 100.

Logging

Log levels

Feature status: stable

The js-controller and each adapter can define their own log level. By default, info is used. The following log levels can be used:

  • silly (most logging)
  • debug
  • info
  • warn
  • error (only errors are logged)

The log level for js-controller is configured in iobroker.json in the logs section:

{
  ...
  "log": {
    "level": "info",
    ...
  }
  ...
}

Dynamic Loglevel change

Feature status: stable since js-controller 2.0.0

The log level can be changed dynamically for adapter-instance and host (main controller and compact group controllers) after they have been started. Initially, the configured loglevel is always used!

The states system.adapter.xy.logLevel and system.host.hostname.logLevel are updated on instance/controller start with the configured log level and can afterward be used to change the loglevel during runtime. These changes are not persisted, so the next restarts resets the loglevel to the configured one.

The Loglevel change is only effective if there is no loglevel (property "level") defined on the transport configuration.

This possibility allows debugging adapters better and during runtime.

File-based logging

Feature status: stable

The default logging will log file based in the log directory inside the ioBroker directory. The logfile will be stored with a name that contains the date and will be deleted after 7 days. It only contains the logs from the current host.

The logging is configured in the iobroker.json file and can be changed there:

{
  ...
  "log": {
    "level": "info",
    "maxDays": 7,
    "noStdout": true,
    "transport": {
      "file1": {
        "type": "file",
        "enabled": true,
        "filename": "log/iobroker",
        "fileext": ".log",
        "maxsize": null,
        "maxFiles": null
      },
    },
  ...
}

If you want to pin a special loglevel for the file transport, you can add a property "level" with a hard defined loglevel. Then no dynamic control is possible.

Since js-controller 3.0 Logfiles on non-Windows-based systems are compressed in rotation, so that the older Files need less space in your storage.

If you do not want to compress the files, this behavior can be deactivated by iobroker.json:

{
  ...
  "log": {
    ...
    "transport": {
      "file1": {
        ...
        "zippedArchive": false,
        ...
      },
    },
  ...
}

Syslog logging

Feature status: stable

ioBroker also supports logging to a syslog server. The configuration is also stored in the iobroker.json configuration file. A section for syslog is pre-created but disabled by default.

{
  ...
  "log": {
    ...
    "transport": {
      ...
      "syslog1": {
        "type": "syslog",
        "enabled": false,
        "host": "localhost",
        "host_comment": "The host running syslogd, defaults to localhost.",
        "port_comment": "The port on the host that syslog is running on, defaults to syslogd's default port(514/UDP).",
        "protocol": "udp4",
        "protocol_comment": "The network protocol to log over (e.g. tcp4, udp4, unix, unix-connect, etc).",
        "path_comment": "The path to the syslog dgram socket (i.e. /dev/log or /var/run/syslog for OS X).",
        "facility_comment": "Syslog facility to use (Default: local0).",
        "localhost": "iobroker",
        "localhost_comment": "Host to indicate that log messages are coming from (Default: localhost).",
        "sysLogType_comment": "The type of the syslog protocol to use (Default: BSD).",
        "app_name_comment": "The name of the application (Default: process.title).",
        "eol_comment": "The end of line character to be added to the end of the message (Default: Message without modifications)."
      }
    }
  }
  ...
}

If you want to pin a special loglevel for the file transport, you can add a property "level" with a hard defined loglevel. Then no dynamic control is possible.

Other Log transports

See the iobroker.json and Admin for more transports and their settings.

If you want to pin a special loglevel for the file transport, you can add a property "level" with a hard defined loglevel. Then no dynamic control is possible.

Adapters are allowed to subscribe log messages

Feature status: stable

ioBroker allows adapters to subscribe to log messages from the whole system. E.g., admin adapter is using this logic

More details for this feature can be found at https://github.com/ioBroker/ioBroker.docs/blob/master/docs/en/dev/logging.md

Controlling and monitoring of adapter processes

The full definition for adapter settings can be found at https://github.com/ioBroker/ioBroker/blob/master/doc/SCHEMA.md#adapter

Multiple adapter instances

Feature status: stable

ioBroker allows installing multiple adapters on the system. For each adapter, the JavaScript code is installed once. For each adapter, multiple instances can be created and started with independent configurations.

Adapter types

Feature status: stable

ioBroker supports multiple Adapter modes. These are:

  • deamon: The adapter is started and runs all the time. If the process gets killed, it will be restarted automatically. This adapter type is mainly used for all situations where communications or actions are done continuously. These adapters also support a restart schedule where the controller restarts the instances. The adapter needs RAM and some CPU resources also when doing nothing.
  • schedule: The adapter is started based on a defined schedule (e.g., once per hour, once a day, all 10 minutes ...), then is doing its work and is stopping itself when finished. The adapter is only using RAM and CPU when needed.
  • once: The adapter ist started only once after it's object got modified. No restarting happens after the adapter stops.
  • none: The adapter is officially not having any process, but could be a webExtension (so iis included by a web instance on the same host or is only running client side and so offering www files)

NOTE: Up from controller v6 for adapters of type schedule and if connectionType is set to cloud

If the schedule consists of a CRON tab without specifically specifying seconds, the execution will be delayed randomly up to 60 seconds. This is to prevent unwanted DDoS attacks. If your adapter needs to exactly run at a specified second, please specify the second in your CRON tab so no delay will be introduced by the controller.

Start adapter instances as normal processes

Feature status: stable

By default, adapters are started by the js-controller as separate Node.js processes. They connect to the state and object DBs to read and write their data and some statistical information.

The js-controller is monitoring the process ids of the started processes and also controls stopping or restarting these processes.

With this approach, the whole iobroker system is very robust. A faulty adapter will only affect his own process, and the js-controller and the other adapter processes are unaffected.

The downside is that more RAM is required because each Node.js process needs 20-30 MB RAM for the Node.js part of it. With this, a 1 GB system is usually limited to run approximately 10 to 15 adapter processes. Aside from using systems with more RAM, distributing adapters onto multiple hosts in a multihost environment is possible.

Start adapter instances in compact mode

The compact mode is developed especially for systems with low memory. All adapters configured to run in compact mode will run inside the same process as js-controller.

As a result, each adapter needs 20-30 MB less RAM because it does not need to have its own Node.js process handling. This way, even a system with only 512 MB RAM can run several adapter instances.

The downside is that as soon as one adapter is crashes or generates an unhandled error, the whole js-controller process will be restarted.

To minimize the risk, adapter instances are run by default in compact group 1 which means that a second process is created for all adapters. A problem there would also not crash the js-controller itself. If you need less RAM usage you can manually change that and configure the instances to run on group 0 (=inside js-controller).

Compact mode

Feature status: Technology preview (since 2.0.0)

To enable compact mode for a js-controller instance, you can use the new "compact" CLI commands, or you can manually change the iobroker.json configuration file

{
  ...
  "system": {
    ...
    "compact":true
  }
  ...
}

and restart the js-controller.

Compact groups

Feature status: Technology preview (since 2.0.0)

To be able to handle the risk of crashed controller processes affecting the whole system, it is possible to assign the adapter instances to different compact groups. Each group will be run in their own process, only group 0 is handled directly by the main js-controller process.

Using several compact groups, you can, by using a bit more memory, lower the risk of a crashing js-controller main process.

Compact groups can be configured for the respective instances using the compact CLI commands (see ìobroker compact commands on https://www.iobroker.net/#de/documentation/config/cli.md).

Implementation details

https://forum.iobroker.net/topic/18338/experimentell-js-controller-compact-mode

Testing details for development

For testing, set up your js-controller to use compact mode and change the io-package.json and javascript files accordingly. Do not forget to iobroker upload adaptername after changing io-package.json.

Please check that your adapter starts and runs as expected also when compact mode is used.

For adapters running in compact mode, special care must be taken to clean up used resources without throwing errors. You need to make sure that all initialized connections, timers and intervals are closed and stopped in the unload handler.

Check available RAM before adapters are started

Feature status: stable, since js-controller 3.0

The js-controller checks the available RAM of the system before starting a new adapter process. If the available RAM is below 50/100 MB by default, an error/warn is logged. The limits can be configured in iobroker.json

    "system": {
        "memLimitWarn": 100,
        "memLimitWarnComment": "If the available RAM is below this threshold on adapter start, a warning will be logged.",
        "memLimitError": 50,
        "memLimitErrorComment": "If the available RAM is below this threshold on adapter start, an error will be logged."
    }
    ...

