4.9 KiB
layout | title | description | date | sidebar | comments | sharing | footer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
page | Installation on a Synology NAS | Instructions to install Home Assistant on a Synology NAS. | 2016-04-16 11:36 | true | false | true | true |
The following configuration has been tested on Synology 413j running DSM 6.0-7321 Update 1.
Running these commands will:
- Install Home Assistant
- Enable Home Assistant to be launched on http://localhost:8123
Using the Synology webadmin:
- Install python3 using the Synology package centre
- Create homeassistant user and add to the "users" group
SSH onto your synology & login as admin or root
Check the path to python3 (assumed to be /volume1/@appstore/py3k/usr/local/bin)
$ cd /volume1/@appstore/py3k/usr/local/bin
Install PIP (Python's package management system)
$ python -m ensurepip
Use PIP to install Homeassistant package
$ pip3 install homeassistant
Create homeassistant config directory & switch to it
$ mkdir /volume1/homeassistant
$ cd /volume1/homeassistant
Create hass-daemon file using the following code (edit the variables in uppercase if necessary)
#!/bin/sh
# Package
PACKAGE="homeassistant"
DNAME="Home Assistant"
# Others
USER="homeassistant"
PYTHON_DIR="/volume1/@appstore/py3k/usr/local/bin"
PYTHON="$PYTHON_DIR/python3"
HASS="$PYTHON_DIR/hass"
INSTALL_DIR="/volume1/homeassistant"
PID_FILE="$INSTALL_DIR/home-assistant.pid"
FLAGS="-v --config $INSTALL_DIR --pid-file $PID_FILE --daemon"
REDIRECT="> $INSTALL_DIR/home-assistant.log 2>&1"
start_daemon ()
{
su ${USER} -s /bin/sh -c "$PYTHON $HASS $FLAGS $REDIRECT;"
}
stop_daemon ()
{
kill `cat ${PID_FILE}`
wait_for_status 1 20 || kill -9 `cat ${PID_FILE}`
rm -f ${PID_FILE}
}
daemon_status ()
{
if [ -f ${PID_FILE} ] && kill -0 `cat ${PID_FILE}` > /dev/null 2>&1; then
return
fi
rm -f ${PID_FILE}
return 1
}
wait_for_status ()
{
counter=$2
while [ ${counter} -gt 0 ]; do
daemon_status
[ $? -eq $1 ] && return
let counter=counter-1
sleep 1
done
return 1
}
case $1 in
start)
if daemon_status; then
echo ${DNAME} is already running
exit 0
else
echo Starting ${DNAME} ...
start_daemon
exit $?
fi
;;
stop)
if daemon_status; then
echo Stopping ${DNAME} ...
stop_daemon
exit $?
else
echo ${DNAME} is not running
exit 0
fi
;;
restart)
if daemon_status; then
echo Stopping ${DNAME} ...
stop_daemon
echo Starting ${DNAME} ...
start_daemon
exit $?
else
echo ${DNAME} is not running
echo Starting ${DNAME} ...
start_daemon
exit $?
fi
;;
status)
if daemon_status; then
echo ${DNAME} is running
exit 0
else
echo ${DNAME} is not running
exit 1
fi
;;
log)
echo ${LOG_FILE}
exit 0
;;
*)
exit 1
;;
esac
Create links to python folders to make things easier in the future:
$ ln -s /volume1/@appstore/py3k/usr/local/bin python3
$ ln -s /volume1/@appstore/py3k/usr/local/lib/python3.5/site-packages/homeassistant
Set the owner and permissions on your config folder
$ chown -R homeassistant:users /volume1/homeassistant
$ chmod -R 664 /volume1/homeassistant
Make the daemon file executable:
$ chmod 777 /volume1/homeassistant/hass-daemon
Copy your configuration.yaml file into the config folder That's it... you're all set to go
Here are some useful commands:
- Start Home Assistant:
$ sh hass-daemon start
- Stop Home Assistant:
$ sh hass-daemon stop
- Restart Home Assistant:
$ sh hass-daemon restart
- Upgrade Home Assistant::
$ python3 -m pip install --upgrade homeassistant
{% linkable_title Troubleshooting %}
If you run into any issues, please see the troubleshooting page. It contains solutions to many of the more commonly encountered issues.
In addition to this site, check out these sources for additional help:
- Forum for Home Assistant discussions and questions.
- Gitter Chat Room for real-time chat about Home Assistant.
- GitHub Page for issue reporting.
{% linkable_title What's next %}
If you want to have Home Assistant start on boot, autostart instructions can be found here.
To see what Home Assistant can do, launch demo mode: hass --demo-mode
or visit the demo page.