home-assistant.io/source/components/automation.markdown
2015-06-13 10:05:40 -07:00

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page Automation Instructions how to setup automation within Home Assistant. 2015-01-20 22:36 false false true true

This page will talk about automating Home Assistant using the automation component. For more advanced ways of automation, see the create a component page.

Each part of automation consists of two parts: the trigger part and the action part. The final result will look something like this:

automation:
  # Optional alias that the logs will use to refer to the entry
  alias: Sunset notification

  # Type of trigger and information for the trigger
  platform: state
  state_entity_id: sun.sun
  state_from: 'above_horizon'
  state_to: 'below_horizon'

  # Action to be done when trigger activated
  execute_service: notify.notify
  service_data: {"message":"The sun has set"}

Setting up triggers

Time-based automation

This allows you to trigger actions whenever the time matches your filter. You can setup filters to match on hours, minutes and seconds. Any filter that you omit will match all values.

Here are some example values:

  # Match at the start of every hour
  platform: time
  time_minutes: 0
  time_seconds: 0

  # Match at 4pm
  platform: time
  time_hours: 16
  time_minutes: 0
  time_seconds: 0

State-based automation

This allows you to trigger actions based on state changes of any entity within Home Assistant. You can omit the state_from and state_to to match all.

  # Match when the sun sets
  platform: state
  state_entity_id: sun.sun
  state_from: 'above_horizon'
  state_to: 'below_horizon'

  # Match when a person comes home
  platform: state
  state_entity_id: device_tracker.Paulus_OnePlus_One
  state_from: 'not_home'
  state_to: 'home'

  # Match when a light turns on
  platform: state
  state_entity_id: light.Ceiling
  state_from: 'off'
  state_to: 'on'

Use quotes around your values for state_from and state_to to avoid the YAML parser interpreting some values as booleans.

Setting up the action

Currently the only supported action is calling a service. Services are what devices expose to be controlled, so this will allow us to control anything that Home Assistant can control.

  # Turn the lights Ceiling and Wall on.
  execute_service: light.turn_on
  service_entity_id: light.Ceiling,light.Wall

  # Turn the lights Ceiling and Wall on and turn them red.
  execute_service: light.turn_on
  service_entity_id: light.Ceiling,light.Wall
  service_data: {"rgb_color": [255, 0, 0]}

  # Notify the user
  execute_service: notify.notify
  service_data: {"message":"YAY"}

Putting it all together

For every combination of a trigger and an action we will have to combine the configuration lines and add it to an automation component entry in configuration.yaml. You can add an optional alias key to the configuration to make the logs more understandable. To setup multiple entries, append 2, 3 etc to the section name. An example of a configuration.yaml file:

automation:
  alias: Sunset notification

  platform: state
  state_entity_id: sun.sun
  state_from: 'above_horizon'
  state_to: 'below_horizon'

  execute_service: notify.notify
  service_data: {"message":"The sun has set"}

automation 2:
  alias: Turn lights off at 8am in the morning

  platform: time
  time_hours: 8
  time_minutes: 0
  time_seconds: 0

  execute_service: light.turn_off

automation 3:
  alias: Turn lights in study room on when Paulus comes home

  platform: state
  state_entity_id: device_tracker.Paulus_OnePlus
  state_from: 'not_home'
  state_to: 'home'

  execute_service: homeassistant.turn_on
  service_entity_id: group.Study_Room

All configuration entries have to be sequential. If you have automation:, automation 2: and automation 4: then the last one will not be processed.