# 🌡️ Temperature Monitoring Pulse supports two methods for collecting hardware temperatures from Proxmox nodes. ## Recommended: Pulse Agent The simplest and most feature-rich method is installing the Pulse agent on your Proxmox nodes: ```bash curl -fsSL http://your-pulse-server:7655/api/download/install.sh | bash -s -- \ --url http://your-pulse-server:7655 \ --token YOUR_TOKEN \ --enable-proxmox ``` **Benefits:** - ✅ One-command setup - ✅ Automatic API token creation - ✅ Temperature monitoring built-in - ✅ Enables AI features for VM/container management - ✅ No SSH keys or proxy configuration required The agent runs `sensors -j` locally and reports temperatures directly to Pulse. --- ## Legacy: Sensor Proxy (SSH-based) For users who prefer not to install an agent on their hypervisor, the sensor-proxy method is still available. > **Note:** This method is deprecated and will be removed in a future release. Consider migrating to the agent-based approach. ### 🛡️ Security Model * **Isolation**: SSH keys live on the host, not in the container. * **Least Privilege**: Proxy runs as `pulse-sensor-proxy` (no shell). * **Verification**: Container identity verified via `SO_PEERCRED`. ### 🏗️ Components 1. **Pulse Backend**: Connects to Unix socket `/mnt/pulse-proxy/pulse-sensor-proxy.sock`. 2. **Sensor Proxy**: Validates request, executes SSH to node. 3. **Target Node**: Accepts SSH key restricted to `sensors -j`. ### 🔒 Key Restrictions SSH keys deployed to nodes are locked down: ``` command="sensors -j",no-port-forwarding,no-X11-forwarding,no-agent-forwarding,no-pty ``` ### 🚦 Rate Limiting * **Per Peer**: ~12 req/min. * **Concurrency**: Max 2 parallel requests per peer. * **Global**: Max 8 concurrent requests. ### 📝 Auditing All requests logged to system journal: ```bash journalctl -u pulse-sensor-proxy ``` Logs include: `uid`, `pid`, `method`, `node`, `correlation_id`.