
* Split MQTT documentation * Add more details * Move content to /docs * Enable sidebar * Move content to /docs * Enable sidebar * Move content * Update links * Remove wizard stuff * Enable sidebar * Minor changes * Move MQTT parts to /docs * update links * Update links and sync content * Fix link * Enable sidebar * Remove navigation * Remove navigation and other minor updates * Update links * Add overview page * Make title linkable * Update * Plit content * Update links * Rearrange content * New getting-started section * Add icons for docs * Update for new structure * Update for new structure * Add docs navigation * Add docs overview page * Remove ecosystem navigation * Add docs and remove other collections * Move ecosystem to docs * Remove duplicate files * Re-add ecosystem overview * Move to ecosystem * Fix permission * Update navigation * Remove collection * Move overview to right folder * Move mqtt to upper level * Move notebook to ecosystem * Remove un-used files * Add one more rectangle for iOS * Move two parts back from docs and rename Run step * Remove colon * update getting-started section * Add redirect * Update * Update navigation
4.2 KiB
layout, title, description, date, sidebar, comments, sharing, footer
layout | title | description | date | sidebar | comments | sharing | footer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
page | Autostart using Upstart | Instructions how to setup Home Assistant to launch on boot using Upstart. | 2015-9-1 22:57 | true | false | true | true |
Many linux distributions use the Upstart system (or similar) for managing daemons. Typically, systems based on Debian 7 or previous use Upstart. This includes Ubuntu releases before 15.04. If you are unsure if your system is using Upstart, you may check with the following command:
$ ps -p 1 -o comm=
If the preceding command returns the string init
, you are likely using Upstart.
Upstart will launch init scripts that are located in the directory /etc/init.d/
. A sample init script for systems using Upstart could look like the sample below.
#!/bin/sh
### BEGIN INIT INFO
# Provides: hass
# Required-Start: $local_fs $network $named $time $syslog
# Required-Stop: $local_fs $network $named $time $syslog
# Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
# Default-Stop: 0 1 6
# Description: Home\ Assistant
### END INIT INFO
# /etc/init.d Service Script for Home Assistant
# Created with: https://gist.github.com/naholyr/4275302#file-new-service-sh
#
# Installation:
# 1) If any commands need to run before executing hass (like loading a
# virutal environment), put them in PRE_EXEC. This command must end with
# a semicolon.
# 2) Set RUN_AS to the username that should be used to execute hass.
# 3) Copy this script to /etc/init.d/
# sudo cp hass-daemon /etc/init.d/hass-daemon
# sudo chmod +x /etc/init.d/hass-daemon
# 4) Register the daemon with Linux
# sudo update-rc.d hass-daemon defaults
# 5) Install this service
# sudo service hass-daemon install
# 6) Restart Machine
#
# After installation, HA should start automatically. If HA does not start,
# check the log file output for errors.
# /var/opt/homeassistant/home-assistant.log
PRE_EXEC=""
RUN_AS="USER"
PID_FILE="/var/run/hass.pid"
CONFIG_DIR="/var/opt/homeassistant"
FLAGS="-v --config $CONFIG_DIR --pid-file $PID_FILE --daemon"
REDIRECT="> $CONFIG_DIR/home-assistant.log 2>&1"
start() {
if [ -f $PID_FILE ] && kill -0 $(cat $PID_FILE) 2> /dev/null; then
echo 'Service already running' >&2
return 1
fi
echo 'Starting service…' >&2
local CMD="$PRE_EXEC hass $FLAGS $REDIRECT;"
su -c "$CMD" $RUN_AS
echo 'Service started' >&2
}
stop() {
if [ ! -f "$PID_FILE" ] || ! kill -0 $(cat "$PID_FILE") 2> /dev/null; then
echo 'Service not running' >&2
return 1
fi
echo 'Stopping service…' >&2
kill -3 $(cat "$PID_FILE")
while ps -p $(cat "$PID_FILE") > /dev/null 2>&1; do sleep 1;done;
echo 'Service stopped' >&2
}
install() {
echo "Installing Home Assistant Daemon (hass-daemon)"
echo "999999" > $PID_FILE
chown $RUN_AS $PID_FILE
mkdir -p $CONFIG_DIR
chown $RUN_AS $CONFIG_DIR
}
uninstall() {
echo -n "Are you really sure you want to uninstall this service? That cannot be undone. [yes|No] "
local SURE
read SURE
if [ "$SURE" = "yes" ]; then
stop
rm -fv "$PID_FILE"
echo "Notice: The config directory has not been removed"
echo $CONFIG_DIR
update-rc.d -f hass-daemon remove
rm -fv "$0"
echo "Home Assistant Daemon has been removed. Home Assistant is still installed."
fi
}
case "$1" in
start)
start
;;
stop)
stop
;;
install)
install
;;
uninstall)
uninstall
;;
restart)
stop
start
;;
*)
echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart|install|uninstall}"
esac
To install this script, download it, tweak it to you liking, and install it by following the directions in the header. This script will setup Home Assistant to run when the system boots. To start/stop Home Assistant manually, issue the following commands:
$ sudo service hass-daemon start
$ sudo service hass-daemon stop
When running Home Assistant with this script, the configuration directory will be located at /var/opt/homeassistant
. This directory will contain a verbose log rather than simply an error log.
When running daemons, it is good practice to have the daemon run under its own user name rather than the default user's name. Instructions for setting this up are outside the scope of this document.