A new version of the package node-red-contrib-vscp-tcp (1.2.7) was published at 2021-09-07T12:05:59.098Z. The shasum of this package was c40952b55b6e36047b1517d3bd65e963401d72f7.
- Fixed known security vulnerabilities
A new version of the package node-red-contrib-vscp-tcp (1.2.7) was published at 2021-09-07T12:05:59.098Z. The shasum of this package was c40952b55b6e36047b1517d3bd65e963401d72f7.
A new version of the package node-vscp-tcp (1.1.3) was published at 2021-09-07T12:04:05.551Z. The shasum of this package was 4fef9146095aca93d1c0c28d0176b63da9b51d78.
A new version of the package node-red-contrib-vscp (1.2.7) was published at 2021-09-07T12:00:57.044Z from 87.249.187.214. The shasum of this package was cb79a7488eb0ffcba06a04063a836b8400229a56.
A new version of the package node-vscp (1.1.20) was published at 2021-09-07T11:58:09.680Z. The shasum of this package was 964e9773d181f6bfb8d01b240fd61042a14551d2.
A new version of the package node-red-contrib-canal (1.0.9) was published at 2021-09-07T11:55:17.904Z. The shasum of this package was 71279c6895d6445594593e27c2d93a5c76746798.
New version of the package node-canal (1.0.13) was published at 2021-09-07T11:51:21.298Z4. The shasum of this package was 401c17eea3bc0c03ab8f8edeb2318f94ef3ff139.
Added a live power demo to the existing demo pages. This demo show the actual power usage in our house/office. Data is collected from a smart power meter with an open interface that is installed by our utility company Ellevio.
You can read more about the interfacing of this meter here. On this page you can also find a link to a Python script that does the job if you prefer using it instead of the VSCP driver approach.
Measurements are collected by a VSCP daemon driver vscpl2drv-energy-p1 and sent by the VSCP daemon to the MQTT broker on the vscp demo server. The VSCP daemon collecting data is installed on a Raspberry Pi 3B+ running Raspbian.
More demo data is on the way.
Still alive!
The VSCP MQTT demo code is now also live on our demo server. This is probably the most ugly and boring demo around – it will improve over time – but the technique behind it is interesting. At the moment it basically just show the temperature in our fridge in some different ways. Not very interesting but it’s live and real time data.
It is also worth noting that everything is secured with TLS. From the source up to the actual widget.
The source generating data is a small device (Kelvin NTC10K) that does not have Internet capabilities but instead communicate over a CAN bus which is connected to a VSCP daemon which in turn publish received events to a local MQTT broker on JSON format. This data is then forwarded to the demo server.
With VSCP it is possible to write widgets like this once and then use them for different scenarios multiple times. Just by using the tools we all have been using for many years now. Things that web designer people do well.
Try yourself to plot the data using charts.js for example.
A new version of the package node-red-contrib-socketcan (1.2.2) was published at 2021-08-26T10:30:37.106Z