Later versions of js-controller might prevent the start of a new adapter process if system resources are too low!

Manually run adapter instances for debugging

Feature status: stable

For debugging reasons, sometimes it is necessary to start an adapter instance via the command line to get more detailed logging.

To do so, manually execute the adapter's main javascript file, which is usually named main.js or <adaptername>.js (where "adaptername" is the name of the adapter):

node node_modules/iobroker.adaptername/main.js --force --logs

All log output will now be printed to the console.

Multihost

Feature status: stable

When local interfaces are required or the host system is reaching its resource limits, the ioBroker system can be distributed to additional hosts. All hosts in a multihost environment are connected to the same states and objects databases and are thus synchronized with each other.

When the states and/or objects databases are provided by a js-controller process on one host, this "master" host needs to be configured so the databases are available on the local network. To do so, enter 0.0.0.0 as the address in iobroker setup custom instead of 127.0.0.1.

All other hosts are configured to connect to this master host.

For detailed setup instructions see https://www.iobroker.net/docu/index-24.htm?page_id=3068&lang=de

TIERS: Start instances in an ordered manner

Feature status: Technology preview (since 3.3.0)

Starting from js-controller 3.3.0, you can define the common.tier attribute in the io-package.json. Lower TIERS will start before higher TIERS. Currently, 3 TIER levels are supported. Note, that the admin adapter as the central control platform will always be started first.

TIER 1

Logic and scripting engines, which should be able to act as fast as possible to work with states delivered by higher TIER adapters.

TIER 2

Adapters which deliver data from external APIs, which are important and can change at any time. This also often includes messaging adapters.

TIER 3

Adapters which are not time-critical like Visualization, Backup adapters, and adapters whose information does not necessarily need to be up-to-date. These are often schedule adapters, whose information is always a bit delayed.

Custom Node.js process arguments

Feature status: New in 5.0.0

Passing custom arguments to the Node.js adapter process

To use this feature, use the nodeProcessParams in the common section of io-package.json. Using this feature will disable the possibility to start the adapter in compact mode, as then other adapters would also be affected by the passed parameters. The property nodeProcessParams needs to be an array of strings.

Example: "nodeProcessParams": ["--tls-min-v1.0"]

IPv6 DNS resolution support

Feature status: New in 5.0.0

You can decide to use IPv6 first as DNS resolution method instead of IPv4 first (default). To use this, configure dnsResolution to verbatim in iobroker.json.

For handling IPv6 and IPv4 in adapters, we provide some convenience methods. These are available via ioBroker Adapter Core starting with version 2.7.0.

Ensure that DNS resolution is performed according to ioBroker config if you need to ensure this for non-standard adapter processes (e.g., own started subprocesses).

Object and State Aliases

Feature status: stable (since 2.0.0)

Feature Flag for detection: ALIAS, ALIAS_SEPARATE_READ_WRITE_ID

The Alias Feature allows defining one object/state to be the "alias" of another object/state.

All Aliases will be created in the Object namespace alias.0

Effectively an alias object will mirror the state value of the target object. If allowed, both states can be changed and are synced automatically by the ioBroker core system. Also, both states can be used to subscribe in scripts and should behave exactly identical.

Additionally, to defining the target ID, the alias object can also define "read and write functions" to do easy value conversions, so e.g. the target state could contain a power measurement value in Wh (because an adapter delivers the value that way) and the alias could use the same value calculated as kWh.

Some devices have separate states for semantically one state. One to read the current status from and one to write to, to control the device. You can combine these states into one alias by using a separate alias id to write to and another to read from.

We recommend to use the devices adapter to manage aliases. Alternatively, you can use Admin interface on the "Objects" tab to create aliases. Just open the context menu on the state, for which you want to create an alias, and select "Create Alias".

