From cc3e2aa40f7d77361bf1db64d62cceccf284e0eb Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Fabian Affolter Date: Tue, 10 Oct 2017 09:07:35 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] UPdate formatting --- source/_components/device_tracker.owntracks_http.markdown | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/source/_components/device_tracker.owntracks_http.markdown b/source/_components/device_tracker.owntracks_http.markdown index 0895af69c1d..7e91746e55a 100644 --- a/source/_components/device_tracker.owntracks_http.markdown +++ b/source/_components/device_tracker.owntracks_http.markdown @@ -29,8 +29,8 @@ For configuration options and usage instructions, read the documentation for the Open OwnTracks and go to Connection preferences: - - Mode: Private HTTP + - Mode: Select **Private HTTP** - Host: [Home Assistant URL]:[port]/api/owntracks/[your name]/[device name] - - Identification: turn authentication on, username `homeassistant` and password is your API password that you use to login to Home Assistant. + - Identification: Turn **Authentication** on, username `homeassistant` and password is your API password that you use to login to Home Assistant. Host example: If I host my Home Assistant at `https://example.duckdns.org`, my name is Paulus and my phone is a Pixel I would set the host to be `https://example.duckdns.org/api/owntracks/paulus/pixel`. This will result in an entity with an ID of `device_tracker.paulus_pixel`. You can pick any name for the user and the device.