My house knows when people are using the wifi, and keeps the inverter on so that the satellite internet is powered up, unless the battery is too low. When nobody is using the wifi, the inverter turns off, except when it's needed to power the fridge.

Sounds a little complicated, doesn't it? The code to automate that using my reactive-banana-automation library is almost shorter than the English description, and certianly clearer.

inverterPowerChange :: Sensors t -> MomentAutomation ( Behavior ( Maybe PowerChange )) inverterPowerChange sensors = do lowpower <- lowpowerMode sensors fridgepowerchange <- fridgePowerChange sensors wifiusers <- numWifiUsers sensors return $ react <$> lowpower <*> fridgepowerchange <*> wifiusers where react lowpower fridgepowerchange wifiusers | lowpower = Just PowerOff | wifiusers > 0 = Just PowerOn | otherwise = fridgepowerchange

Of course, there are complexities under the hood, like where does numWifiUsers come from? (It uses inotify to detect changes to the DHCP leases file, and tracks when leases expire.) I'm up to 1200 lines of custom code for my house, only 170 lines of which are control code like the above.

But that code is the core, and it's where most of the bugs would be. The goal is to avoid most of the bugs by using FRP and Haskell the way I have, and the rest by testing.

For testing, I'm using doctest to embed test cases along with the FRP code. I designed reactive-banana-automation to work well with this style of testing. For example, here's how it determines when the house needs to be in low power mode, including the tests:

-- | Start by assuming we're not in low power mode, to avoid -- entering it before batteryVoltage is available. -- -- If batteryVoltage continues to be unavailable, enter low power mode for -- safety. -- -- >>> runner <- observeAutomation (runInverterUnless lowpowerMode) (mkSensors (pure ())) -- >>> runner $ \sensors -> gotEvent (dhcpClients sensors) [] -- [] -- >>> runner $ \sensors -> sensorUnavailable (batteryVoltage sensors) -- [InverterPower PowerOff] -- >>> runner $ \sensors -> batteryVoltage sensors =: Volts 25 -- [InverterPower PowerOn] -- >>> runner $ \sensors -> batteryVoltage sensors =: Volts 20 -- [InverterPower PowerOff] -- >>> runner $ \sensors -> batteryVoltage sensors =: Volts 25 -- [InverterPower PowerOn] -- >>> runner $ \sensors -> sensorUnavailable (batteryVoltage sensors) -- [InverterPower PowerOff] lowpowerMode :: Sensors t -> MomentAutomation ( Behavior Bool ) lowpowerMode sensors = automationStepper False =<< fmap calc <$> getEventFrom ( batteryVoltage sensors ) where -- Below 24.0 (really 23.5 or so) is danger zone for lead acid. calc ( Sensed v ) = v < Volts 24.1 calc SensorUnavailable = True

The sensor data is available over http, so I can run this controller code in test mode, on my laptop, and observe how it reacts to real-world circumstances.

joey@darkstar:~/src/house>./controller test InverterPower PowerOn FridgeRelay PowerOff

Previously: my haskell controlled offgrid fridge