--- layout: page title: "Ping (ICMP) Binary sensor" description: "Instructions on how to integrate Ping (ICMP)-based binary sensors into Home Assistant." date: 2017-04-11 08:00 sidebar: true comments: false sharing: true footer: true logo: home-assistant.png ha_category: Network ha_release: 0.43 ha_qa_scale: internal --- The `ping` binary sensor platform allows you to use `ping` to send ICMP echo requests. This way you can check if a given host is online and determine the round trip times from your Home Assistant instance to that system. ## {% linkable_title Configuration %} To use this sensor in your installation, add the following to your `configuration.yaml` file: ```yaml # Example configuration.yaml entry binary_sensor: - platform: ping host: 192.168.0.1 ``` {% configuration %} host: description: The IP address or hostname of the system you want to track. required: true type: string count: description: Number of packets to send. required: false type: integer default: 5 name: description: Let you overwrite the name of the device. required: false type: string default: Ping Binary sensor {% endconfiguration %} The sensor exposes the different round trip times values measured by `ping` as attributes: - `round trip time mdev` - `round trip time avg` - `round trip time min` - `round trip time max` The default polling interval is 5 minutes. As many components [based on the entity class](/docs/configuration/platform_options), it is possible to overwrite this scan interval by specifying a `scan_interval` configuration key (value in seconds). In the example below we setup the `ping` binary sensor to poll the devices every 30 seconds. ```yaml # Example configuration.yaml entry to ping host 192.168.0.1 with 2 packets every 30 seconds. binary_sensor: - platform: ping host: 192.168.0.1 count: 2 scan_interval: 30 ```

When run on Windows systems, the round trip time attributes are rounded to the nearest millisecond and the mdev value is unavailable.