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layout | title | description | date | sidebar | comments | sharing | footer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
page | Getting Started | Step by step guide to get started with Home Assistant. | 2014-12-18 22:57 | false | false | true | true |
Installing Home Assistant and running it is easy. Make sure you have Python 3 installed and execute the following code in your console:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/balloob/home-assistant.git
cd home-assistant
pip3 install -r requirements.txt
python3 -m homeassistant
This will start the Home Assistant server and create an initial configuration file config/home-assistant.conf
that is setup for demo mode. It will launch its web interface on http://127.0.0.1:8123. The default password is 'password'.
If you're using Docker, you can use
docker run -d --name="home-assistant" -v /path/to/homeassistant/config:/config -v /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro --net=host balloob/home-assistant
After you got the demo mode running it is time to customize your configuration and enable some built-in components. See /config/home-assistant.conf.example
for an example configuration.
You can append ?api_password=YOUR_PASSWORD
to any url to log in automatically.
For the light and switch component, you can specify multiple platforms by using sequential sections: [switch], [switch 2], [switch 3] etc
Philips Hue
To get Philips Hue working you will have to connect Home Assistant to the Hue bridge.
Run the following command from your config dir and follow the instructions:
python3 -m phue --host HUE_BRIDGE_IP_ADDRESS --config-file-path phue.conf
After that add the following lines to your home-assistant.conf
:
[light]
platform=hue
Wireless router
Your wireless router is used to track which devices are connected. Three different types of wireless routers are currently supported: tomato, netgear and luci (OpenWRT). To get started add the following lines to your home-assistant.conf
(example for Netgear):
[device_tracker]
platform=netgear
host=192.168.1.1
username=admin
password=MY_PASSWORD
Tomato requires an extra config variable called `http_id`. The value can be obtained by logging in to the Tomato admin interface and search for `http_id` in the page source code.
Before the Luci scanner can be used you have to install the luci RPC package on OpenWRT: opkg install luci-mod-rpc
.
Once tracking, the device_tracker
component will maintain a file in your config dir called known_devices.csv
. Edit this file to adjust which devices have to be tracked. Here you can also setup a url for each device to be used as the entity picture.
As an alternative to the router-based device tracking, it is possible to directly scan the network for devices by using nmap. The IP addresses to scan can be specified in any format that nmap understands, including the network-prefix notation (192.168.1.1/24
) and the range notation (192.168.1.1-255
).
[device_tracker]
platform=nmap_tracker
hosts=192.168.1.1/24