Deviceplane is an open source device management tool for embedded systems and edge computing. It helps solve various infrastructure problems relating to remote device management such as:
- Network connectivity and SSH access
- Orchestrating and deployment of remote updates
- Host and application monitoring
- Device organization: naming, labeling, searching, and filtering of devices
- Access and security controls
Deviceplane integrates with your device by running a lightweight static binary via your system supervisor. It can be used with nearly any Linux distro, which means you can continue using Ubuntu, Raspbian, a Yocto build, or whatever else fits your needs.
Deviceplane is completely open source and all of our code, including the code for the backend and UI, can be found in this repo. The architecture of Deviceplane is simple and designed to be very easy to run and manage. The backend can even be run with one simple Docker command:
docker run -d --restart=unless-stopped -p 8080:8080 deviceplane/deviceplane
For more information on hosting Deviceplane yourself, check out our self-hosted docs.
If you'd rather jump right into managing devices there's a hosted version of Deviceplane available at https://cloud.deviceplane.com/.
Run make db-reset
to setup the database. This command will reset the database to an empty state and then seed it with some basic data.
Run the controller with go run cmd/controller/main.go --allowed-origin "http://localhost:3000"
. By default it runs on port 8080.
Run the UI with npm start
in the ui/
folder. If it's your first time doing this, or if dependencies change, you'll need to run npm install
. The login is email@example.com
/ password
.
To run the agent navigate to the "Add Device" button in the UI. A command to run the agent locally will be generated and printed to the console.
Release the controller, agent, or CLI by pushing git tags.
git tag controller-x.x.x
git push origin controller-x.x.x
git tag agent-x.x.x
git push origin agent-x.x.x
git tag cli-x.x.x
git push origin cli-x.x.x