bvandeusen 988c13d51f
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feat(dashboard): phase C richer panels — host time-series graph + cpu sparklines
Milestone 72 phase C — bring the host-view graphs onto the dashboard:
- host_resource_history widget reworked into a real host-view chart: epoch-ms
  linear axis (no Chart.js date adapter), themed like the host-detail charts,
  maintainAspectRatio:false so it fills the resized panel, unique canvas per
  widget instance (wid), and empty states ("pick a host" / "no metrics yet").
  Was previously unusable — it had a broken time axis and no way to choose a host.
- Add a "host" param type: the edit form renders a live dropdown of hosts
  (dashboard routes now pass the host list to the editor); the chosen host_id is
  stored in config and fed to the widget.
- Hosts-overview widget gains a per-row CPU sparkline (last hour) via the shared
  sparkline_svg helper — the host-view at-a-glance trend, on the main widget.

Charts/sparklines render only in the browser, so CI can't exercise them — needs
an operator visual check.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-17 15:18:50 -04:00

Steward

A self-hosted network monitoring and infrastructure management hub for home servers. Steward gives you a single pane of glass over your hosts, services, and automation — with live-updating dashboards, alerting, and Ansible integration.


What It Does

  • Ping monitoring — TCP/ICMP probes with live latency history and configurable thresholds
  • DNS monitoring — resolution checks with optional expected-IP validation
  • Ansible — browse playbooks, trigger runs, stream output live
  • Alerting — threshold-based rules against any monitored metric, with email and webhook (Discord-compatible) notifications
  • Plugins — extend with additional data sources; Traefik metrics included out of the box
  • Dashboard widgets — all monitors and plugins contribute live-updating widgets

No JavaScript framework. No build step. No external workers or message brokers.


Quick Start — Docker

cp .env.example .env
# Set STEWARD_DATABASE_URL in .env

docker compose up -d

Open http://localhost:5000. On first run you'll be prompted to create the admin account.

This compose file builds the image locally and bind-mounts the source for live editing. To run a persistent instance off the published CI image instead, see Remote dev instance below.


Remote dev instance

For a long-lived instance on a remote server that tracks the dev CI line, use compose.deploy.yml. It pulls the published image (git.fabledsword.com/bvandeusen/steward:dev) rather than building, runs no source bind-mounts, and persists data in named volumes.

One-time prerequisite — registry push token (on the Git host). CI publishes the image, so the FabledSteward repo needs a push credential. The injected GITHUB_TOKEN lacks write:package, so create a Forgejo token scoped read:package + write:package and add it as the repo Actions secret REGISTRY_TOKEN. Until this exists, the publish CI job 401s and no :dev image is produced.

Standup (on the server):

# 1. Authenticate to the registry (read:package token is enough to pull)
docker login git.fabledsword.com -u <user>

# 2. Configure secrets
cp .env.example .env
# Set POSTGRES_PASSWORD. Leave STEWARD_SECRET_KEY unset to let the app
# generate + persist one on the /data volume.

# 3. Pull + boot
docker compose -f compose.deploy.yml up -d

Open http://<server>:5000 and create the admin account on first run.

Update to the latest dev build:

docker compose -f compose.deploy.yml pull
docker compose -f compose.deploy.yml up -d

Every push to dev that goes CI-green publishes a fresh :dev (and an immutable :<commit-sha> for rollback). To pin a specific commit, change the image: tag in compose.deploy.yml to :<sha>.


Quick Start — Bare Metal

Requires Python 3.11+ and PostgreSQL.

python -m venv .venv && source .venv/bin/activate
pip install -e .

cp config.example.yaml config.yaml
# Edit config.yaml — set database.url at minimum

steward --host 0.0.0.0 --port 5000

ICMP ping requires CAP_NET_RAW or the setuid ping binary. TCP mode (the default) needs no elevated privileges.


Configuration

Only two things must be set to run the app:

What How
Database URL STEWARD_DATABASE_URL env var or database.url in config.yaml
Secret key Auto-generated on first run and saved to /data/secret.key

Everything else — SMTP, webhooks, monitor intervals, Ansible sources, plugin settings — is configured through the web UI at /settings/.


Plugins

Drop a directory into plugins/ and enable it via the Settings UI. The Traefik plugin is included:

plugins/
└── traefik/      ← included; enable in Settings

See docs/plugins/ for a full plugin development guide.


Documentation

Document Contents
docs/architecture.md How the app works: startup sequence, routing, scheduler, DB pattern
docs/core/configuration.md Bootstrap config, DB-backed settings, all setting keys and defaults
docs/core/monitors.md Ping and DNS monitors: probe logic, metrics emitted, data models
docs/core/alerting.md Alert rules, state machine, notification channels, template variables
docs/core/ansible.md Playbook sources, run lifecycle, SSE streaming
docs/plugins/overview.md Plugin system: how loading works, plugin.yaml schema, required exports
docs/plugins/writing-a-plugin.md Step-by-step plugin development guide
docs/plugins/traefik.md Traefik plugin: config, metrics, alert rule examples
docs/reference/code-map.md Where every key function, model, and route lives in the codebase
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