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  3. Stand alone lighting control system

Stand alone lighting control system

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  • S Offline
    S Offline
    Stuart Middleton
    wrote on last edited by
    #11

    I'd never even considered the delay! Yes, I agree. I'm after a stand alone lighting system that has the flexibility to connect to home automation software, but works quite happily by itself and is immune to the house software crashing or being rebooted. We get power cuts sometimes, and I'd hate to have to wait for my system to reboot before the lights work! And I'm pretty sure my wife would leave me if the light switches were unreliable!

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    • E Offline
      E Offline
      ericvdb
      wrote on last edited by
      #12

      @Stuart-Middleton you can do node-to-node as well as node-to-gateway communication one after the other.
      Your switch node can send a command to the relay node, and send a command to the gateway. But to be honestly, I would have the relay nodes communicate their changed status to the gateway, that way if you press a button on a switch node, and it does not arrive at the relay node, but it arrives at the gateway, you controller will think the light is on while it is not.

      Regarding the mapping, i would build my switching nodes so that when they boot up, they ask the controller for the mapping and store that in the eeprom. (or make a function that when button 1 on a switch node is pressed for 5 secs, it asks the controller for the mapping) This makes it all independent from any gateway and/or controller while you retain the flexibility of changing mappings afterwards.

      Just my 2c's

      Greetings

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      • S Offline
        S Offline
        Stuart Middleton
        wrote on last edited by Stuart Middleton
        #13

        That is an option. I like the idea that the switch nodes that are physically close to the lights they control. The delay is less than relaying through the gateway (and possibly relay nodes) and the signal strength would be the strongest. I still think for functions such as "turn all lights off", a controller would be easier rather than a single switch needing to send messages to all lights in the house, but I could use a combination of both techniques. This method would make it more robust as if the gateway or repeater goes down, the system would still work. If I wanted to log the system for playback, I could always poll the lights every minute or so and get their state.

        I've not started building it yet so I'm just after ideas, but a combination of node-to-node and controller for more complex actions and node setup may be the ideal solution.

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        • TheoLT Offline
          TheoLT Offline
          TheoL
          Contest Winner
          wrote on last edited by
          #14

          Not sure if I'm getting this right. You want to add logic to a Node or Gateway in case the controller shuts down? But what happens if the node/gateway containing the logic will go down?

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          • S Offline
            S Offline
            Stuart Middleton
            wrote on last edited by
            #15

            That's right. But the node or gateway are far less likely to go down than the controller. Especially in an environment where I'm constantly messing with my home control by adding new software to the controller and rebooting it. The gateway, in theory, will never be switched off

            TheoLT 1 Reply Last reply
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            • S Stuart Middleton

              That's right. But the node or gateway are far less likely to go down than the controller. Especially in an environment where I'm constantly messing with my home control by adding new software to the controller and rebooting it. The gateway, in theory, will never be switched off

              TheoLT Offline
              TheoLT Offline
              TheoL
              Contest Winner
              wrote on last edited by
              #16

              @Stuart-Middleton I have a second Pi with a second gateway I use to do my experiments on. On just want my production environment to run 24/7.

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              • D Offline
                D Offline
                dakipro
                wrote on last edited by
                #17

                I have some weird problem when power goes down, I have to have domotics up and running first, and then power on the gateway and click reset on it, and then MySensors starts working again. Which is manual job, not difficult for me but if my wife comes home from work before me, then "nothing works without the wires" topic appears on the table.
                That should be probably fixed in the code/communication it self, but it was also one of the reasons why independent light control made sense for me, it just sounds more reliable.

                But second PI is also good idea for experiments. Although often experiments work when I test them, but when scenarios are used in real life quite some bugs appear forcing me to test and fix "live" (and then lights are off and cable topic appears again)

                C: OpenHAB2 with node-red on linux laptop
                GW: Arduino Nano - W5100 Ethernet, Nrf24l01+ 2,4Ghz mqtt
                GW: Arduino Mega, RFLink 433Mhz

                TheoLT 1 Reply Last reply
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                • S Offline
                  S Offline
                  Stuart Middleton
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #18

                  I like the idea that all of the systems are essentially self contained to a point where they can perform their main task without a master controller. I.e. lights work without domotics or whatever needing to boot up. I also have an alarm system I'm working on. All controlled from a central server, BUT it still works as an alarm if the controller fails, I just can't get useful info from the web interface or control it remotely.

