Installation on SUSE systems¶
This is a guide to installing WeeWX from an RPM package systems based on SUSE, such as openSUSE Leap.
WeeWX V5 requires Python 3.6 or greater, which is only available on SUSE-15 or later. For older systems, install Python 3 then install WeeWX using pip.
Configure zypper¶
The first time you install WeeWX, you must configure zypper so that it will
trust weewx.com, and know where to find the WeeWX releases.
-
Tell your system to trust weewx.com:
-
Tell
zypperwhere to find the WeeWX repository.
Install¶
Install WeeWX using zypper. When you are done, WeeWX will be running the
Simulator in the background.
Verify¶
After 5 minutes, copy the following and paste into a web browser. You should see simulated data.
If things are not working as you think they should, check the status:
and check the system log: See the Troubleshooting section of the User's guide for more help.Configure¶
To switch from the Simulator to real hardware, reconfigure the driver.
# Stop the daemon
sudo systemctl stop weewx
# Reconfigure to use your hardware
weectl station reconfigure
# Delete the old database
rm /var/lib/weewx/weewx.sdb
# Start the daemon
sudo systemctl start weewx
Customize¶
To enable uploads, or to enable other reports, modify the configuration file
/etc/weewx/weewx.conf using any text editor such as nano:
The reference Application options contains an extensive list of the configuration options, with explanations for what they do. For more advanced customization, see the Customization Guide, as well as the reference Skin options.
To install new skins, drivers, or other extensions, use the extension utility.
WeeWX must be restarted for the changes to take effect.
Upgrade¶
Upgrade to the latest version like this:
The upgrade process will only upgrade the WeeWX software; it does not modify the configuration file, database, or any extensions you may have installed.
If modifications have been made to the configuration file or the skins that
come with WeeWX, you will see a message about any differences between the
modified files and the new files. Any new changes from the upgrade will be
noted as files with a .rpmnew extension, and the modified files will be left
untouched.
For example, if /etc/weewx/weewx.conf was modified, you will see a message
something like this:
Uninstall¶
To uninstall WeeWX, deleting configuration files but retaining data:
When you use zypper to uninstall WeeWX, it does not touch WeeWX data, logs,
or any changes you might have made to the WeeWX configuration. It also leaves
the weewx user, since data and configuration files were owned by that user.
To remove every trace of WeeWX: