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Notify_homeassistant
- Source: https://www.home-assistant.io/
- Icon Support: No
- Message Format: Text
- Message Limit: 32768 Characters per message
- Access your profile after logging into your Home Assistant website.
- You need to generate a Long-Lived Access Tokens via the Create Token button (very bottom of profile page)
Valid syntax is as follows:
hassio://{host}/{long-lived-access-token}
hassio://{user}:{pass}:{host}/{access_token}
hassio://{user}:{pass}:{host}:{port}/{access_token}
hassio://{host}/optional/path/{access_token}
hassio://{user}:{pass}:{host}/optional/path/{access_token}
hassio://{user}:{pass}:{host}:{port}/optional/path/{access_token}
By default hassio://
will use port 8123
(unless you otherwise specify). If you use hassios://
(adding an s
) to the end, then you use the https
protocol on port 443
(unless otherwise specified).
So the same URL's above could be written using a secure connection/port as:
hassios://{host}/{access_token}
hassios://{user}:{pass}:{host}/{access_token}
hassios://{user}:{pass}:{host}:{port}/{access_token}
hassios://{host}/optional/path/{access_token}
hassios://{user}:{pass}:{host}/optional/path/{access_token}
hassios://{user}:{pass}:{host}:{port}/optional/path/{access_token}
The other thing to note is that Home Assistant requires a notification_id
associated with each message sent. If the ID is the same as the previous, then the previous message is over-written with the new. This may or may not be what your goal is.
So by default Apprise will generate a unique ID (thus a separate message) on every call. If this isn't the effect you're going for, then define your own Notification ID like so:
hassio://{host}/{long-lived-access-token}?nid=myid
Variable | Required | Description |
---|---|---|
access_token | Yes | The generated Long Lived Access Token from your profile page. |
hostname | Yes | The Web Server's hostname |
port | No | The port our Web server is listening on. By default the port is 8123 for hassios:// and 443 for all jsons:// references. |
user | No | If you're system is set up to use HTTP-AUTH, you can provide username for authentication to it. |
password | No | If you're system is set up to use HTTP-AUTH, you can provide password for authentication to it. |
nid | No | Allows you to specify the Notification ID used when sending the notifications to Home Assistant. By doing this, each message sent to Home Assistant will replace the last. |
Send a Home Assistant notification:
# Assuming the {hostname} we're hosting Home Assistant on is just myserver.local (port 8123)
# Assuming our {access_token} is 4b4f2918fd-dk5f-8f91f
apprise -vvv hassio:///noreply@myserver.local/4b4f2918fd-dk5f-8f91f
Send a Home Assistant notification that always replaces the last one sent:
# Assuming the {hostname} we're hosting Home Assistant on is just myserver.local (port 8123)
# Assuming our {access_token} is 4b4f2918fd-dk5f-8f91f
# Fix our Notification ID to anything we want:
apprise -vvv hassio:///noreply@myserver.local/4b4f2918fd-dk5f-8f91f?nid=apprise
Secure access to Home Assistant just requires you to add an s
to the schema. Hence hassio://
becomes hassios://
like so:
# Assuming the {hostname} we're hosting a secure version of Home Assistant
# is accessible via my.secure.server.local (port 443)
# Assuming our {access_token} is 4b4f2918fd-dk5f-8f91f
apprise -vvv hassios:///noreply@my.secure.server.local/4b4f2918fd-dk5f-8f91f