                  TheoLT 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • D dakipro

                    I have some weird problem when power goes down, I have to have domotics up and running first, and then power on the gateway and click reset on it, and then MySensors starts working again. Which is manual job, not difficult for me but if my wife comes home from work before me, then "nothing works without the wires" topic appears on the table.
                    That should be probably fixed in the code/communication it self, but it was also one of the reasons why independent light control made sense for me, it just sounds more reliable.

                    But second PI is also good idea for experiments. Although often experiments work when I test them, but when scenarios are used in real life quite some bugs appear forcing me to test and fix "live" (and then lights are off and cable topic appears again)

                    TheoLT Offline
                    TheoLT Offline
                    TheoL
                    Contest Winner
                    wrote on last edited by TheoL
                    #19

                    @dakipro I'm not saying that I find this a bad idea. I just can't see why I would wanna go through all of this trouble and lots of work. When, in my opinion some of the problems mentioned in this topic could be solved differently.

                    First of all, building all the logic in a node with supporting scenario's and things like that is really complicated and might be getting to big for a normal Arduino. So you probably need an Atmega which is quit a bit more expensive. Also you'll loose a lot of flexibility, because you have to reprogram the logic node with every addition you make to your network.

                    I've read the following problems:
                    a.) Gateway not stable. Regardless to what solution you come up with. You should try to make the gateway stable. Mine runs for more than a year and so far no need to reset the gateway. In most cases problems like these are power related or you might have a bad radio.
                    b.) the lights can't be controlled when the gateway/controller isn't up and running: This is in my opinion not caused by the gateway/controller going down. I always add some kind of switch to my actuators, so that I'm able to control everything manually. This is a good practice when designing Home Automation solutions. HA should enhance our lives not take it over.
                    c.) Controller can shutdown: Why not use an MQTT gateway? And add emergency logic on the MQTT bus with NodeRed? This is really easy and takes less time to implement. It's also a good architecture, because you create an extra layer and have a loose coupling between mySensors and the controller logic. Also you can add logic, you just can't with most of the controllers. Because by using MQTT you can use MySensors at it's fullest capability.
                    d.) Als0 scenario's for turning on/off multiple lights are there for your convenience. You should still be able to control any light manually regardless of the logic in your controller.
                    But that's just my 50 cents.

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                    • S Stuart Middleton

                      I like the idea that all of the systems are essentially self contained to a point where they can perform their main task without a master controller. I.e. lights work without domotics or whatever needing to boot up. I also have an alarm system I'm working on. All controlled from a central server, BUT it still works as an alarm if the controller fails, I just can't get useful info from the web interface or control it remotely.

                      TheoLT Offline
                      TheoLT Offline
                      TheoL
                      Contest Winner
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #20

                      @Stuart-Middleton Fair. But please consider using MQTT. It saves you a lot of time.

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                      • D Offline
                        D Offline
                        dakipro
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #21

                        very good points @TheoL , I am all for easy AND very reliable solutions.

                        Honestly, I didn't find much info about MQTT, on build pages it says that "The MQTT gateway is basically a Ethernet Gateway with modified software which makes it act as a MQTT broker", and first comment says there are bunch of errors, and for me as a beginner in mysensors/HA it is probably another "complicated" term and technology I need to get my hands on.
                        I will try to find more info about benefits of the MQTT protocol, but if it would be possible to have a "backup" controller as you describe it or something else that would be dedicated to the "lighting control" logic, then I would definitely like to try it. Please do tell more :)

                        C: OpenHAB2 with node-red on linux laptop
                        GW: Arduino Nano - W5100 Ethernet, Nrf24l01+ 2,4Ghz mqtt
                        GW: Arduino Mega, RFLink 433Mhz

                        TheoLT 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • D dakipro

                          very good points @TheoL , I am all for easy AND very reliable solutions.

                          Honestly, I didn't find much info about MQTT, on build pages it says that "The MQTT gateway is basically a Ethernet Gateway with modified software which makes it act as a MQTT broker", and first comment says there are bunch of errors, and for me as a beginner in mysensors/HA it is probably another "complicated" term and technology I need to get my hands on.
                          I will try to find more info about benefits of the MQTT protocol, but if it would be possible to have a "backup" controller as you describe it or something else that would be dedicated to the "lighting control" logic, then I would definitely like to try it. Please do tell more :)

                          TheoLT Offline
                          TheoLT Offline
                          TheoL
                          Contest Winner
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #22

                          @dakipro I'll try to add an MQTT tutorial within a couple of weeks. I want to do an MQTT presentation for my colleagues so why not combine it with a tutorial for the MySensors community. It's a bit hard to understand in the beginning, but once you understand the basics, you wonder why you not have used it before.

                          But again, there should be no need for an master/slave controller implementation. The only thing I can't prevent is an power outage. Everything else runs very stable in my house at least. And if I don't want to control my lighting with my Home Automation controller, I'm still able to use manually operated switches, which is one of my main design principles when designing new MySensors actuators.

                          Most important for each Node is that you simply don't used the Arduino as a power supply. I found that out the hard way. I now power everything from an power adapter, incl. the Antenna.

                          Nca78N 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • TheoLT TheoL

                            @dakipro I'll try to add an MQTT tutorial within a couple of weeks. I want to do an MQTT presentation for my colleagues so why not combine it with a tutorial for the MySensors community. It's a bit hard to understand in the beginning, but once you understand the basics, you wonder why you not have used it before.

                            But again, there should be no need for an master/slave controller implementation. The only thing I can't prevent is an power outage. Everything else runs very stable in my house at least. And if I don't want to control my lighting with my Home Automation controller, I'm still able to use manually operated switches, which is one of my main design principles when designing new MySensors actuators.

                            Most important for each Node is that you simply don't used the Arduino as a power supply. I found that out the hard way. I now power everything from an power adapter, incl. the Antenna.

                            Nca78N Offline
                            Nca78N Offline
                            Nca78
                            Hardware Contributor
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #23

                            @TheoL that would be awesome, I'm using a serial gateway at the moment but upgrading to MQTT is on the roadmap, a tutorial would save me a lot of time setting everything up :)

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                            • sundberg84S Offline
                              sundberg84S Offline
                              sundberg84
                              Hardware Contributor
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #24

                              I agree with @TheoL - I run Domoticz and Ethernet GW without major issues for 1.5 years now... offcourse there was some initial setup problems. You need to be able to run everything on a smaller arduino. Lightswitches and spaces you are going to work in are most of the times very tight so dont forget about that.

                              I also run a arduino + relay with the switch connected to this relay through D3 for example. If MySensors fail (untested in real enviroment so far) the switch should still work by hitting the switch.

                              Controller: Proxmox VM - Home Assistant
                              MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - W5100 Ethernet, Gw Shield Nrf24l01+ 2,4Ghz
                              MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - Gw Shield RFM69, 433mhz
                              RFLink GW - Arduino Mega + RFLink Shield, 433mhz

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                              • D dakipro

                                For me personally the main focus is not fallback as is independency from the controller/domoticz.
                                Also there is delay when you use domoticz as controller, which annoys me so much. I click on the switch, sometims it is 2s before the light comes on. And there is always "stress" of switch not working, rebooting or what not.
                                Also there is convenience on only programming one single node when new lights are added (or existing changed). And when we talk 25-30 lights and 15-20 light switch nodes as mentioned in the first topic, I would like to avoid ever touching those 40-50 nodes and edit logic in one place.
                                There is always a balance between convenience / reliability, but one can have clone of the "controller" node as a backup, just in case main dies, you just plug inn the backup :)

                                P Offline
                                P Offline
                                pjr
                                wrote on last edited by pjr
                                #25

                                @dakipro said:

                                For me personally the main focus is not fallback as is independency from the controller/domoticz.
                                Also there is delay when you use domoticz as controller, which annoys me so much. I click on the switch, sometims it is 2s before the light comes on. And there is always "stress" of switch not working, rebooting or what not.

