evcc is an extensible EV Charge Controller with PV integration implemented in Go. Featured in PV magazine.
- simple and clean user interface
- wide range of supported chargers:
- ABL eMH1, Alfen (Eve), Bender (CC612/613), cFos (PowerBrain), Daheimladen, Ebee (Wallbox), Ensto (Chago Wallbox), EVSEWifi/ smartWB, Garo (GLB, GLB+, LS4), go-eCharger, HardyBarth (eCB1, cPH1, cPH2), Heidelberg (Energy Control), Innogy (eBox), Juice (Charger Me), KEBA/BMW, Menneckes (Amedio, Amtron Premium/Xtra, Amtron ChargeConrol), NRGkick, openWB (includes Pro), Optec (Mobility One), PC Electric (includes Garo), Siemens, TechniSat (Technivolt), Tinkerforge Warp Charger, Ubitricity (Heinz), Vestel, Wallbe, Webasto (Live), Mobile Charger Connect and many more
- experimental EEBus support (Elli, PMCC)
- experimental OCPP support
- Build-your-own: Phoenix Contact (includes ESL Walli), EVSE DIN
- Smart-Home outlets: FritzDECT, Shelly, Tasmota, TP-Link
- wide range of supported meters for grid, pv, battery and charger:
- ModBus: Eastron SDM, MPM3PM, ORNO WE, SBC ALE3 and many more, see https://github.com/volkszaehler/mbmd#supported-devices for a complete list
- Integrated systems: SMA Sunny Home Manager and Energy Meter, KOSTAL Smart Energy Meter (KSEM, EMxx)
- Sunspec-compatible inverter or home battery devices: Fronius, SMA, SolarEdge, KOSTAL, STECA, E3DC, ...
- and various others: Discovergy, Tesla PowerWall, LG ESS HOME, OpenEMS (FENECON)
- vehicle integration (state of charge, remote charge, battery and preconditioning status):
- Audi, BMW, Citroën, Dacia, Fiat, Ford, Hyundai, Jaguar, Kia, Landrover, Mercedes, Mini, Nissan, Opel, Peugeot, Porsche, Renault, Seat, Smart, Skoda, Tesla, Volkswagen, Volvo, ...
- Services: OVMS, Tronity
- Scooters: Niu, Silence
- plugins for integrating with any charger/ meter/ vehicle:
- Modbus, HTTP, MQTT, Javascript, WebSockets and shell scripts
- status notifications using Telegram, PushOver and many more
- logging using InfluxDB and Grafana
- granular charge power control down to mA steps with supported chargers (labeled by e.g. smartWB as OLC)
- REST and MQTT APIs for integration with home automation systems
- Add-ons for HomeAssistant and OpenHAB (not maintained by the evcc core team)
You'll find everything you need in our documentation (German).
To build evcc from source, Go 1.20 and Node 18 are required.
Build and run go backend. The UI becomes available at http://127.0.0.1:7070/
make ui
make install
make
./evcc
For frontend development start the Vue toolchain in dev-mode. Open http://127.0.0.1:7071/ to get to the livelreloading development server. It pulls its data from port 7070 (see above).
npm install
npm run start
We use linters (golangci-lint, Prettier) to keep a coherent source code formatting. It's recommended to use the format-on-save feature of your editor. For VSCode use the Go, Prettier and Veture extension. You can manually reformat your code by running:
make lint
make lint-ui
evcc supports a massive amount of different devices. To keep our documentation and website in sync with the latest software the core project (this repo) generates meta-data that's pushed to the docs
and evcc.io
repository. Make sure to update this meta-data every time you make changes to a templates.
make docs
If you miss one of the above steps Gitub Actions will likely trigger a Porcelain error.
evcc already includes many translations for the UI. Weblate Hosted is used to maintain all languages. Feel free to add more languages or verify and edit existing translations. Weblate will automatically push all modifications on a regular base to the evcc repository.
https://hosted.weblate.org/projects/evcc/evcc/
evcc believes in open source software. We're committed to provide best in class EV charging experience. Maintaining evcc consumes time and effort. With the vast amount of different devices to support, we depend on community and vendor support to keep evcc alive.
While evcc is open source, we would also like to encourage vendors to provide open source hardware devices, public documentation and support open source projects like ours that provide additional value to otherwise closed hardware. Where this is not the case, evcc requires "sponsor token" to finance ongoing development and support of evcc.
The personal sponsor token requires a Github Sponsorship and can be requested at sponsor.evcc.io.