--- layout: page title: "Automation" description: "Instructions how to setup automation within Home Assistant." date: 2015-01-20 22:36 sidebar: false comments: false sharing: true footer: true --- This page will go into more detail about the various options the `automation` component offers. If you haven't yet, read the [getting started page on automation](/getting-started/automation.html). A configuration section of an automation requires a `trigger` and an `action` section. `condition` and `condition_type` are optional. To keep this page compact, all following sections will not show the full configuration but only the relevant part. ```yaml # Example of entry in configuration.yaml automation: # Turns on lights 1 hour before sunset if people are home # and if people get home between 16:00-23:00 - alias: 'Rule 1 Light on in the evening' trigger: # Prefix the first line of each trigger configuration # with a '-' to enter multiple - platform: sun event: sunset offset: '-01:00:00' - platform: state entity_id: group.all_devices state: 'home' condition: # Prefix the first line of each condition configuration # with a '-'' to enter multiple - platform: state entity_id: group.all_devices state: 'home' - platform: time after: '16:00:00' before: '23:00:00' action: service: homeassistant.turn_on entity_id: group.living_room # Turn off lights when everybody leaves the house - alias: 'Rule 2 - Away Mode' trigger: platform: state entity_id: group.all_devices state: 'not_home' action: service: light.turn_off entity_id: group.all_lights # Notify when Paulus leaves the house in the evening - alias: 'Leave Home notification' trigger: platform: zone event: leave zone: zone.home entity_id: device_tracker.paulus condition: platform: time after: '20:00' action: service: notify.notify data: message: 'Paulus left the house' ``` - [Jump to conditions](#conditions) - [Jump to actions](#actions) - [Jump to troubleshooting](#troubleshooting) ## {% linkable_title Triggers %} Triggers are what starts the processing of an automation rule. It is possible to specify multiple triggers for the same rule. Once a trigger starts, Home Assistant will validate the conditions, if any, and call the action. #### {% linkable_title Event trigger %} Triggers when an event is being processed. Events are the raw building blocks of Home Assistant. You can match events on just the event name or also require specific event data to be present. ```yaml automation: trigger: platform: event event_type: MY_CUSTOM_EVENT # optional event_data: mood: happy ``` #### {% linkable_title MQTT trigger %} Triggers when a specific message is received on given topic. Optionally can match on the payload being sent over the topic. ```yaml automation: trigger: platform: mqtt topic: living_room/switch/ac # Optional payload: 'on' ``` #### {% linkable_title Numeric state trigger %} On state change of a specified entity, attempts to parse the state as a number and triggers if value is above and/or below a threshold. ```yaml automation: trigger: platform: numeric_state entity_id: sensor.temperature # At least one of the following required above: 17 below: 25 ``` #### {% linkable_title State trigger %} Triggers when the state of an entity changes. If only entity_id given will match all state changes. ```yaml automation: trigger: platform: state entity_id: device_tracker.paulus # Optional from: 'not_home' to: 'home' ```

Use quotes around your values for from and to to avoid the YAML parser interpreting some values as booleans.

