home-assistant.io/source/hassio/installation.markdown
mcfrojd f73acb0ea2 Raspberry Pi 3 B+ note (#4935)
* Raspberry Pi 3 B+ note

Added note that pi 3 image does not work with pi 3 b+ yet

* ✏️ Improves the warning message

* 🚑 Removes old warning message
2018-03-16 16:02:05 +01:00

3.1 KiB

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page Installing Hass.io Instructions on how-to install Hass.io. 2017-04-30 13:28 true false true true

Hass.io images are available for all available Raspberry Pi and Intel NUC platforms.

The recently released Raspberry Pi 3 model B+ is not yet supported.

  • Download the appropriate image for your Raspberry Pi / Intel NUC:

  • Flash the downloaded image to an SD card using Etcher.

  • Optional - Setup the WiFi or static IP: On the SD-card, edit the system-connections/resin-sample file and follow the ResinOS howto.

  • Insert SD card to Raspberry Pi and turn it on. On first boot, it downloads the latest version of Home Assistant which takes ~20 minutes (slower/faster depending on the platform).

Please remember to ensure you're using an [appropriate power supply](https://www.raspberrypi.org/help/faqs/#powerReqs) with your Pi. Mobile chargers may not be suitable since some are designed to only provide the full power with that manufacturer's handsets.

If you copy over your existing Home Assistant configuration, make sure to enable the Hass.io panel by adding either `discovery:` or `hassio:` to your configuration.

{% linkable_title Alternative: install on generic Linux server %}

For advanced users, it is also possible to try Hass.io on your Linux server or inside a virtual machine. To do so, run the following command as root:

curl -sL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/home-assistant/hassio-build/master/install/hassio_install | bash -s

When you use this installation method, some add-ons will not be available, and the documentation might not work for your installation.

A detailed guide about running Hass.io as a virtual machine is available in the blog.