diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index 7012253..f2cb373 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -33,3 +33,4 @@ smtp.yaml !.gitignore !.gitkeep !/.HA_VERSION +!docker/mosquitto.conf diff --git a/configuration.yaml b/configuration.yaml index eeb70f8..55f7115 100644 --- a/configuration.yaml +++ b/configuration.yaml @@ -38,18 +38,17 @@ updater: # MQTT Integration -# https://home-assistant.io/components/mqtt/ -#mqtt: -# broker: !secret mqtt_broker -# port: !secret mqtt_port -# username: !secret mqtt_username -# password: !secret mqtt_password -# birth_message: -# topic: 'hass/status' -# payload: 'online' -# will_message: -# topic: 'hass/status' -# payload: 'offline' +mqtt: + broker: !secret mqtt_host + port: !secret mqtt_port + username: !secret mqtt_username + password: !secret mqtt_password + birth_message: + topic: 'hass/status' + payload: 'online' + will_message: + topic: 'hass/status' + payload: 'offline' # ZWave integration diff --git a/docker/mosquitto.conf b/docker/mosquitto.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..46bc8dd --- /dev/null +++ b/docker/mosquitto.conf @@ -0,0 +1,666 @@ +# Config file for mosquitto +# +# See mosquitto.conf(5) for more information. +# +# Default values are shown, uncomment to change. +# +# Use the # character to indicate a comment, but only if it is the +# very first character on the line. + +# ================================================================= +# General configuration +# ================================================================= + +# Time in seconds to wait before resending an outgoing QoS=1 or +# QoS=2 message. +#retry_interval 20 + +# Time in seconds between updates of the $SYS tree. +# Set to 0 to disable the publishing of the $SYS tree. +#sys_interval 10 + +# Time in seconds between cleaning the internal message store of +# unreferenced messages. Lower values will result in lower memory +# usage but more processor time, higher values will have the +# opposite effect. +# Setting a value of 0 means the unreferenced messages will be +# disposed of as quickly as possible. +#store_clean_interval 10 + +# Write process id to a file. Default is a blank string which means +# a pid file shouldn't be written. +# This should be set to /var/run/mosquitto.pid if mosquitto is +# being run automatically on boot with an init script and +# start-stop-daemon or similar. +#pid_file + +# When run as root, drop privileges to this user and its primary +# group. +# Leave blank to stay as root, but this is not recommended. +# If run as a non-root user, this setting has no effect. +# Note that on Windows this has no effect and so mosquitto should +# be started by the user you wish it to run as. +#user mosquitto + +# The maximum number of QoS 1 and 2 messages currently inflight per +# client. +# This includes messages that are partway through handshakes and +# those that are being retried. Defaults to 20. Set to 0 for no +# maximum. Setting to 1 will guarantee in-order delivery of QoS 1 +# and 2 messages. +#max_inflight_messages 20 + +# The maximum number of QoS 1 and 2 messages to hold in a queue +# above those that are currently in-flight. Defaults to 100. Set +# to 0 for no maximum (not recommended). +# See also queue_qos0_messages. +#max_queued_messages 100 + +# Set to true to queue messages with QoS 0 when a persistent client is +# disconnected. These messages are included in the limit imposed by +# max_queued_messages. +# Defaults to false. +# This is a non-standard option for the MQTT v3.1 spec but is allowed in +# v3.1.1. +#queue_qos0_messages false + +# This option sets the maximum publish payload size that the broker will allow. +# Received messages that exceed this size will not be accepted by the broker. +# The default value is 0, which means that all valid MQTT messages are +# accepted. MQTT imposes a maximum payload size of 268435455 bytes. +#message_size_limit 0 + +# This option controls whether a client is allowed to connect with a zero +# length client id or not. This option only affects clients using MQTT v3.1.1 +# and later. If set to false, clients connecting with a zero length client id +# are disconnected. If set to true, clients will be allocated a client id by +# the broker. This means it is only useful for clients with clean session set +# to true. +#allow_zero_length_clientid true + +# If allow_zero_length_clientid is true, this option allows you to set a prefix +# to automatically generated client ids to aid visibility in logs. +#auto_id_prefix + +# This option allows persistent clients (those with clean session set to false) +# to be removed if they do not reconnect within a certain time frame. +# +# This is a non-standard option in MQTT V3.1 but allowed in MQTT v3.1.1. +# +# Badly designed clients may set clean session to false whilst using a randomly +# generated client id. This leads to persistent clients that will never +# reconnect. This option allows these clients to be removed. +# +# The expiration period should be an integer followed by one of d w m y for +# day, week, month and year respectively. For example +# +# persistent_client_expiration 2m +# persistent_client_expiration 14d +# persistent_client_expiration 1y +# +# The default if not set is to never expire persistent clients. +#persistent_client_expiration + +# If a client is subscribed to multiple subscriptions that overlap, e.g. foo/# +# and foo/+/baz , then MQTT expects that when the broker receives a message on +# a topic that matches both subscriptions, such as foo/bar/baz, then the client +# should only receive the message once. +# Mosquitto keeps track of which clients a message has been sent to in order to +# meet this requirement. The allow_duplicate_messages option allows this +# behaviour to be disabled, which may be useful if you have a large number of +# clients subscribed to the same set of topics and are very concerned about +# minimising memory usage. +# It can be safely set to true if you know in advance that your clients will +# never have overlapping subscriptions, otherwise your clients must be able to +# correctly deal with duplicate messages even when then have QoS=2. +#allow_duplicate_messages false + +# The MQTT specification requires that the QoS of a message delivered to a +# subscriber is never upgraded to match the QoS of the subscription. Enabling +# this option changes this behaviour. If upgrade_outgoing_qos is set true, +# messages sent to a subscriber will always match the QoS of its subscription. +# This is a non-standard option explicitly disallowed by the spec. +#upgrade_outgoing_qos false + +# ================================================================= +# Default listener +# ================================================================= + +# IP address/hostname to bind the default listener to. If not +# given, the default listener will not be bound to a specific +# address and so will be accessible to all network interfaces. +# bind_address ip-address/host name +#bind_address + +# Port to use for the default listener. +port 8883 + +# The maximum number of client connections to allow. This is +# a per listener setting. +# Default is -1, which means unlimited connections. +# Note that other process limits mean that unlimited connections +# are not really possible. Typically the default maximum number of +# connections possible is around 1024. +#max_connections -1 + +# ----------------------------------------------------------------- +# Certificate based SSL/TLS support +# ----------------------------------------------------------------- +# The following options can be used to enable SSL/TLS support for +# this listener. Note that the recommended port for MQTT over TLS +# is 8883, but this must be set manually. +# +# See also the mosquitto-tls man page. + +# At least one of cafile or capath must be defined. They both +# define methods of accessing the PEM encoded Certificate +# Authority certificates that have signed your server certificate +# and that you wish to trust. +# cafile defines the path to a file containing the CA certificates. +# capath defines a directory that will be searched for files +# containing the CA certificates. For capath to work correctly, the +# certificate files must have ".crt" as the file ending and you must run +# "c_rehash " each time you add/remove a certificate. +cafile /mosquitto/config/ssl/ca.crt +#capath + +# Path to the PEM encoded server certificate. +certfile /mosquitto/config/ssl/server.crt + +# Path to the PEM encoded keyfile. +keyfile /mosquitto/config/ssl/server.key + +# This option defines the version of the TLS protocol to use for this listener. +# The default value will always be the highest version that is available for +# the version of openssl that the broker was compiled against. For openssl >= +# 1.0.1 the valid values are tlsv1.2 tlsv1.1 and tlsv1. For openssl < 1.0.1 the +# valid values are tlsv1. +#tls_version + +# By default a TLS enabled listener will operate in a similar fashion to a +# https enabled web server, in that the server has a certificate signed by a CA +# and the client will verify that it is a trusted certificate. The overall aim +# is encryption of the network traffic. By setting require_certificate to true, +# the client must provide a valid certificate in order for the network +# connection to proceed. This allows access to the broker to be controlled +# outside of the mechanisms provided by MQTT. +#require_certificate false + +# If require_certificate is true, you may set use_identity_as_username to true +# to use the CN value from the client certificate as a username. If this is +# true, the password_file option will not be used for this listener. +#use_identity_as_username false + +# If you have require_certificate set to true, you can create a certificate +# revocation list file to revoke access to particular client certificates. If +# you have done this, use crlfile to point to the PEM encoded revocation file. +#crlfile + +# If you wish to control which encryption ciphers are used, use the ciphers +# option. The list of available ciphers can be optained using the "openssl +# ciphers" command and should be provided in the same format as the output of +# that command. +# If unset defaults to DEFAULT:!aNULL:!eNULL:!LOW:!EXPORT:!SSLv2:@STRENGTH +#ciphers DEFAULT:!aNULL:!eNULL:!LOW:!EXPORT:!SSLv2:@STRENGTH + +# ----------------------------------------------------------------- +# Pre-shared-key based SSL/TLS support +# ----------------------------------------------------------------- +# The following options can be used to enable PSK based SSL/TLS support for +# this listener. Note that the recommended port for MQTT over TLS is 8883, but +# this must be set manually. +# +# See also the mosquitto-tls man page and the "Certificate based SSL/TLS +# support" section. Only one of certificate or PSK encryption support can be +# enabled for any listener. + +# The psk_hint option enables pre-shared-key support for this listener and also +# acts as an identifier for this listener. The hint is sent to clients and may +# be used locally to aid authentication. The hint is a free form string that +# doesn't have much meaning in itself, so feel free to be creative. +# If this option is provided, see psk_file to define the pre-shared keys to be +# used or create a security plugin to handle them. +#psk_hint + +# Set use_identity_as_username to have the psk identity sent by the client used +# as its username. Authentication will be carried out using the PSK rather than +# the MQTT username/password and so password_file will not be used for this +# listener. +#use_identity_as_username false + +# When using PSK, the encryption ciphers used will be chosen from the list of +# available PSK ciphers. If you want to control which ciphers are available, +# use the "ciphers" option. The list of available ciphers can be optained +# using the "openssl ciphers" command and should be provided in the same format +# as the output of that command. +#ciphers + +# ================================================================= +# Extra listeners +# ================================================================= + +# Listen on a port/ip address combination. By using this variable +# multiple times, mosquitto can listen on more than one port. If +# this variable is used and neither bind_address nor port given, +# then the default listener will not be started. +# The port number to listen on must be given. Optionally, an ip +# address or host name may be supplied as a second argument. In +# this case, mosquitto will attempt to bind the listener to that +# address and so restrict access to the associated network and +# interface. By default, mosquitto will listen on all interfaces. +# listener port-number [ip address/host name] +#listener + +# The maximum number of client connections to allow. This is +# a per listener setting. +# Default is -1, which means unlimited connections. +# Note that other process limits mean that unlimited connections +# are not really possible. Typically the default maximum number of +# connections possible is around 1024. +#max_connections -1 + +# The listener can be restricted to operating within a topic hierarchy using +# the mount_point option. This is achieved be prefixing the mount_point string +# to all topics for any clients connected to this listener. This prefixing only +# happens internally to the broker; the client will not see the prefix. +#mount_point + +# ================================================================= +# Persistence +# ================================================================= + +# If persistence is enabled, save the in-memory database to disk +# every autosave_interval seconds. If set to 0, the persistence +# database will only be written when mosquitto exits. See also +# autosave_on_changes. +# Note that writing of the persistence database can be forced by +# sending mosquitto a SIGUSR1 signal. +autosave_interval 1800 + +# If true, mosquitto will count the number of subscription changes, retained +# messages received and queued messages and if the total exceeds +# autosave_interval then the in-memory database will be saved to disk. +# If false, mosquitto will save the in-memory database to disk by treating +# autosave_interval as a time in seconds. +#autosave_on_changes false + +# Save persistent message data to disk (true/false). +# This saves information about all messages, including +# subscriptions, currently in-flight messages and retained +# messages. +# retained_persistence is a synonym for this option. +persistence true + +# The filename to use for the persistent database, not including +# the path. +persistence_file mosquitto.db + +# Location for persistent database. Must include trailing / +# Default is an empty string (current directory). +# Set to e.g. /var/lib/mosquitto/ if running as a proper service on Linux or +# similar. +persistence_location /mosquitto/data/ + +# ================================================================= +# Logging +# ================================================================= + +# Places to log to. Use multiple log_dest lines for multiple +# logging destinations. +# Possible destinations are: stdout stderr syslog topic file +# +# stdout and stderr log to the console on the named output. +# +# syslog uses the userspace syslog facility which usually ends up +# in /var/log/messages or similar. +# +# topic logs to the broker topic '$SYS/broker/log/', +# where severity is one of D, E, W, N, I, M which are debug, error, +# warning, notice, information and message. Message type severity is used by +# the subscribe/unsubscribe log_types and publishes log messages to +# $SYS/broker/log/M/susbcribe or $SYS/broker/log/M/unsubscribe. +# +# The file destination requires an additional parameter which is