To create an alias object simple create a new object with an own name in the alias.0 namespace and add the alias definition in the common section (here for an alias with the id "alias.0.aliasName"):

{
    _id: "alias.0.aliasName",
    common: {
        name: 'Test AliasC',
        type: 'number',
        role: 'state',
        min: -10,
        max: 10,
        alias: {
            id: 'state.id.of.target',
            read: 'val * 10 + 1',
            write: '(val - 1) / 10'
        }
    },
    native: {},
    type: 'state'
}

or using different read and write ids (supported starting js-controller 3.0, check using feature flag ALIAS_SEPARATE_READ_WRITE_ID):

{
    _id: "alias.0.aliasName",
    common: {
        name: 'Test AliasC',
        type: 'number',
        role: 'state',
        min: -10,
        max: 10,
        alias: {
            id: {
                read: 'state.id.to.read.from',
                write: 'state.id.to.write.to'
            }
            read: 'val * 10 + 1',
            write: '(val - 1) / 10'
        }
    },
    native: {},
    type: 'state'
}

The following fields are allowed in the alias structure:

  • alias.id contains the ID of the target object/state to mirror OR (since js-controller 3.0) represents an object with the following two properties:
    • alias.id.write contains the ID of the object which will be set when alias is written
    • alias.id.read contains the ID of the object which will be mirrored to the alias object/state
  • alias.read can optionally contain a "read" script (will be evaluated) to calculate the alias value when the target state changes
  • alias.write can optionally contain a "write" script (will be evaluated) to calculate the target value if the alias value is changed

Note, that alias states will be automatically scaled if the following conditions match:

  • target and source state are of type number
  • either the alias state or (not both) the source state are of unit %
  • no read or write function is defined
  • the state which is not of unit % has a valid min and max property

To set the alias properties without a JavaScript or in adapter code you can also use the cli commands like:

iobroker object set alias.0.aliasName common.alias.id=state.id.of.target
iobroker object set alias.0.aliasName common.alias.read="read-func"
iobroker object set alias.0.aliasName common.alias.write="write-func"

NOTE: The permissions of the source object are ignored and only the permissions set on the alias object itself are relevant for database operations.

Additional information about aliases could be found here.

State and objects databases and files

ioBroker is storing three different types of data:

  • objects contain the metadata, descriptions and configuration values for all objects and states stored by ioBroker. Objects are created initially and sometimes updated, but usually not changed very frequently
  • files are all JSON, image and other files that are accessible for all ioBroker adapters. A meta.user object needs to exist for the adapter or instance to define allowed root directories. As example see sayIt adapter io-package.
  • states contain the real data from sensors, devices and objects which are updated frequently

ioBroker in-memory database with JSON file storage

By default, the js-controller process is offering in-memory DBs at ports 9000 (for states) and 9001 (for objects/file). All adapter processes and js-controller processes from other hosts connect to these databases to read and store data.

The in-memory DBs for states and objects use JSON files to store the data. The files are stored after changes every 30 seconds and are backed up automatically. The files are stored in iobroker-data directory, the backups in a subfolder.

The in-memory DBs work well for up to 10000 objects and normal state update frequencies. When your system has more objects and states or its states are updated very often, it is a better idea to use Redis as the database engine. A good indicator for this if the js-controller process is using a lot of CPU and/or the system feels slow.

js-controller 1.x was using socket.io as the communication protocol between the adapters and the in-memory DBs. Starting with js-controller 2.0, the communication protocol was changed to be a lightweight Redis protocol. This simplifies the logic and should increase performance.

For the objects and states databases, special additional logging of the redis protocol messages can be activated in iobroker.json

"objects": {
  ...
  "enhancedLogging": false
}

When not configured differently, the file databases are persisted every 15s (15000ms) after data are changed. The interval in ms can be changed by configuration in iobroker.json starting js-controller 3.0.

NOTE: If you do that be aware that you may lose data when the js-controller crashes unexpectedly!

"objects": {
  ...
  "writeFileInterval": 60000
}

Redis as database

Redis is a well-known industrial grade in-memory database optimized for speed and stability. It performs better than the ioBroker In-Memory database which is written in JavaScript.

Install Redis

e.g. for Linux: https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-and-secure-redis-on-ubuntu-18-04

Configure Redis
make sure Locale is set correctly

ioBroker requires the "Locale" for the redis-server process to be set to "LANG=C" instead of other locales in order to get correct sorted results when Objects are stored in Redis.

On Linux, ideally set the LC_ALL environment variable for the redis-server process correctly. For more information to see if changes are needed and how to do them see https://forum.iobroker.net/topic/52976/wichtiger-hinweis-f%C3%BCr-redis-installationen (German right now).

Allow Network access

Ideally, the Redis server should be installed on the same host as the js-controller process because as soon as Redis is configured to be used, the ioBroker installation will not work without it.

