Move content

This commit is contained in:
Fabian Affolter 2016-03-12 14:52:33 +01:00
parent 662821a268
commit 82fde628ce

View File

@ -10,34 +10,116 @@ footer: true
ha_category: Custom Python Component Examples
---
This is a simple hello world example to show the basics for setting a state. To use this example, create the file `<config dir>/custom_components/hello_state.py` and copy the below example code.
This is a simple tutorial/example on how to write a component for [Home Assistant](https://home-assistant.io/). We will work on a component called "hello_state" to beginn with. The purpose of this component is to display a given text in the frontend.
The setup of a development environment is described in the [Developers section](/developers/#starting-development) of the documentation.
## {% linkable_title Component %}
To get started, create the file `<config dir>/custom_components/hello_state.py` and copy the below example code.
```python
# The domain of your component. Should be equal to the name of your component.
"""
Support for showing text in the frontend.
For more details about this component, please refer to the documentation at
https://home-assistant.io/components/hello_state/
"""
import logging
_LOGGER = logging.getLogger(__name__)
DOMAIN = 'hello_state'
DEPENDENCIES = []
CONF_NAME = 'name'
DEFAULT_NAME = 'World'
def setup(hass, config=None):
"""Setup the Hello State component. """
_LOGGER.info("The 'hello state' component is ready!")
def setup(hass, config):
"""Setup is called when Home Assistant is loading our component."""
# Get the name from the configuration. Use DEFAULT_NAME if no name provided.
name = config[DOMAIN].get(CONF_NAME, DEFAULT_NAME)
# States are in the format DOMAIN.OBJECT_ID
hass.states.set('hello_state.hello', name)
# Return boolean to indicate that initialization was successfully.
return True
```
Load the component by adding the following to your `configuration.yaml`:
1. In the file header we decided to add some details: A short description and the link to the documentation.
2. We want to do some logging. This means that we import the Python logging module and create an alias.
3. The component name is equal to the domain name.
4. At the moment this component has no dependencies. For detail check [dependencies](/developers/creating_components/#dependencies) section.
5. The `setup` function will take care of the initialization of our component.
The component will only write a log message. Keep in mind for later that you have several options for the severity:
- `_LOGGER.info(msg)`
- `_LOGGER.warning(msg)`
- `_LOGGER.error(msg)`
- `_LOGGER.critical(msg)`
- `_LOGGER.exception(msg)`
7. We return `True` if everything is ok.
Add the component to your `configuration.yaml` file.
```yaml
# configuration.yaml entry
hello_state:
# optional
name: Paulus
```
After a start or a restart of Home Assistant the component will create an entry in the log.
```bash
16-03-12 14:16:42 INFO (MainThread) [custom_components.hello_state] The 'hello state' component is ready!
```
The next step is the introduction of configuration options. Most configuration details are coming out of the `configuration.yaml` file. To do that we need to update the `def setup()` method to accept configuration information and access the configuration variable in the `setup` method.
More details about this topic can be found in the [User given configuration](/developers/creating_components/#config-user-given-configuration) section.
```python
import logging
_LOGGER = logging.getLogger(__name__)
DOMAIN = 'hello_state'
DEPENDENCIES = []
CONF_TEXT = 'text'
DEFAULT_TEXT = 'No text!'
def setup(hass, config):
"""Setup the Hello State component. """
# Get the text from the configuration. Use DEFAULT_TEXT if no name is provided.
text = config[DOMAIN].get(CONF_TEXT, DEFAULT_TEXT)
# States are in the format DOMAIN.OBJECT_ID
hass.states.set('hello_state.Hello_State', text)
return True
```
To add the latest feature of our component, update the entry in your `configuration.yaml` file.
```yaml
information:
text: 'Hello, World!'
```
Thanks to `DEFAULT_TEXT` variable the component will launch even if no `text:` field is used in the `configuration.yaml` file. Quite often there are variables which are required. It's important to check if all mandatory configuration variables are provided. If not, the setup should fail. We will use the `validate_config` function as a helper to achive this. The next listing shows the essential parts.
```python
from homeassistant.helpers import validate_config
[...]
if not validate_config(config, {DOMAIN: [CONF_TEXT]}, _LOGGER):
return False
```
If `text:` is missing, there will be a warning in the log file.
```bash
16-03-12 14:37:37 ERROR (MainThread) [custom_components.hello_state] Missing required configuration items in hello_state: text
16-03-12 14:37:37 ERROR (MainThread) [homeassistant.bootstrap] component hello_state failed to initialize
```
After a start or a restart of Home Assistant the component will be visible in the frontend if the `configuration.yaml` file is up-to-date.
<p class='img'>
<img src='/images/screenshots/create-component01.png' />
</p>
To get your component included in the Home Assistant releases, follow the steps described in the [Submitting improvements](https://home-assistant.io/developers/#submitting-improvements) section. Basically you only need to move your component in the `homeassistant/component/` directory of your fork and create a Pull Request.