Madelena Mak d4c03fe1be
Update the theme to match branding better (#33462)
Co-authored-by: Franck Nijhof <git@frenck.dev>
2024-06-30 13:47:01 +02:00

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### Running a development version
If you want to stay on the bleeding-edge Home Assistant Core development branch, you can upgrade to `dev`.
{% caution %}
The `dev` branch is likely to be unstable. Potential consequences include loss of data and instance corruption.
{% endcaution %}
{% if page.installation == "os" or page.installation == "supervised" %}
1. Join the dev channel.
```bash
ha supervisor options --channel dev
```
2. Reload the {% term "Home Assistant Supervisor" %}.
```bash
ha supervisor reload
```
3. Update {% term "Home Assistant Core" %} to the latest dev version.
```bash
ha core update --backup
```
_The_ `--backup` _flag here ensures that you have a partial backup of your current setup incase you need to downgrade._
{% elsif page.installation == "container" %}
```bash
docker pull {{ site.installation.container }}:dev
```
**[You then need to recreate the container with the new image.](/installation/linux#install-home-assistant-container)**
{% elsif page.installation == "core" %}
1. Stop the Home Assistant service.
2. Switch to the user that is running Home Assistant.
```bash
sudo -u homeassistant -H -s
```
3. Activate the virtual environment that Home Assistant is running in.
```bash
source /srv/homeassistant/bin/activate
```
4. Download and install the version you want.
```bash
pip3 install --upgrade git+https://github.com/home-assistant/core.git@dev
```
5. When that is complete, start the service again for it to use the new files.
{% endif %}