If you plan to install Redis on a different host than the js-controller or use a multi-host environment (see below), you must allow connections to redis from any address (the default only accepts connections from 127.0.0.1). To do that edit the file /etc/redis/redis.conf (sudo nano /etc/redis/redis.conf) and replace bind 127.0.0.1 with bind 0.0.0.0 . Don't forget to restart redis after that. (sudo systemctl restart redis-server)

Redis Slaves

If you have multiple hosts, you can install Redis to all of them and configure the other hosts to be slaves of the Master host. With this, all data is available on all hosts, so even if one host crashes completely, you still have the database content from the other hosts.

More details can be found at https://redis.io/topics/replication#configuration and https://redis.io/commands/replicaof

Redis slaves will be not writable by default.

In case of a crash of the master, you can reconfigure one of the slaves to be the new master and it will use the current content. After reconfiguring all slaves to sync with the new Master, the redis database is functional again.

After reconfiguring Redis, you also need to update all ioBroker states/objects DB settings to connect to the new Redis Master host.

Redis persistence

By default, Redis is a pure in-memory Database which means that it has no content when it starts. In the default configuration, the content of the redis DB is stored on disk after a certain number of changed keys.

Depending on how many changes your system is doing, it will update the data on disk roughly every 5 minutes by default. Please consider this if your system runs from an SD card (like Raspberry Pi).

If you are not working on an SD card and want to have real up-to-date data on disk, you can use the second persistence method called AOF. Else the latest dumped data is used, which could be some minutes old.

Please see https://redis.io/topics/persistence for details, differences, and configuration information for both persistence options.

Using Redis as States-DB

Feature status: stable

There is a possibility to use Redis as a state database. It is reasonable to do that for big installations or for systems with performance problems. It is possible to switch anytime between Redis and in-memory Javascript DB.

Note for js-controller <2.0: After changing to Redis, all states must be updated by the adapters again (the previous values will be lost). Please especially note this for the state values from own JavaScript states! Objects and configuration are not affected.

To switch to Redis, execute the following on the console:

iobroker stop
iobroker setup custom

And then enter redis as the states DB type (line 4):

Type of objects DB [file, redis], default [file]:
Host of objects DB(file), default[127.0.0.1]:
Port of objects DB(file), default[9001]:
Type of states DB [file, redis], default [file]: redis
Host of states DB (redis), default[127.0.0.1]:
Port of states DB (redis), default[6379]:
Data directory (file), default[../../../iobroker-data/]:
Host name of this machine [FastPC]:
creating conf/iobroker.json

Now ioBroker can be started. If it does not start, please check the log at log/iobroker.*.log in the ioBroker directory. Please also check the redis is running (use e.g. redis-cli) and that the firewall set up correctly.

To switch back to file-based states, write the same commands again, just instead of redis in the fourth line, write nothing and press ENTER.

Using Redis as objects/File-DB

Feature status: New in 2.0.0

Starting with js-controller 2.0.0, objects and files can also be stored in Redis. Since Redis holds all data in the RAM, this setup uses much more RAM because uploaded files and image assets are also stored in Redis. Please think carefully about this step and make sure your system has enough RAM available!

The setup is comparable to the setup for states in Redis by using iobroker setup custom, but enter redis as type of the objects' database. You can use the same redis server for states and objects/files database.

Using Redis Sentinel as objects/File-DB

Feature status: New in 2.0.0

Redis Sentinel is an industry standard to achieve a highly available redis database. It is based on a Redis master-slave setup with at least three nodes. Additional so-called sentinel processes monitor all redis instances in the master-slave setup.

If the master is going offline, the sentinel processes react and coordinate to select a new master. After this is done, the master-slave cluster is reconfigured and the new master is taking over.

More details about the Redis sentinel can be found in the official documentation at https://redis.io/topics/sentinel .

ioBroker allows using a Redis Sentinel system. For this you use iobroker custom like above, but provide a comma-separated list of the sentinel hosts. For the sentinel ports you can either enter a comma-separated list with the same number of entries, or a single one which is then used for all hosts.

With such a setup, ioBroker will connect to one of these sentinel processes to get the current Master Redis and then connect to it. When the connection to the Master is disconnected, all data updates are cached and transmitted as soon as a connection to the new master has been established.

