* [x] Support custom Modbus transports (Sungrow WiNet-S has been implemented)
* Modbus RTU has not been tested because I don't have a serial Modbus device, but in principle it should work. Please let me know
* [x] Support reading input registers
* [x] Support reading holding registers
* [ ] Support _setting_ holding registers
* [ ] Support optional auto-configuration of Home Assistant entities, including using [MQTT Number](https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/number.mqtt/) et al for holding registers, to allow setting the value.
For now, use `cargo install` (Rust toolchain required). Soon, I will have release binaries attached to GitHub releases. In the future, there will also be Docker images made available for convenience.
The supported protocols are currently just `tcp://`/`mqtt://`, but with intent to support: `mqtts://`, `ssl://`/`tls://`, `ws://`, and `wss://`.
The default topic which ModbusMQTT monitors and to which it publishes is `modbus-mqtt`. You can vary that by changing the path portion of the MQTT URL.
Further, you can change other MQTT options by using query params, such as setting a custom client_id:
```sh
"mqtt://1.2.3.4/?client_id=$CUSTOM_CLIENT_ID"
```
For a full list of supported options, check [the MQTT client library's source code](https://github.com/bytebeamio/rumqtt/blob/c6dc1f7cfb26f6c1f676954a51b398708d49091a/rumqttc/src/lib.rs#L680-L768).
### Connecting to Modbus devices
To connect to a Modbus device, you need to post the connection details to MQTT under a topic of `$prefix/$connection_id/connect`. It is intended that such messages are marked as **retained** so that ModbusMQTT reconnects to your devices when it restarts.
Post to `$MODBUS_MQTT_TOPIC/$CONNECTION_ID/$TYPE/$ADDRESS` where `$TYPE` is one of `input` or `holding` with the following payload (optional fields show defaults):
```jsonc
{
"name": null, // OPTIONAL - gives the register a name which is used in the register MQTT topics (must be a valid topic component)
"interval": "1m", // OPTIONAL - how often to update the registers value to MQTT
// e.g.: 3s (every 3 seconds)
// 2m (every 2 minutes)
// 1h (every 1 hour)
"swap_bytes": false, // OPTIONAL
"swap_words": false, // OPTIONAL
"type": "s16", // OPTIONAL
// valid: s8, s16, s32, s64 (signed)
// u8, u16, u32, u64 (unsigned)
// f32, f64 (floating point)
"scale": 0, // OPTIONAL - number in register will be multiplied by 10^(scale)
// e.g.: to turn kW into W, you would provide scale=3
// to turn W into kW, you would provide scale=-3
"offset": 0, // OPTIONAL - will be added to the final result (AFTER scaling)
// Additionally, "type" can be set to "array":
"type": "array",
"of": "u16" // The default array element is u16, but you can change it with the `of` field
}
```
Further, the `type` field can additionally be set to `"array"`, in which case, a `count` field must be provided. The array elements default to `"s16"` but can be overriden in the `"of"` field.
NOTE: this is likely to change such that there is always a `count` field (with default of 1) and if provided to be greater than 1, it will be interpreted to be an array of elements of the `type` specified.
There is some code to accept `"string"` type (with a required `length` field) but this is experimental and untested.
##### Register shorthand
When issuing the `connect` payload, you can optionally include `input` and/or `holding` fields as arrays containing the above register schema, as long as an `address` field is added. When present, these payloads will be replayed to the MQTT server as if the user had specified each register separately, as above.
This is a recommended way to specify connections, but the registers are broken out separately so that they can be dynamically added to too.
## Development
TODO: set up something like https://hub.docker.com/r/oitc/modbus-server to test with
## Similar projects
* https://github.com/Instathings/modbus2mqtt
* https://github.com/TenySmart/ModbusTCP2MQTT - Sungrow inverter specific
* https://github.com/bohdan-s/SunGather - Sungrow inverter specific