--- layout: page title: "One wire Sensor" description: "Instructions how to integrate One wire (1-wire) sensors into Home Assistant." date: 2017-09-15 10:10 sidebar: true comments: false sharing: true footer: true logo: onewire.png ha_category: DIY ha_release: 0.12 ha_iot_class: "Local Polling" --- The `onewire` platform supports sensors which are using the One wire (1-wire) bus for communication. Supported devices: - [DS18B20](https://datasheets.maximintegrated.com/en/ds/DS18B20.pdf) - [DS18S20](https://www.maximintegrated.com/en/products/analog/sensors-and-sensor-interface/DS18S20.html) - [DS1822](https://datasheets.maximintegrated.com/en/ds/DS1822.pdf) - [DS1825](https://datasheets.maximintegrated.com/en/ds/DS1825.pdf) - [DS28EA00](https://datasheets.maximintegrated.com/en/ds/DS28EA00.pdf) temperature sensors - [DS2406/TAI-8570](https://datasheets.maximintegrated.com/en/ds/DS2406.pdf) Temperature and pressure sensor made by AAG - [DS2438/B1-R1-A](https://datasheets.maximintegrated.com/en/ds/DS2438.pdf) Temperature, pressure and humidity sensor by AAG The 1-Wire bus can be connected directly to the IO pins of Raspberry Pi or using dedicated interface adapter (e.g [DS9490R](https://datasheets.maximintegrated.com/en/ds/DS9490-DS9490R.pdf)). #### Raspberry Pi setup In order to setup 1-Wire support on Raspberry Pi, you'll need to edit `/boot/config.txt` following [this documentation](https://www.waveshare.com/wiki/Raspberry_Pi_Tutorial_Series:_1-Wire_DS18B20_Sensor#Enable_1-Wire). Don't use the `mount_dir` option. #### Interface adapter setup When an interface adapter is used, sensors can be accessed on Linux hosts via [owfs 1-Wire file system](http://owfs.org/). When using an interface adapter and the owfs, the `mount_dir` option must be configured to correspond a directory, where owfs device tree has been mounted.

This component has been modified to work with devices with multiple sensors which will cause a discontinuity in recorded values. Existing devices will receive a new ID and therefore show up as new devices. If you wish to maintain continuity it can be resolved in the database by renaming the old devices to the new names. Connect to your database using the instructions from [home-assistant.io/docs/backend/database/](https://home-assistant.io/docs/backend/database/). Check the names of sensors: ```sql SELECT entity_id, COUNT(*) as count FROM states GROUP BY entity_id ORDER BY count DESC LIMIT 10; ``` Alter the names of sensors using the following examples: ```sql UPDATE states SET entity_id='sensor._temperature' WHERE entity_id LIKE 'sensor.%' AND attributes LIKE '%\u00b0C%'; UPDATE states SET entity_id='sensor._pressure' WHERE entity_id LIKE 'sensor.%' AND attributes LIKE '%mb%'; UPDATE states SET entity_id='sensor._humidity' WHERE entity_id LIKE 'sensor.%' AND attributes LIKE '%%%' ESCAPE ''; ``` Remember to replace `` with the actual name of the sensor as seen in the `SELECT` query.

#### Home Assistant setup To enable One wire sensors in your installation, add the following to your `configuration.yaml` file: ```yaml # Example configuration.yaml entry sensor: - platform: onewire names: some_id: your name ``` Configuration variables: - **names** array (*Optional*): ID and friendly name of your sensors. - **mount_dir** (*Optional*): Location of device tree if owfs driver used.