the file to be +# logged to, e.g. "log_dest file /var/log/mosquitto.log". The file will be +# closed and reopened when the broker receives a HUP signal. Only a single file +# destination may be configured. +# +# Note that if the broker is running as a Windows service it will default to +# "log_dest none" and neither stdout nor stderr logging is available. +# Use "log_dest none" if you wish to disable logging. +#log_dest stderr + +# Types of messages to log. Use multiple log_type lines for logging +# multiple types of messages. +# Possible types are: debug, error, warning, notice, information, +# none, subscribe, unsubscribe, all. +# Note that debug type messages are for decoding the incoming/outgoing +# network packets. They are not logged in "topics". +#log_type error +#log_type warning +#log_type notice +#log_type information + +# If set to true, client connection and disconnection messages will be included +# in the log. +#connection_messages true + +# If set to true, add a timestamp value to each log message. +#log_timestamp true + +# ================================================================= +# Security +# ================================================================= + +# If set, only clients that have a matching prefix on their +# clientid will be allowed to connect to the broker. By default, +# all clients may connect. +# For example, setting "secure-" here would mean a client "secure- +# client" could connect but another with clientid "mqtt" couldn't. +#clientid_prefixes + +# Boolean value that determines whether clients that connect +# without providing a username are allowed to connect. If set to +# false then a password file should be created (see the +# password_file option) to control authenticated client access. +# Defaults to true. +allow_anonymous false + +# In addition to the clientid_prefixes, allow_anonymous and TLS +# authentication options, username based authentication is also +# possible. The default support is described in "Default +# authentication and topic access control" below. The auth_plugin +# allows another authentication method to be used. +# Specify the path to the loadable plugin and see the +# "Authentication and topic access plugin options" section below. +#auth_plugin + +# ----------------------------------------------------------------- +# Default authentication and topic access control +# ----------------------------------------------------------------- + +# Control access to the broker using a password file. This file can be +# generated using the mosquitto_passwd utility. If TLS support is not compiled +# into mosquitto (it is recommended that TLS support should be included) then +# plain text passwords are used, in which case the file should be a text file +# with lines in the format: +# username:password +# The password (and colon) may be omitted if desired, although this +# offers very little in the way of security. +# +# See the TLS client require_certificate and use_identity_as_username options +# for alternative authentication options. +password_file /mosquitto/config/passwd.db + +# Access may also be controlled using a pre-shared-key file. This requires +# TLS-PSK support and a listener configured to use it. The file should be text +# lines in the format: +# identity:key +# The key should be in hexadecimal format without a leading "0x". +#psk_file + +# Control access to topics on the broker using an access control list +# file. If this parameter is defined then only the topics listed will +# have access. +# If the first character of a line of the ACL file is a # it is treated as a +# comment. +# Topic access is added with lines of the format: +# +# topic [read|write] +# +# The access type is controlled using "read" or "write". This parameter +# is optional - if not given then the access is read/write. +# can contain the + or # wildcards as in subscriptions. +# +# The first set of topics are applied to anonymous clients, assuming +# allow_anonymous is true. User specific topic ACLs are added after a +# user line as follows: +# +# user +# +# The username referred to here is the same as in password_file. It is +# not the clientid. +# +# +# If is also possible to define ACLs based on pattern substitution within the +# topic. The patterns available for substition are: +# +# %c to match the client id of the client +# %u to match the username of the client +# +# The substitution pattern must be the only text for that level of hierarchy. +# +# The form is the same as for the topic keyword, but using pattern as the +# keyword. +# Pattern ACLs apply to all users even if the "user" keyword has previously +# been given. +# +# If using bridges with usernames and ACLs, connection messages can be allowed +# with the following pattern: +# pattern write $SYS/broker/connection/%c/state +# +# pattern [read|write] +# +# Example: +# +# pattern write sensor/%u/data +# +#acl_file + +# ----------------------------------------------------------------- +# Authentication and topic access plugin options +# ----------------------------------------------------------------- + +# If the auth_plugin option above is used, define options to pass to the +# plugin here as described by the plugin instructions. All options named +# using the format auth_opt_* will be