2018-10-05 18:00:02 +02:00

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page Blink Instructions for how to integrate Blink camera/security system within Home Assistant. 2017-03-05 22:13 true false true true blink.png Hub 0.40 Cloud Polling

The blink component lets you view camera images and motion events from Blink camera and security systems.

You will need your Blink login information (username, which is usually your email address, and password) to use this module.

{% linkable_title Configuration %}

To enable devices linked in your Blink account, add the following to your configuration.yaml file:

# Example configuration.yaml entry
blink:
  username: YOUR_USERNAME
  password: YOUR_PASSWORD

{% configuration %} username: description: The username for accessing your Blink account. required: true type: string password: description: The password for accessing your Blink account. required: true type: string scan_interval: description: How frequently to query for new data. Defaults to 60 seconds. required: false type: integer binary_sensors: description: Binary sensor configuration options. required: false type: map keys: monitored_conditions: description: The conditions to create sensors from. required: false type: list default: all (motion_enabled, motion_detected) sensors: description: Sensor configuration options. required: false type: map keys: monitored_conditions: description: The conditions to create sensors from. required: false type: list default: all (battery, temperature, status, wifi_strength) {% endconfiguration %}

Since the cameras are battery operated, setting the scan_interval must be done with care so as to not drain the battery too quickly, or hammer Blink's servers with too many API requests. The cameras can be manually updated via the trigger_camera service which will ignore the throttling caused by scan_interval. As a note, all of the camera-specific sensors are only polled when a new image is requested from the camera. This means that relying on any of these sensors to provide timely and accurate data is not recommended.

Note: Each camera reports two different states, one as sensor.blink_<camera_name>_status and the other as binary_sensor.blink_<camera_name>_motion_enabled. The motion_enabled property reports if the camera is ready to detect motion regardless if the system is actually armed*. The status property is more descriptive, and can be one of the following states:

  • disabled: System is disabled.
  • disarmed: Camera and/or system are disarmed and not ready to detect motion.
  • armed: System and camera are armed and detecting motion.

Below is an example showing every possible entry:

# Example configuration.yaml entry
blink:
  username: YOUR_USERNAME
  password: YOUR_PASSWORD
  scan_interval: 60
  binary_sensors:
    monitored_conditions:
      - motion_enabled
      - motion_detected
  sensors:
    monitored_conditions:
      - battery
      - temperature
      - status
      - wifi_strength

{% linkable_title Services %}

Force a refresh of the Blink system.

{% linkable_title blink.trigger_camera %}

Trigger a camera to take a new still image.

Service Data Attribute Optional Description
name no Name of camera to take new image with.

{% linkable_title blink.save_video %}

Save the last recorded video of a camera to a local file. Note that in most cases, home-assistant will need to know that the directory is writable via the whitelist_external_dirs in your configuration.yaml file (see example below).

Service Data Attribute Optional Description
name no Name of camera containing video to save.
filename no Location of save file.
homeassistant:
    ...
    whitelist_external_dirs:
        - '/tmp'
        - '/path/to/whitelist'