Updated Information

* Updated `build.sh`
* Updated `README.md`
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Daniel Legt 2024-01-22 12:24:27 +02:00
parent 44d4237bec
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## 📖About
## 📖 About
Drive Health is a program written in golang to help with tracking and monitoring of your hardware's temperature.
This tool has been with the purpose of installing it in different servers I own with different configurations to help keep track of the temperature of different hard-disks, ssds, nvme drives, etc... The testing has been very limited to only 4 different computers and not on laptops so expect some mishaps.
This tool had been conceived with the purpose of installing it on different servers I own with different configurations to help keep track of the temperature of hard-disks, ssds, nvme drives, etc...
### Features
- Disk Listing
- Temperature Graphing
- Disk activity logging
- [API](./lib/web/api.go)
![UI Example](./media/design_v1.webp)
## ❗Disclaimer
## ❗ Disclaimer
I'm not exactly a linux hardware wizard, so I honestly have no clue about a lot of things and I myself can tell there's a lot to improve upon and that there's a lot of other things missing that are a little bit more obscure, I personally don't currently own any m.2 sata drives to test the code on, or many of the other drive types, I have only tested on HDD, SSD and NVMe drives, any issues opened would help me so much!
## ❗Requirements
## ❗ Requirements
1. A linux machine, this will NOT work on macOS or on Windows, it's meant to be ran on servers as a service with which administrators can privately connect to for temperature logging.
2. Please make sure you have the [**drivetemp kernel drive**](https://docs.kernel.org/hwmon/drivetemp.html) you can check this by running `sudo modprobe drivetemp`.
The program depends on this to be able to log the temperature of your devices.
## 📖How to use
## 📖 How to use
1. Follow the `Deployment` section instrcutions to launch the program
The program is straight forward to use really, edit the [.env](./.env) file and make the changes you would like applied.
2. Once the program has launched, access it in your browser
### Docker ( Recommended/Hassle free )
3. Enter the administrative username and password for the simple HTTP Auth
4. You now have access to the application, you can monitor your disk's temperature over a period of time.
## 🐦 Deployment
To deploy the application you have multiple choices, the preffered method should be one which runs the binary directly and not containerization, the `docker` image is taking up a wopping `1Gb+` because I have to include sqlite3-dev and musl-dev dependencies, which sucks, so I whole heartedly recommend just installing this on your system as a binary either with `SystemD` or whichever service manager you are using.
Download binaries from [the releases page](https://github.com/JustKato/drive-health/releases)
### 🐋 Docker
In the project there's a `docker-compose.prod.yml` which you can deploy on your server, you will notice that there's also a "dev" version, this version simply has a `build` instead of `image` property, so feel free to use either.
Please do take notice that I have just fed the `environment file` directly to the service via docker-compose, and I recommend you do the same but please feel free to pass in `environment` variables straight to the process as well.
[Docker Compose File](./docker-compose.prod.yml)
```yaml
version: "3.8"
services:
drive-health:
# Latest image pull, mention the specific version here please.
image: ghcr.io/justkato/drive-health:latest
# Restart in case of crashing
restart: unless-stopped
# Load environment variables from .env file
env_file:
- .env
# Mount the volume to the local drive
volumes:
- ./data:/data
# Setup application ports
ports:
- 5003:8080
```
### 💾 SystemD
When running with SystemD or any other service manager, please make sure you have a `.env` inside the `WorkingDirectory` of your runner, in the below example I will simply put my env in `/home/daniel/services/drive-health/.env`
### SystemD
```ini
[Unit]
Description=Drive Health Service
@ -40,18 +80,19 @@ Restart=on-failure
WantedBy=multi-user.target
```
## ❔FAQ
## ❔ FAQ
### How does it work?
Currently the program does not depend on any hardware library as I couldn't find anything that would not require root access while giving me the possibility to interrogate the temperature of the drives, I chose not to depend on `lsblk` either, so how does the program work? Well it looks in `/sys/block` and simply
Currently the program does not depend on any go library for hardware detection as I couldn't find anything that would not require root access while giving me the possibility to interrogate the temperature of the drives.
I chose not to depend on `lsblk` either, so how does the program work?
The program currently looks in `/sys/block` and then tries to make sense of the devices, I have had limited testing with my hardware specs, any issues being open in regards to different kinds of hardware would be highly appreciated
### Why not just run as root?
I really, really, **really** want to avoid asking people to run **ANY** program I write as root and even try and prevent that from happening since that's how things can go bad, especially because I am runnig actions over hardware items. I think you can see how easy it is for a mistake or a **malicious attack** to easily deal damage
I really, REALLY, **REALLY** want to avoid asking people to run **ANY** program I write as root and even try and prevent that from happening since that's how things can go bad, especially because I am running actions over hardware devices.
## Support & Contribution
For support, bug reports, or feature requests, please open an issue on the [GitHub repository](https://github.com/JustKato/drive-health/issues). Contributions are welcome! Fork the repository, make your changes, and submit a pull request.
## License
This project is licensed under the [Apache License 2.0](./LICENSE).

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#!/bin/sh
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -o pipefail
set -u
# Function to display messages in color
echo_color() {
color=$1
text=$2
case $color in
"green") echo -e "\033[0;32m$text\033[0m" ;;
"yellow") echo -e "\033[0;33m$text\033[0m" ;;
"red") echo -e "\033[0;31m$text\033[0m" ;;
*) echo "$text" ;;
esac
}
# Getting GIT_VERSION from the most recent tag or commit hash
GIT_VERSION=$(git describe --tags --always)
if [ -z "$GIT_VERSION" ]; then
echo_color red "Error: Unable to determine GIT_VERSION."
exit 1
fi
APP_NAME="drive-health"
DIST_DIR="${DIST_DIR:-dist}"
SCRIPT_DIR=$( cd -- "$( dirname -- "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}" )" &> /dev/null && pwd )
# make sure we are in the source dir
cd $SCRIPT_DIR;
# Create the dist directory if it doesn't exist
mkdir -p $DIST_DIR
# Build the application
echo "Building the application..."
echo_color yellow "[🦝] Building the application..."
GOOS=linux CGO_ENABLED=1 GOARCH=amd64 go build -o $DIST_DIR/$APP_NAME
# echo "Copying additional resources..."
# Copying additional resources...
cp -r static templates $DIST_DIR/
echo "Compilation and packaging completed."
echo_color yellow "[🦝] Compilation and packaging completed, archiving..."
cd $DIST_DIR/
zip "drive-health_$GIT_VERSION.zip" -r .
# TODO: Add reliable method of cleaning up the compiled files optionally
cd $SCRIPT_DIR;