passed to the plugin, for example: +# +# auth_opt_db_host +# auth_opt_db_port +# auth_opt_db_username +# auth_opt_db_password + + +# ================================================================= +# Bridges +# ================================================================= + +# A bridge is a way of connecting multiple MQTT brokers together. +# Create a new bridge using the "connection" option as described below. Set +# options for the bridges using the remaining parameters. You must specify the +# address and at least one topic to subscribe to. +# Each connection must have a unique name. +# The address line may have multiple host address and ports specified. See +# below in the round_robin description for more details on bridge behaviour if +# multiple addresses are used. +# The direction that the topic will be shared can be chosen by +# specifying out, in or both, where the default value is out. +# The QoS level of the bridged communication can be specified with the next +# topic option. The default QoS level is 0, to change the QoS the topic +# direction must also be given. +# The local and remote prefix options allow a topic to be remapped when it is +# bridged to/from the remote broker. This provides the ability to place a topic +# tree in an appropriate location. +# For more details see the mosquitto.conf man page. +# Multiple topics can be specified per connection, but be careful +# not to create any loops. +# If you are using bridges with cleansession set to false (the default), then +# you may get unexpected behaviour from incoming topics if you change what +# topics you are subscribing to. This is because the remote broker keeps the +# subscription for the old topic. If you have this problem, connect your bridge +# with cleansession set to true, then reconnect with cleansession set to false +# as normal. +#connection +#address [:] [[:]] +#topic [[[out | in | both] qos-level] local-prefix remote-prefix] + +# If the bridge has more than one address given in the address/addresses +# configuration, the round_robin option defines the behaviour of the bridge on +# a failure of the bridge connection. If round_robin is false, the default +# value, then the first address is treated as the main bridge connection. If +# the connection fails, the other secondary addresses will be attempted in +# turn. Whilst connected to a secondary bridge, the bridge will periodically +# attempt to reconnect to the main bridge until successful. +# If round_robin is true, then all addresses are treated as equals. If a +# connection fails, the next address will be tried and if successful will +# remain connected until it fails +#round_robin false + +# Set the client id for this bridge connection. If not defined, +# this defaults to 'name.hostname' where name is the connection +# name and hostname is the hostname of this computer. +#clientid + +# Set the clean session variable for this bridge. +# When set to true, when the bridge disconnects for any reason, all +# messages and subscriptions will be cleaned up on the remote +# broker. Note that with cleansession set to true, there may be a +# significant amount of retained messages sent when the bridge +# reconnects after losing its connection. +# When set to false, the subscriptions and messages are kept on the +# remote broker, and delivered when the bridge reconnects. +#cleansession false + +# If set to true, publish notification messages to the local and remote brokers +# giving information about the state of the bridge connection. Retained +# messages are published to the topic $SYS/broker/connection//state +# unless the notification_topic option is used. +# If the message is 1 then the connection is active, or 0 if the connection has +# failed. +#notifications true + +# Choose the topic on which notification messages for this bridge are +# published. If not set, messages are published on the topic +# $SYS/broker/connection//state +#notification_topic + +# Set the keepalive interval for this bridge connection, in +# seconds. +#keepalive_interval 60 + +# Set the start type of the bridge. This controls how the bridge starts and +# can be one of three types: automatic, lazy and once. Note that RSMB provides +# a fourth start type "manual" which isn't currently supported by mosquitto. +# +# "automatic" is the default start type and means that the bridge connection +# will be started automatically when the broker starts and also restarted +# after a short delay (30 seconds) if the connection fails. +# +# Bridges using the "lazy" start type will be started automatically when the +# number of queued messages exceeds the number set with the "threshold" +# parameter. It will be stopped automatically after the time set by the +# "idle_timeout" parameter. Use this start type if you wish the connection to +# only be active when it is needed. +# +# A bridge using the "once" start type will be started automatically when the +# broker starts but will not be restarted if the connection fails. +#start_type automatic + +# Set the amount of time a bridge using the automatic start type will wait +# until attempting to reconnect. Defaults to 30 seconds. +#restart_timeout 30 + +# Set the amount of time a bridge using the lazy start type must be idle before +# it will be