--- layout: page title: "Server-sent events" description: "Home Assistant Server-sent events documentation" date: 2016-04-08 07:00 sidebar: true comments: false sharing: true footer: true --- The [server-sent events](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Server-sent_events/Using_server-sent_events) feature is a one-way channel from your Home Assistant server to a client which is acting as a consumer. For bi-directional communication check the [RESTful API](/developers/rest_api/) and [Python API](/developers/python_api/). The URI that is generating the data is `/api/stream`. A requirement on the client-side is existing support for the [EventSource](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/EventSource) interface. There are various ways to access the stream. One is `curl`: ```bash $ curl -X GET -H "x-ha-access: YOUR_PASSWORD" \ -H "Content-Type: application/json" http://localhost:8123/api/stream ``` You can create a convenient view for this by creating an HTML file (`sse.html`) in the `www` folder of your Home Assistant configuration directory (`.homeassistant`). Paste this snippet into the file: ```html

Getting Home Assistant server events

``` Visit [http://localhost:8123/local/sse.html](http://localhost:8123/local/sse.html) to see the stream of events. ## {% linkable_title Examples %} A simple way to consume server-sent events is to use a command-line http client like [httpie](https://httpie.org/). Installation info is on the site (if you use Homebrew, it's `brew install httpie`). Once installed, run this snippet from your terminal: ```bash $ http --stream http://localhost:8123/api/stream x-ha-access:YOUR_PASSWORD content-type:application/json ``` ### {% linkable_title Website %} The [home-assistant-sse](https://github.com/fabaff/home-assistant-sse) repository contains a more advanced example. ### {% linkable_title Python %} If you want to test the server-sent events without creating a website, the Python module [`sseclient` ](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/sseclient/) can help. To install (assuming Python and pip3 are already installed): ```bash $ pip3 install sseclient ``` A simple script to consume SSE in Python looks like this: ```python from sseclient import SSEClient messages = SSEClient('http://localhost:8123/api/stream?api_password=YOUR_PASSWORD') for msg in messages: print(msg) ```