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3.6 KiB

Communicating with Hoymiles Micro-Inverters using Python on RaspberryPi

The tools in this folder (and subfolders) provide the ability to communicate with Hoymiles micro-inverters.

They require the hardware setup described below.

The tools are still quite rudimentary, as the communication behaviour is not yet fully understood.

This is part of an ongoing group effort, and the knowledge gained so far is the result of a crowd effort that started at [1].

Thanks go to all who contributed, and are continuing to contribute, by providing their time, equipment, and ingenuity!

Required Hardware Setup

ahoy.py has been successfully tested with the following setup

  • RaspberryPi Model 2B (any model should work)
  • NRF24L01+ Radio Module connected as described, e.g., in [2] (Instructions at [3] should work identically, but [2] has more pretty pictures.)
  • TMRh20's 'Optimized High Speed nRF24L01+ Driver' [3], installed as per the instructions given in [4]
    • Python Library Wrapper, as per [5]

Example Run

The following command will run the communication tool, which will try to contact the inverter every second on channel 40, and listen for replies.

Whenever it sees a reply, it will decoded and logged to the given log file.

$ sudo python3 ahoy.py --config /home/dtu/ahoy.yml | tee -a log2.log

Inject payloads via MQTT

To enable mqtt payload injection, this must be configured per inverter

...
  inverters:
...
    - serial: 1147112345
      mqtt:
        send_raw_enabled: true
...

This can be used to inject debug payloads The message must be in hexlified format

Use of variables:

  • tttttttt expands to current time like we know from our 80 0b command

Example injects exactly the same as we normally use to poll data

$ mosquitto_pub -h broker -t inverter_topic/command -m 800b00tttttttt0000000500000000

This allows for even faster hacking during runtime

Analysing the Logs

Use basic command line tools to get an idea what you recorded. For example:

$ cat log2.log
[...]
2022-05-02 16:41:16.044179 Transmit | 15 72 22 01 43 78 56 34 12 80 0b 00 62 3c 8e cf 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 00 35 a3 08
2022-05-02 17:01:41.844361 Received 27 bytes on channel 3: 95 72 22 01 43 72 22 01 43 01 00 01 01 44 00 4e 00 fe 01 46 00 4f 01 02 00 00 6b
2022-05-02 17:01:41.886796 Received 27 bytes on channel 75: 95 72 22 01 43 72 22 01 43 02 8f 82 00 00 86 7a 05 fe 06 0b 08 fc 13 8a 01 e9 15
2022-05-02 17:01:41.934667 Received 23 bytes on channel 75: 95 72 22 01 43 72 22 01 43 83 00 00 00 15 03 e8 00 df 03 83 d5 f3 91
2022-05-02 17:01:41.934667 Decoded: 44 string1= 32.4VDC 0.78A 25.4W 36738Wh 1534Wh/day string2= 32.6VDC 0.79A 25.8W 34426Wh 1547Wh/day phase1= 230.0VAC 2.1A 48.9W inverter=114171230143 50.02Hz 22.3°C
[...]

A brief example log is supplied in the example-logs folder.

Configuration

Local settings are read from ahoy.yml
An example is provided as ahoy.yml.example

Todo

  • Ability to talk to multiple inverters
  • MQTT gateway
  • understand channel hopping
  • configurable polling interval
  • commands
  • picture of setup!
  • python module
  • ...

References