Using Password for Redis Databases

Feature status: Stable

Certificate Handling

... CLI ... Files vs PEM content ... TODO

js-controller Host Messages

... TODO

shell

... TODO

cmdExec

... TODO

getRepository

... TODO

getInstalled

... TODO

getInstalledAdapter

... TODO

getVersion

... TODO

getDiagData

... TODO

... TODO

getLocationOnDisk

... TODO

getDevList

... TODO

getLogs

... TODO

getHostInfo

... TODO

getHostInfoShort

... TODO

delLogs

... TODO

readDirAsZip

... TODO

writeDirAsZip

... TODO

readObjectsAsZip

... TODO

writeObjectsAsZip

... TODO

updateMultihost

... TODO

getInterfaces

... TODO

upload

... TODO

rebuildAdapter

... TODO

readBaseSettings

... TODO

writeBaseSettings

... TODO

Adapter Development

Feature status: Stable

TODO: Link to Adapter Development docs

Automatically Encrypt/Decrypt configuration fields

Feature status: Stable, since js-controller 3.0

Since js-controller 3.0, the adapter developer can define an array or field names in io-package.json as encryptedNative to define which fields should be automatically encrypted before being stored by Admin and decrypted when the adapter process starts. The values are not decrypted when the object itself is read!

With this change and the Admin support for this soon, the adapter developer does not need to struggle around with encryption or decryption of adapter values and can simply configure this.

To preserve backward compatibility, you can check for the feature flag ADAPTER_AUTO_DECRYPT_NATIVE or add a global Admin dependency to the respective Admin (>=4.0.10) version.

Protect free reading of adapter configuration fields

Feature status: Stable, since js-controller 2.0

Normally, all objects can be read by any adapter using getObject or getForeignObject. To make sure sensible adapter configuration values are protected from that free reading they can be secured.

If an array with field names from native is defined in io-package.json as common.protectedNative the ioBroker system will sort these fields out when the object is read. Only the adapter itself is allowed to read the full object.

It is best practice adding the field names of encrypted fields to the protectedNative array too to make sure the fields stay protected (even if encrypted). Only let other adapters read your encrypted values if there is a need to (e.g. adapter interoperability)

Define Adapter dependencies to other adapters

Feature status: Stable

Dependencies are defined in an array and can contain an adapter name of an object.

When using the object style, you can define a semver version range for this adapter:

"dependencies": [
      {
        "js-controller": ">=2.0.0"
      }
    ],

If the version do not matter and just the adapter itself needs to be present you can also use:

"dependencies": [
      "web"
    ],

There are two types of adapter dependencies that can be defined in io-package.json and will be checked on installation and adapter start.

common.dependencies for Same Host dependencies With common.dependencies in io-package.json you can define if an adapter needs to be present on the same host and optionally in which version. This is mainly used to define the needed "js-controller" version for yor adapter and can also be relevant e.g. for web extension adapters (adapters that can be plugged in into the web adapter, so the code needs to be on the same host).

common.globalDependencies for dependencies on any Host With common.globalDependencies in io-package.json and starting with js-controller 3.0, you can define a global dependency that will be checked over all hosts. Irrelevant where on the system the referenced adapter is installed it needs to match the version and at least one instance needs to exist. This can mainly be used for more loose dependencies where adapters are split over multiple hosts but still work together, e.g. Admin.

Subscribe to Logs from other adapters

Feature status: Stable

The js-controller allows adapters to subscribe to log messages from other adapters and react on them. For details see https://github.com/ioBroker/ioBroker.js-controller/blob/master/doc/LOGGING.md

Adapter Feature Detection

Feature status: Stable since js-controller 2.0.0

Since js-controller 2.0, there exists a dedicated method to detect if certain features exist for an adapter.

