Docker image for running Homebridge on a Raspberry Pi
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Hacky way of making it easy to run on ARM

Just prefix any make command with 'arm'. Eg. `make arm shell'.
Don't commit the modified Makefile.

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docker-rpi-homebridge

Docker image for running Homebridge on a Raspberry Pi

Homebridge

Here is what the author has to say about Homebridge:

Homebridge is a lightweight NodeJS server you can run on your home network that emulates the iOS HomeKit API. It supports Plugins, which are community-contributed modules that provide a basic bridge from HomeKit to various 3rd-party APIs provided by manufacturers of "smart home" devices.

This project is just a Docker container that makes it easy to deploy Homebridge on your Raspberry Pi.

Getting Docker on your Raspberry Pi

I recommend checking out Hypriot and their Getting Started guide

Configuration

There are two files that need to be provided in order for Homebridge to run.

  • config.json: For a quick start, you can copy config-sample.json and modify it to your needs. For detailed explanation of this file, check out the documentation provided by Homebridge
  • plugins.txt: in order to do anything, Homebridge needs to install plugins for your accessories and platforms. You can list them here with each npm package on a new line. See plugins-sample.txt for an example and, again, check out the documentation provided by Homebridge for more details.

Running

This image is hosted on Docker Hub tagged as vividboarder/rpi-homebridge, so you can feel free to use the docker-compose.yaml and change build: . to image: vividboarder/rpi-homebridge. After that, docker-compose up should get you started.

Alternately, you can compile the image yourself by cloning this repo and using docker-compose

docker-compose up

If you want a little more control, you can use any of the make targets:

make build          # builds a new image
make run            # builds and runs container using same parameters as compose
make shell          # builds and runs an interractive container
make tag            # tags image to be pushed to docker hub
make push           # pushes image to docker hub
make unshrinkwrap   # clears npm-shrinkwrap.json so the next build will use latest
make shrinkwrap     # generates npm-shrinkwrap.json to pin versions
make arm            # modifies Dockerfile for building against arm

Multi-arch

This project is capable of being compiled on arm or cross-built on an x86 machine. There is some trickiness involved in this, so here's the description broken down by platform. High level, the cross-build-start cannot be present when building on arm. When running the built image, a non-arm system needs to have qemu-arm-static mounted as a volume. The Makefile tries to automate this a bit.

arm (Raspberry Pi)

The default is to support building on Docker Hub and not a Raspberry Pi. Unfortunately, cross-build-start will fail to run on an arm machine.

To build or shrinkwrap, just add arm to your make command. Eg. make arm build shrinkwrap. This will modify the Dockerfile to comment out the cross-build commands. If contributing changes back upstream, do not commit this change!

Linux x86

Building can be done by directly running make build. If you want to run image, you need to install qemu qemu-user qemu-user-static. After that you should be able to run make shrinkwrap or make shell.

macOS

Docker for Mac actually supports running arm binaries. So that's cool! To make things simple, you should follow the arm instructions.

Development

Follow the instructions above for how to run on your architechture. Also, be sure to not commit commented out cross-build-* lines as those are necessary for Docker Hub to build.

Bumping version numbers

This is most easily done by updating package.json and then running make unshrinkwrap shrinkwrap. That should force a reinstallation of all node packages and then provide you with an updated npm-shrinkwrap.json file to commit.

Issues?

Feel free to report any issues you're having getting this to run on Github