#### {% linkable_title Sun trigger %} Trigger when the sun is setting or rising. An optional time offset can be given to have it trigger for example 45 minutes before sunset, when dusk is setting in. ```yaml automation: trigger: platform: sun # Possible values: sunset, sunrise event: sunset # Optional time offset. This example is 45 minutes. offset: '-00:45:00' ``` #### {% linkable_title Time trigger %} Time can be triggered in many ways. The most common is to specify `after` and trigger at a specific point in time each day. Alternatively, you can also match if the hour, minute or second of the current time has a specific value. For example, by only setting minutes in the config to 5 it will trigger every hour when it is 5 minutes past whole. You cannot use `after` together with hour, minute or second. ```yaml automation: trigger: platform: time # All following are optional. # When 'after' is used, you cannot also match on hour, minute, seconds. # Military time format. # after: '15:32:00' hours: 0 minutes: 5 seconds: 0 weekday: - sat - sun ``` You can use `weekday` to limit the trigger times to speific days as well (also available in conditions). Valid values for `weekday` are (`sun`, `mon`, `tue`, `wed`, `thu`, `fri` & `sat`) The above example will trigger on Saturday and Sunday every hour on the 5 (2:05, 3:05, 4:05, etc). #### {% linkable_title Zone trigger %} Zone triggers can trigger when an entity is entering or leaving the zone. For zone automation to work, you need to have setup a device tracker platform that supports reporting GPS coordinates. Currently this is limited to the [OwnTracks platform](/components/device_tracker.owntracks.html). ```yaml automation: trigger: platform: zone entity_id: device_tracker.paulus zone: zone.home # Event is either enter or leave event: enter ``` ## {% linkable_title Conditions %} Conditions are an optional part of an automation rule and be used to prevent an action from happening when triggered. Conditions look very familiar to triggers but are very different. A trigger will look at events happening at the system while a condition only looks at how the system looks right now. A trigger can observe that a switch is being turned on. A condition can only see if a switch is on or off. An automation rule can have mulitiple triggers. By default the action will only fire if all conditions pass. An optional key `condition_type: 'or'` can be set on the automation rule to fire action if any condition matches. In the example below, the automation would trigger if the time is before 05:00 _OR_ after 20:00. ```yaml automation: condition_type: or condition: - platform: time before: '05:00' - platform: time after: '20:00' ``` If your triggers and conditions are exactly the same, you can use a shortcut to specify conditions. In this case, triggers that are not valid conditions will be ignored. ```yaml automation: condition: use_trigger_values ``` #### {% linkable_title Numeric state condition %} Attempts to parse the state of specified entity as a number and triggers if value is above and/or below a threshold. ```yaml automation: condition: platform: numeric_state entity_id: sensor.temperature # At least one of the following required above: 17 below: 25 ``` #### {% linkable_title State condition %} Tests if an entity is a specified state. ```yaml automation: condition: platform: state entity_id: device_tracker.paulus state: not_home ``` #### {% linkable_title Time condition %} The time condition can test if it is after a specified time, before a specified time or if it is a certain day of the week ```yaml automation: condition: platform: time # At least one of the following is required. after: '15:00:00' before: '23:00:00' weekday: - mon - wed - fri ``` Valid values for `weekday` are (sun, mon, tue, wed, thu, fri & sat) #### {% linkable_title Zone condition %} Zone conditions test if an entity is in a certain zone. For zone automation to work, you need to have setup a device tracker platform that supports reporting GPS coordinates. Currently this is limited to the [OwnTracks platform](/components/device_tracker.owntracks.html). ```yaml automation: condition: platform: zone entity_id: device_tracker.paulus zone: zone.home ``` ## {% linkable_title Actions %} When an automation rule fires, it calls a service. For this service you can specify an entity id it should apply to and optional service parameters (to specify for example the brightness). ```yaml automation: # Change the light in the kitchen and living room to 150 brightness and color red. action: service: homeassistant.turn_on entity_id: - light.kitchen - light.living_room data: brightness: 150 rgb_color: [255, 0, 0] ``` ```yaml automation: # Notify me on my mobile phone of an event action: service: notify.notify data: message: Something just happened, better take a look! ``` If you want to specify multiple services to be called or include a delay, have a look at the [script component](/components/script.html). If you want to describe how certain entities should look, check out the [scene component](/components/scene.html). ## {% linkable_title Troubleshooting %} You can verify that your automation rules are being initialized correctly by watching both the realtime logs and also the logbook. The realtime logs will show the rules being initialized (once for each trigger): ```bash INFO [homeassistant.components.automation] Initialized rule Rainy Day INFO [homeassistant.components.automation] Initialized rule Rainy Day INFO [homeassistant.components.automation] Initialized rule Rainy Day INFO [homeassistant.components.automation] Initialized rule Rain is over ``` The Logbook component will show a line entry when an automation is triggered. You can look at the previous entry to determine which trigger in the rule triggered the event. ![Logbook example](/images/components/automation/logbook.png)