This is the Home Assistant addon for HA_enoceanmqtt.
HA_enoceanmqtt allows to easily have access to EnOcean devices in Home Assistant through MQTT.
The addon repository has been moved from the HA_enoceanmqtt repository to this new one.
This has been done as the addon and HA_enoceanmqtt may evolve at different pace and keeping separate repositories seems easier to me to handle that.
The migration is possible without losing your current setup:
- Go to Settings → Add-ons, go to your current addon page and browse to the configuration tab.
- Click ⋮ → Edit as YAML, and copy your configuration then paste it in a temporary file of your choice.
- If the addon is running, stop it first then uninstall it.
- Once the addon is uninstalled, go to the Add-on store, click ⋮ → Repositories and remove the old repository.
- Follow the instructions in the installation chapter below to install the new addon repository.
- Finally, in the configuration tab, click ⋮ → Edit as YAML and paste your previously saved configuration.
Note: Your device configuration file is not affected by the addon uninstallation.
- If you don't have a MQTT broker yet, in Home Assistant go to Settings → Add-ons → Add-on store and install the Mosquitto broker addon.
- Go back to the Add-on store, click ⋮ → Repositories, fill in
https://github.com/mak-gitdev/HA_enoceanmqtt-addon
and click Add → Close. - Click on the addon and press Install and wait until the addon is installed.
- Click on Configuration
- If you already have a previous valid configuration, click ⋮ → Edit as YAML and paste your previously saved configuration. Otherwise, follow the instructions below.
- Adapt the
addon/enoceanmqtt.devices.sample
and put it to your Home Assistant /config directory. You can use the Home Assistant File Editor.
Tip: Your device name can contain/
e.g.[lights/livingroom]
. This allows you to group your devices by type when exploring MQTT messages. - Indicate the location of this device file under the device_file entry.
- Leave empty the mapping_file entry to use the default mapping file. If you want to use a custom mapping file, indicate the location of your mapping file. This can be useful for people wanting to add support for new devices or customize the existing ones. Refer to this wiki page for more details.
- Leave empty the eep_file entry to use the default EEP.xml file. If you want to use a custom EEP.xml file, indicate the location of your EEP.xml file. This can be useful for people wanting to add support for new devices not yet supported by the Python EnOcean library. Refer to this wiki page for more details.
- Indicate your preferred location for the log file under the log_file entry. It shall be in your Home Assistant /config directory.
- Select the serial interface of your EnOcean transceiver in the list of detected serial ports. When using yaml configuration, the format is for example:
enocean_port: /dev/ttyUSB0
- If you are not using the Mosquitto broker addon, fill in your MQTT details. Otherwise, leave empty the MQTT broker configuration. The format is for example:
host: localhost port: '1883' user: my_user pwd: my_password
- Indicate the
mqtt_discovery_prefix
under the mqtt_discovery_prefix entry. This is the MQTT prefix used for MQTT Discovery mechanism from the MQTT integration. It defaults tohomeassistant
and can be configured in the Home Assistant MQTT integration as follow:mqtt: discovery_prefix: <prefix>
homeassistant
as it seems to be the one used in general.- Indicate the
mqtt_prefix
under the mqtt_prefix entry. This is the prefix which will be used to interact with your EnOcean devices.
EnOceanMQTT will interact with EnOcean devices through the device root topic<mqtt_prefix>/<device_name>
. - Turn on the debug switch if you want a very verbose log file.
- Other settings can be kept to their default values.
- Click Save
- Tip: it is possible to refer to variables in the Home Assistant
secrets.yaml
file by using e.g.pwd: '!secret mqtt_pwd'
- Start the addon by going to Info and click Start
- Wait till HA_enoceanmqtt starts and press Log to verify HA_enoceanmqtt started correctly.
See Usage for more information.
Issues should be reported on the HA_enoceanmqtt issue tracker.
The addon version follow the versions of HA_enoceanmqtt.
The format is: <HA_enoceanmqtt version>-<addon iteration> where HA_enoceanmqtt version format is: <major>.<minor>.<dev iteration>
Example:
0.2-1 = first addon iteration for version 0.2 of HA_enoceanmqtt (stable version)
0.2.2-1 = first addon iteration for version 0.2.2 of HA_enoceanmqtt (dev version, second iteration from stable version 0.2)
Note: x.y.0
and -0
are omitted.