Eugenio Panadero a7f6915a9c
Add note about hue remotes support (#12624)
as device triggers and battery sensors
2020-04-01 20:45:52 +02:00

8.0 KiB

title, description, ha_category, ha_iot_class, featured, ha_release, ha_config_flow, ha_quality_scale, ha_codeowners, ha_domain
title description ha_category ha_iot_class featured ha_release ha_config_flow ha_quality_scale ha_codeowners ha_domain
Philips Hue Instructions on setting up Philips Hue within Home Assistant.
Hub
Light
Local Polling true 0.60 true platinum
@balloob
hue

The Philips Hue integration allows you to control and monitor the lights and motion sensors connected to your Hue bridge. The preferred way to set up the Philips Hue integration is by enabling discovery.

There is currently support for the following device types within Home Assistant:

  • Lights
  • Motion sensors (including temperature and light level sensors)
  • Hue switches (as device triggers for automations and also exposed as battery sensors when they are battery-powered)

To set up this integration, click Configuration in the sidebar and then click Integrations. You should see "Philips Hue" in the discovered section (if you do not, click the + icon in the lower right and find Philips Hue). Click configure and you will be presented with the initiation dialog. This will prompt you to press the button on your Hue bridge to register the hub with Home Assistant. After you click submit, you will have the opportunity to select the area that your bridge is located.

When you configure the Hue bridge from Home Assistant, it writes a token to a file in your Home Assistant configuration directory. That token authenticates the communication with the Hue bridge. This token uses the IP address of the bridge. If the IP address for the bridge changes, you will need to register it with Home Assistant again. To avoid this, you may set up a DHCP reservation on your router for your Hue bridge so that it always has the same IP address.

Once registration is complete you should see the Hue lights listed as light entities, the Hue motion sensors listed as binary_sensor entities, and the Hue temperature and light level sensors (which are built in to the motion sensors) listed as sensor entities. If you don't, you may have to restart Home Assistant once more.

If you want to enable the integration without relying on discovery, add the following lines to your configuration.yaml file:

# Example configuration.yaml entry
hue:
  bridges:
    - host: DEVICE_IP_ADDRESS

{% configuration %} host: description: The IP address of the bridge (e.g., 192.168.1.10). Required if not using the discovery integration to discover Hue bridges. required: true type: string allow_unreachable: description: This will allow unreachable bulbs to report their state correctly. required: false type: boolean default: false allow_hue_groups: description: Disable this to stop Home Assistant from importing the groups defined on the Hue bridge. required: false type: boolean default: false {% endconfiguration %}

Examples

# Example configuration.yaml entry specifying optional parameters
hue:
  bridges:
    - host: DEVICE_IP_ADDRESS
      allow_unreachable: true
      allow_hue_groups: true

Multiple Hue bridges

Multiple Hue bridges work transparently with discovery, so you don't have to do anything special to set them up.

# Example configuration.yaml entry
hue:
  bridges:
    - host: BRIDGE1_IP_ADDRESS
    - host: BRIDGE2_IP_ADDRESS

Using Hue Groups in Home Assistant

The Hue API allows you to group lights. Home Assistant also supports grouping of entities natively, but sometimes it can be useful to use Hue groups to group light bulbs. By doing so, Home Assistant only needs to send one API call to change the state of all the bulbs in those groups instead of one call for every light in the group. This causes all the bulbs to change state simultaneously.

These Hue groups can be a Luminaire, Lightsource, LightGroup, or Room. The Luminaire and Lightsource can't be created manually since the Hue bridge manages these automatically based on the discovered bulbs. The Room and LightGroup can be created manually through the API or the mobile app. A bulb can only exist in one Room, but can exist in more than one LightGroup. The LightGroup can be useful if you want to link certain bulbs together.

The 2nd generation Hue app only has the ability to create a Room. You need to use the first generation app or the API to create a LightGroup.

Example:

To create a LightGroup named Ceiling lights that contains the lights 1, 2, and 3, execute the following command:

$ curl -XPOST -d '{"name": "Ceiling lights", "lights": ["1", "2", "3"]}' http://<bridge>/api/<username>/groups

The <username> is the string that is used to register Home Assistant with the bridge. You can find it in the core.config_entries file in /PATH-TO-YOUR-CONFIGURATION/.storage/. <bridge> is the IP address or hostname of your Hue bridge.

You can find the IDs of your lights by executing the following command:

$ curl http://<bridge>/api/<username>/lights

Home Assistant will automatically detect your new LightGroup and add it to the interface.

To support Hue light groups, your bridge needs to have at least firmware 1.13 (released on June 3, 2016).

More information can be found on the Philips Hue API documentation website.

Using Hue Scenes in Home Assistant

The Hue platform has its own concept of scenes for setting the colors of a group of lights simultaneously. Hue Scenes are very cheap, get created by all kinds of apps (as it is the only way to have 2 or more lights change at the same time), and are rarely deleted. A typical Hue hub might have hundreds of scenes stored in them—many that you've never used, and almost all very poorly named.

To avoid user interface overload, we don't expose scenes directly. Instead there is a hue.hue_activate_scene service which can be used in an automation or script. This will have all the bulbs transitioned at once, instead of one at a time like when using standard scenes in Home Assistant.

For instance:

script:
  porch_on:
    sequence:
      - service: hue.hue_activate_scene
        data:
          group_name: "Porch"
          scene_name: "Porch Orange"
Service data attribute Optional Description
group_name no The group/room name of the lights. Find this in the official Hue app.
scene_name no The name of the scene. Find this in the official Hue app.

Note: group_name is not a reference to a Home Assistant group name. It can only be the name of a group/room in the Hue app.

Finding Group and Scene Names

The easiest way to find Hue scene names is to only use the scenes from the 2nd generation Hue app, which are organized by room (group) and scene name. Use the room name and scene name that you see in the app. You can test that these work at Developer Tools > Services in your Home Assistant instance.

Alternatively, you can dump all rooms and scene names using this gist. This does not tell you which groups and scenes work together, but it is sufficient to get values that you can test at Developer Tools > Services.

Caveats

The Hue API doesn't activate scenes directly; rather, they must be associated with a Hue group (typically rooms, especially if using the 2nd generation Hue app). But Hue scenes don't actually reference their group, so heuristic matching is used.

Neither group names nor scene names are guaranteed unique in Hue. If you are observing unexpected behavior from calling Hue scenes in Home Assistant, make the names of your Hue scenes more specific in the Hue app.

The Hue hub has limited space for scenes and will delete scenes if new ones get created that would overflow that space. The API documentation says this is based on the scenes that are "least recently used."