2.3 KiB
Configuration
Automatic
You can use an USB drive with HassOS to configure network options, SSH access to the host and to install updates.
Format a USB stick with FAT32/EXT4/NTFS and name it CONFIG
. Alternative you can create a CONFIG
folder inside boot partition. Use the following directory structure within the USB drive:
network/
modules/
udev/
authorized_keys
timesyncd.conf
hassos-xy.raucb
- The
network
folder can contain any kind of NetworkManager connection files. For more information see Network. - The
modules
folder is for modules-load configuration files. - The
udev
folder is for udev rules files. - The
authorized_keys
file activates debug SSH access on port22222
. See Debugging Hassio. - The
timesyncd.conf
file allow you to set different NTP servers. HassOS won't boot without correct working time servers! - The
hassos-*.raucb
file is a firmware OTA update which will be installed. These can be found on on the release page.
You can put this USB stick into the device and it will be read on startup. You can also trigger this process later over the
API/UI or by calling systemctl restart hassos-config
on the host.
Local
Bootargs
You can edit or create a cmdline.txt
in your boot partition. That will be read from the bootloader.
Kernel-Module
The kernel module folder /etc/modules-load.d
is persistent and you can add your configuration files there. See Systemd modules load.
Udev rules
The udev rules folder /etc/udev/rules.d
is persistent and you can add your configuration files there.
Network
You can manual add, edit or remove connections configurations from /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections
.
NTP
You can manual edit the systemd timesync file on /etc/systemd/timesyncd.conf
.
Our default ntp configuration look like:
[Time]
NTP=time1.google.com time2.google.com time3.google.com
FallbackNTP=0.pool.ntp.org 1.pool.ntp.org 2.pool.ntp.org 3.pool.ntp.org