The preferred way to use it (also because of backward compatibility reasons) is:

if (adapter.supportsFeature && adapter.supportsFeature('NAME')) {
    // ...
}

The following features can be checked using this method:

  • ALIAS: checks if the Alias feature is existing (since js-controller 2.0)
  • ALIAS_SEPARATE_READ_WRITE_ID: allows specifying separate IDs for reading and writing (since js-controller 3.0)
  • ADAPTER_GETPORT_BIND: the adapter.getPort method allows an optional second parameter to bind the port only on a special network interface (since js-controller 2.0)
  • ADAPTER_SET_OBJECT_SETS_DEFAULT_VALUE: adapter.setObject(*) methods now sets the default value (def) after the object was created (since js-controller 2.0)
  • ADAPTER_DEL_OBJECT_RECURSIVE: adapter.delObjects supports options.recursive flag to delete whole object structures (since js-controller 2.2)
  • ADAPTER_AUTO_DECRYPT_NATIVE: The Controller supports auto decryption of encrypted native properties (since js-controller 3.0)
  • PLUGINS: Plugins are supported by this js-controller and adapters, see the section below for more details (since js-controller 3.0)
  • CONTROLLER_NPM_AUTO_REBUILD: Automatic rebuild when node version mismatch is detected (since js-controller 3.0)
  • CONTROLLER_READWRITE_BASE_SETTINGS: Allow reading and writing of js-controller base settings file (iobroker.json) via host messages (since js-controller 3.0)
  • CONTROLLER_MULTI_REPO: indicates that the controller supports multiple repository sources, which will be combined in one (since js-controller 4.0)
  • CONTROLLER_LICENSE_MANAGER: js-controller can read licenses from iobroker.net (since js-controller 4.0)
  • DEL_INSTANCE_CUSTOM: indicates that controller is able to delete all custom attributes of an adapter and instance if it is deleted via --custom flag (since js-controller 4.0)

To check if certain adapter methods itself are existing, please simply check for their existence like

if (adapter.getObjectView) {
    // ...
}

or

if (typeof adapter.getObjectView === 'function') {
    // ...
}

Plugin-System for Adapters and js-controller

Feature status: Stable since js-controller 3.0.0

Starting with js-controller 3.0, a flexible plugin system is available to the js-controller and also to adapters. Plugins are custom modules that can be configured in io-package.json in a new "plugins" section and provide central functionality on the level of the adapter or js-controller process. The modules are automatically loaded and configured. Depending on the plugin they can be enabled or disabled by setting system.host or system.adapter states.

More details about plugins and their development can be found at the Plugin-Base repository. A simple implementation can be found at the Sentry-Plugin

New Plugins should always be developed, reviewed and published by ioBroker Core developers! Contact @Apollon77 or @GermanBluefox for this.

Since js-controller 3.0, the sentry plugin is integrated and activated by default in js-controller. See the information above.

Maintenance mode

There is a special maintenance mode. It is used by some special adapters, that will clean the objects and states from invalid entries. Invalid entries could be:

  • has invalid ID (e.g., null, empty or with prohibited chars, very long IDs over 2000 chars),
  • has an empty object or with no object type.
  • states that have no according entry in object DB

To make it possible to get such an entries, the maintenance mode was implemented. To make a call in maintenance mode, you must provide options object with the at least following attributes:

{
    user: 'system.user.admin',
    maintenance: true,
}

Following adapter methods support maintenance mode:

- adapter.getForeignState
- adapter.getForeignObject
- adapter.setObjectWithDefaultValue
- adapter.setForeignObject
- adapter.setObjectNotExists
- adapter.delForeignObject

- adapter.getForeignState
- adapter.delForeignState

*** Do not use this mode for any other purposes except sanitizing/cleaning/repairing of existing DBs (Object and States)***

Environment Variables

Feature status: stable

There are several environment variables which are respected by the js-controller.

IOB_NO_SETCAP (up from js-controller 7.0.X)

By default, the js-controller sets some capabilities on the Node.js executable. Currently, cap_net_admin, cap_net_bind_service, cap_net_raw are set to e.g. allow Node.js to start/stop BLE advertising without root privileges. On installation these are set by the ioBroker installer. However, on upgrades of Node.js these get lost. If js-controller detects a Node.js upgrade, it will ensure that these capabilities are set again.

In some scenarios, e.g. during development it may be useful to deactivate this feature. You can do so by settings the IOB_NO_SETCAP environment variable to true.

Vendor Packages Workflow

Feature status: New in 7.0.0

This feature is only of interest for vendors which aim to provide a package which is published to a private package registry (e.g. GitHub Packages). This may be desirable if the adapter is only relevant for a specific customer and/or contains business logic which needs to be kept secret.