stopped. Defaults to 60 seconds. +#idle_timeout 60 + +# Set the number of messages that need to be queued for a bridge with lazy +# start type to be restarted. Defaults to 10 messages. +# Must be less than max_queued_messages. +#threshold 10 + +# If try_private is set to true, the bridge will attempt to indicate to the +# remote broker that it is a bridge not an ordinary client. If successful, this +# means that loop detection will be more effective and that retained messages +# will be propagated correctly. Not all brokers support this feature so it may +# be necessary to set try_private to false if your bridge does not connect +# properly. +#try_private true + +# Set the username to use when connecting to an MQTT v3.1 broker +# that requires authentication. +#username + +# Set the password to use when connecting to an MQTT v3.1 broker +# that requires authentication. This option is only used if +# username is also set. +#password + +# Set the username to use on the local broker. +#local_username + +# Set the password to use on the local broker. +# This option is only used if local_username is also set. +#local_password + +# ----------------------------------------------------------------- +# Certificate based SSL/TLS support +# ----------------------------------------------------------------- +# Either bridge_cafile or bridge_capath must be defined to enable TLS support +# for this bridge. +# bridge_cafile defines the path to a file containing the +# Certificate Authority certificates that have signed the remote broker +# certificate. +# bridge_capath defines a directory that will be searched for files containing +# the CA certificates. For bridge_capath to work correctly, the certificate +# files must have ".crt" as the file ending and you must run "c_rehash " each time you add/remove a certificate. +#bridge_cafile +#bridge_capath + +# Path to the PEM encoded client certificate, if required by the remote broker. +#bridge_certfile + +# Path to the PEM encoded client private key, if required by the remote broker. +#bridge_keyfile + +# When using certificate based encryption, bridge_insecure disables +# verification of the server hostname in the server certificate. This can be +# useful when testing initial server configurations, but makes it possible for +# a malicious third party to impersonate your server through DNS spoofing, for +# example. Use this option in testing only. If you need to resort to using this +# option in a production environment, your setup is at fault and there is no +# point using encryption. +#bridge_insecure false + +# ----------------------------------------------------------------- +# PSK based SSL/TLS support +# ----------------------------------------------------------------- +# Pre-shared-key encryption provides an alternative to certificate based +# encryption. A bridge can be configured to use PSK with the bridge_identity +# and bridge_psk options. These are the client PSK identity, and pre-shared-key +# in hexadecimal format with no "0x". Only one of certificate and PSK based +# encryption can be used on one +# bridge at once. +#bridge_identity +#bridge_psk + + +# ================================================================= +# External config files +# ================================================================= + +# External configuration files may be included by using the +# include_dir option. This defines a directory that will be searched +# for config files. All files that end in '.conf' will be loaded as +# a configuration file. It is best to have this as the last option +# in the main file. This option will only be processed from the main +# configuration file. The directory specified must not contain the +# main configuration file. +#include_dir + +# ================================================================= +# Unsupported rsmb options - for the future +# ================================================================= + +#addresses +#round_robin + +# ================================================================= +# rsmb options - unlikely to ever be supported +# ================================================================= + +#ffdc_output +#max_log_entries +#trace_level +#trace_output diff --git a/docker/run-mosquitto.sh b/docker/run-mosquitto.sh new file mode 100755 index 0000000..87f52de --- /dev/null +++ b/docker/run-mosquitto.sh @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +#!/bin/bash + +REPO=eclipse-mosquitto + +docker pull $REPO + +docker container stop mosquitto +docker container rm mosquitto + +docker run -it --name mosquitto \ + --restart unless-stopped \ + -p 8883:8883 \ + --network docker-private \ + -e DEBUG=1 \ + -l traefik.enable=false \ + -v /var/mosquitto/config:/mosquitto/config \ + -v /var/mosquitto/data:/mosquitto/data \ + -v /var/mosquitto/log:/mosquitto/log \ + ${REPO}:latest diff --git a/secrets-example.yaml b/secrets-example.yaml index d9b1943..746fae0 100644 --- a/secrets-example.yaml +++ b/secrets-example.yaml @@ -19,6 +19,12 @@ recorder_db_url: "postgresql://user:password@SERVER_IP/DB_NAME" # API Keys dark_sky_api_key: YOUR_API_KEY_HERE +# MQTT +mqtt_host: "mosquitto" +mqtt_port: 1883 +mqtt_username: "SomeUser" +mqtt_password: "mqttpassword" + # SMTP smtp_server: smtp.gmail.com smtp_port: 587