3.8 KiB
title | description | logo | ha_category | ha_release | ha_iot_class | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Serial | Instructions on how to integrate data from serial connected sensors into Home Assistant. | home-assistant.png |
|
0.56 | Local Polling |
The serial
sensor platform is using the data provided by a device connected to the serial port of the system where Home Assistant is running. With ser2net
and socat
would it also work for sensors connected to a remote system.
To check what kind of data is arriving at your serial port, use a command-line tool like minicom
or picocom
on Linux, on a macOS you can use screen
or on Windows putty
.
sudo minicom -D /dev/ttyACM0
Configuration
To setup a serial sensor to your installation, add the following to your configuration.yaml
file:
# Example configuration.yaml entry
sensor:
- platform: serial
serial_port: /dev/ttyACM0
{% configuration %} serial_port: description: Local serial port where the sensor is connected and access is granted. required: true type: string name: description: Friendly name to use for the frontend. Default to "Serial sensor". required: false type: string baudrate: description: Baudrate of the serial port. required: false default: 9600 Bps type: integer value_template: description: "Defines a template to extract a value from the serial line." required: false type: template {% endconfiguration %}
value_template
for Template sensor
TMP36
{% raw %}
"{{ (((states('sensor.serial_sensor') | float * 5 / 1024 ) - 0.5) * 100) | round(1) }}"
{% endraw %}
Examples
Arduino
For controllers of the Arduino family, a possible sketch to read the temperature and the humidity could look like the sample below.The returned data is in JSON format and can be split into the individual sensor values using a template.
#include <ArduinoJson.h>
void setup() {
Serial.begin(115200);
}
void loop() {
StaticJsonDocument<100> jsonBuffer;
jsonBuffer["temperature"] = analogRead(A0);
jsonBuffer["humidity"] = analogRead(A1);
serializeJson(jsonBuffer, Serial);
Serial.println();
delay(1000);
}
Devices returning multiple sensors as a text string
For devices that return multiple sensors as a concatenated string of values with a delimiter, (i.e., the returned string is not JSON formatted) you can make several template sensors, all using the same serial response. For example, a stream from the Sparkfun USB Weather Board includes temperature, humidity and barometric pressure within it returned text string. Sample returned data:
$,24.1,50,12.9,1029.83,0.0,0.00,*
$,24.3,51,12.8,1029.76,0.0,0.00,*
To parse this into individual sensors, split using the comma delimiter and then create a template sensor for each item of interest.
{% raw %}
# Example configuration.yaml entry
sensor:
- platform: serial
serial_port: /dev/ttyUSB0
baudrate: 9600
- platform: template
sensors:
my_temperature_sensor:
friendly_name: Temperature
unit_of_measurement: "°C"
value_template: "{{ states('sensor.serial_sensor').split(',')[1] | float }}"
my_humidity_sensor:
friendly_name: Humidity
unit_of_measurement: "%"
value_template: "{{ states('sensor.serial_sensor').split(',')[2] | float }}"
my_barometer:
friendly_name: Barometer
unit_of_measurement: "mbar"
value_template: "{{ states('sensor.serial_sensor').split(',')[4] | float }}"
{% endraw %}
Digispark USB Development Board
This blog post describes the setup with a Digispark USB Development Board.