In the following, information is provided how private packages can be installed into the ioBroker ecosystem. The information is tested with GitHub packages. However, it should work in a similar fashion with other registries, like GitLab Packages.

Package Registry

You can use e.g. the GitHub package registry. Simply scope your adapter to your organization or personal scope by changing the package name in the package.json and configuring the publishConfig:

{
  "name": "@org/vendorAdapter",
  "publishConfig": {
    "registry": "https://npm.pkg.github.com"
  }
}

Note, that you need to configure npm to authenticate via your registry. Find more information in the documentation.

Example .npmrc file (can be in your project or in the users home directory):

//npm.pkg.github.com/:_authToken=<YOUR_TOKEN>
@org:registry=https://npm.pkg.github.com

Where YOUR_TOKEN is an access token which has the permissions to write packages.

If you then execute npm publish, the package will be published to your custom registry instead of the npm registry.

Vendor Repository

In your vendor-specific repository, each adapter can have a separate field called packetName. This represents the real name of the npm packet. E.g.

{
  "vendorAdapter": {
    "version": "1.0.0",
    "name": "vendorAdapter",
    "packetName": "@org/vendorAdapter"
  }
}

The js-controller will alias the package name to the adapter name on installation. This has one drawback, which is normally not relevant for vendor setups. You can not install the adapter via the npm url command, meaning no installation from GitHub or local tarballs.

Token setup

On the customers ioBroker host, create a .npmrc file inside of /home/iobroker/. It should look like:

//npm.pkg.github.com/:_authToken=<YOUR_TOKEN>
@org:registry=https://npm.pkg.github.com

Where YOUR_TOKEN is an access token which has the permissions to read packages. A best practice working with multiple customers is, to create an organization for each customer instead of using your personal scope. Hence, you can scope them to not have access to packages of other customers or your own.

Find more information in the documentation.

Release cycle and Development process overview

The goal is to release an update for the js-controller roughly all 6 months (April/September). The main reasons for this are shorter iterations and fewer changes that can be problematic for the users (and getting fast feedback) and also trying to stay up-to-date with the dependencies.

For the dependencies, we will use depend-a-bot. In general, the goal is still to support a certain range of Node.js LTS versions. Currently, js-controller 3.0 will start with nodes 10.x up to 12/14.x. If dependency updates break that and would require a major-release, this will be discussed and decided on core developer level BEFORE merging such a dependency change!

For the planned changes, we use a backlog approach. This means that out of the existing issues for the project, the core developers select issues to put into a prioritized backlog in the project view. Other users also can propose tickets. All merged PRs (also when unplanned/not prioritized before) are included as finished tickets in the project (so a project is assigned to them manually on merge). When a ticket is contained in the backlog, this does not mean that it will be done in the next version! But it helps if developers have some time to see what’s considered important. The current project will always get the name „Next Release“. All older projects will get the respective release version number to know the history.

Roughly at the end of each first/third quarter (so 31.3. and 30.9.) we will finalize the next release version, update change logs. A version branch for this version is created that will allow hotfixes. 1-2 weeks before that cut-off date, no new feature PRs should be added. Changes are flagged as [Bugfix], [Feature] or [Breaking Change] in changelog (ideally also in PRs) and the version increase is depending on the type of the changes.

After this, we will have a testing phase for this version. Once tests ended successfully, it will be published to „latest“ repository to get feedback from the community. After this it goes too stable. Depending on the problems, bugs and feedback the goal is to release the stable version roughly 1 - 1.5 months after cut-off date from the version.

All changes should be added via PRs that are reviewed and merged by the core developers. PRs are flagged as [Bugfix], [Feature] or [Breaking Change].

It is also allowed to introduce unfinished new features, as soon as they do not break the system. We will also start to introduce „testing quality features“ that only may be configured manually in JSON files or via CLI. They are then flagged as „Technology Preview“. This means we will not delay a new js-controller version because a new feature is not possible to configure via admin. The feature list and details in js-controller README needs to be updated as soon as the feature is ready in general (including "Technology preview"). Unfinished features are not included in the README even if existing partly in the code.

This new process and rules are introduced with js-controller 2.0 and updated to a 6-months cycle with js-controller 3.0.

License

The MIT License (MIT)

Copyright (c) 2014-2024 bluefox [email protected],

Copyright (c) 2014 hobbyquaker