                                This might help if someone could make it as configurable value and will merge it to codebase: https://www.domoticz.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=93701#p92910

                                I've designed my setup another way: The house is divided in 5 areas. Every area has its own relay box where all the actuators of that area are living. So in normal wall boxes I have only weak current. I'll try to implement everything based on rs485. Most of the buttons will be directly tied to actuator and some are action buttons for HA controller. Mainly for scenes I think.

                                Another solution I was thinking is that as fall back I could use nexa remote to control those actuator-boxes directly since it has ability to control 4x4 devices or 4x8 if you use it for toggle... but the problem might be that the remotes are always lost..

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                                • D dakipro

                                  For me personally the main focus is not fallback as is independency from the controller/domoticz.
                                  Also there is delay when you use domoticz as controller, which annoys me so much. I click on the switch, sometims it is 2s before the light comes on. And there is always "stress" of switch not working, rebooting or what not.
                                  Also there is convenience on only programming one single node when new lights are added (or existing changed). And when we talk 25-30 lights and 15-20 light switch nodes as mentioned in the first topic, I would like to avoid ever touching those 40-50 nodes and edit logic in one place.
                                  There is always a balance between convenience / reliability, but one can have clone of the "controller" node as a backup, just in case main dies, you just plug inn the backup :)

                                  TheoLT Offline
                                  TheoLT Offline
                                  TheoL
                                  Contest Winner
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #26

                                  @dakipro I missed your 2s delay in Domoticz post. I'm also experiencing that. But as far as I can tell, the delay is only there when I use the web interface. When I control lightnings via MQTT, the lightning responds instantly.

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                                  • D Offline
                                    D Offline
                                    dakipro
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #27

                                    are you using domoticz as well?
                                    I've read that mqtt is "officially" not supported, but it could work. Anyway, I am looking forward to your presentation :)

                                    C: OpenHAB2 with node-red on linux laptop
                                    GW: Arduino Nano - W5100 Ethernet, Nrf24l01+ 2,4Ghz mqtt
                                    GW: Arduino Mega, RFLink 433Mhz

                                    TheoLT 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • D dakipro

                                      are you using domoticz as well?
                                      I've read that mqtt is "officially" not supported, but it could work. Anyway, I am looking forward to your presentation :)

                                      TheoLT Offline
                                      TheoLT Offline
                                      TheoL
                                      Contest Winner
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #28

                                      @dakipro I'm using Domoticz as controller as well. I mainly use it as a gateway to all the devices I want to control and defining the scenes I use.

                                      I have for instance one scene in my living room for normal lightning. This means there's an additional lamp on which is standing next to the tv (It's actually my gesture controlled MySensors lamp).

                                      When I want to watch TV I don't want that additional light to be on. So in my watch tv scene I turn that one off.

                                      And I have an additional Scene for turning all lamps in my living room off.

                                      Now when I use the domoticz GUI it's some times really slow. Especially when I use my mobile because, I have crappy WiFi. So I just have a MySensors scene controller talking to Domoticz (not MQTT) for controlling the light scenes. Even that one causes instant responses from my lamps in the living room.

                                      When I send MQTT commands to Domoticz it's acts instantly. Meaning really fast. Which is the same when I send rest calls to Domoticz.

                                      I'm not sure where you've read that MQTT is not supported by Domoticz. I've been using it for more than a half year. But I'm one Domoticz release behind. And it works like a charm. I let Domoticz do the Home Automation and do my IoT stuff through MQTT.

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                                      • D Offline
                                        D Offline
                                        dakipro
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #29

                                        Hi @TheoL how is life and hacking? :)
                                        I got reminded on this topic when I saw that Domoticz now officially supports the MySensors MQTT Gateway
                                        So I was thinking maybe you have some time and material to contribute to the subject, I see there is a lot of people (me first) not really understanding how they could benefit from MQTT protocol. Since you mentioned the presentation/tutorial last time :)
                                        Cheers!

                                        C: OpenHAB2 with node-red on linux laptop
                                        GW: Arduino Nano - W5100 Ethernet, Nrf24l01+ 2,4Ghz mqtt
                                        GW: Arduino Mega, RFLink 433Mhz

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