Skip to content

bschatzow/Home-AssistantConfig

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Home Assistant (0.105.5) configuration

This is my primary Home Assistant Core configuration, This instance is running 0.105.5 on a VM, using an old laptop (Intel Core i5-3230M), with a manual Python virtual environment install (aka Home Assistant Core) following this guide.

Each directory has a short readme explaining what's in there, and the purpose of each file or group of files.

Z-Wave

My Z-Wave stack runs on a Raspberry Pi 3, using the old All in One installer (effectively a manual install like this, on a 16 GB card, that I've upgraded to Python 3.6. I use a Razberry board for Z-Wave control. The configuration for that instance can be found here.

To limit the risk brought by SD card corruption (a known risk with Pi3) I store the Home Assistant database on a USB stick, and use a multi-port USB charger with sufficient power for all ports, but have left one unused. The power cables are short, and high quality, to minimise issues with voltage drop. Of course, I also take many different backups to reduce the risk of losing anything.

This is one of a number of Pi3s I've got, and they're all in a Multi-Pi stackable case, to keep the footprint down. They share an HDMI cable to a nearby monitor, and an old USB keyboard I've got kicking around, because having a Pi fail to respond isn't that uncommon.

The key software I run is

  • Home Assistant
  • Floorplan for a high level overview
    • Screenshot of floorplan
    • Showing:
      • No bins are due for collection otherwise they'd have a yellow outline (collected tomorrow) or red outline (collected today)
      • The living room and family room are occupied
      • The front door is open, motion has been detected in the downstairs hall, and two windows upstairs is open
      • The TV is on in the living room
      • The TV in the family room is on
      • All the mobiles are home, as is the tablet, and the car
      • The office is a bit warm (red temperature), and the humidity in the bathroom and master en-suite is a little high (amber)
      • Oh, and the printer isn't a little low on consumables.
    • The floorplan was created in Inkscape, by importing the image of the house's floorplan from the purchase paperwork, then drawing over it. If you look at it you'll see that I built it up in layers, one for the foundation (ground), one for the structure, and one for the sensors. I don't really use those currently, other than to ensure that the right things are on top (sensors).
  • nginx to provide remote access, in conjunction with Let's Encrypt
  • Mosquitto for the MQTT broker
  • MariaDB for the database

The devices, services, and software I use (with HA)

  • Sandisk Extreme micro SD cards (for the Z-Wave Pi)
  • Z-Wave
    • Z-Wave.me Razberry Z-Wave board - it has the advantage of not using a USB port, but does require that the onboard Bluetooth is disabled
    • Aeotec MultiSensor 6
    • Fibaro motion sensor in the living room
    • Fibaro FGK10x door sensors (previous generation, superseded by the FGDW-002) on the garage doors
    • Sensative door/window strips on the external house doors
    • TKB TKB TZ69E - metering wall plugs
    • Foxx Project Smart Switch (which identifies itself as an Aeotec ZW075, aka Smart Switch Gen5). These are cheap, but there's no local switch control for the attached device. Mostly I'm using these as range extenders.
    • NodOn Octan Remote in the master bedroom to provide manual control of the Yeelight. It was originally used by the kitchen door, where the next item is now mounted.
    • NodOn Soft Remote in the second bedroom, to also provide manual control of that room's Yeelight.
    • Z-Wave.me WALLC-S wall controller, to provide a wall switch for the garden lights
  • Zigbee, using Zigbee2MQTT running on another system
  • Lighting
    • Yeelight integration and led strips, one mounted behind the headboard in the master bedroom, and one along the wall side of the bed frame in the second bedroom. These provide good enough lighting to read by at night, and also to help wake us in the morning.
    • Outdoor mains 240V LED strip which we turn on and off with one of the wall plugs
    • A Flux LED compatible RGBW controller, a roll of RGB-CCT LED tape, and a 24V power supply.
  • Nabu Casa cloud, which is a paid service, instead of the previous Google Assistant integration. I use this with a bunch of Google Home Minis, a couple of Google Home Hubs, and a Lenovo Smart Display
  • Media
  • Notifications:
    • Telegram for my notifications, supported by Hangouts Chat using a command line notifier, and the REST notifier for Discord (system status notifications)
    • LaMetric for notifications "in person", and it's a clock the rest of the time
    • TTS with the Google Home Mini's, Sonos, and Squeezeboxes
  • Presence detection:
    • Back to using Nmap for device tracking. While I did switch to Fritz!Box device tracking when I upgraded my router, the router ran out of memory
    • Monitor on another Pi3, and a Pi Zero W. This has completely replaced the use of the built in Bluetooth device tracker, and more than halved the startup time of HA.
      • This works with our mobile phones, tablets, and beacons
    • GPS Logger for remote device tracking
      • I used to use OwnTracks for device tracking, using the HTTP interface, but not only did it have an annoying bug that caused it to randomly disable reporting, but it had been abandoned by the developer. Version 2.0 of the app solved both of those, but I've seen no reason to go back.
  • TransportAPI for information on the local train service with the UK transport integration
  • DarkSky for weather data, alongside the Met Office, along with the associated sensor integration
  • Plex for watching media, on TV, tablets and mobiles. I don't currently use the component
  • Xbox Live sensor which uses the XBoxAPI to track when one of us is on the XBox
  • Here Travel Time integration, replacing my previous use of the Google Travel Time integration (which uses the Google Distance Matrix) to provide estimated time to home
  • Getmail with a script that acts as the message delivery agent, to parse the recycling collection emails
    • I gave up on the the IMAP email content sensor since it doesn't keep state through restarts (which isn't unique to it, Home Assistant doesn't have a persistence mechanism other than for the input_* entities)
  • A HiWatch IPC-T140 dome camera, using the generic camera integration.

Custom integrations

Historically I didn't make much use of custom components/integrations, however that's changed. Here are the ones I use, and why:

  • HACS for intalling, updating, and finding new custom integrations. All other custom integrations are installed using this.
  • Circadian lighting since the built in flux integration isn't as good.
  • Home Assistant Remote for linking my Z-Wave and primary instances. This is more effective than my ugly MQTT hack.

Other software

Presence detection

  • If you were following along, you'll note I use three different device trackers, two for home (nmap, bluetooth) and one for away (GPSLogger). I explain more about this here, with an update here, and another update, and semi-finally a fourth. Short version - I don't merge the trackers (that's going away anyway), but I do use groups again. I've experimented with the Bayesian sensor, but compared to what I can do with the automations, it's not flexible enough for me.
  • When I said semi-finally, that's because I've a few tweaks to write up, and some other thoughts. I'll eventually get around to summarising these.

Notes

  • These are (automatically) modified versions of my actual configurations
  • The goals with Home Assistant have been:
    1. Minimise human actions, and where that isn't possible streamline those human actions
    2. Provide voice control where the automations don't get it right (but try to fix that)
    3. Have a minimal UI to provide manual control (this is currently the Google Home app)

Future plans

A large amount of this will require a rewire of the lighting circuits, so that all the light switches have a neutral wire.

Devices

  • Dimmer modules at most light switches, the exception will be the toilet (since there's a fan linked to it) and the outside light
  • Switch modules for the extractor fans
  • Multisensors (light/motion/humidity/temperature) in the bedrooms and bathrooms
  • Multisensors (light/motion/temperature) in all other rooms
  • Lots more door and window sensors, including on the garden gate
  • Some form of distance sensor (ultrasonic or laser) in the garage
  • Digital LED strip for the front of the garage
  • Analogue LED strips (likely with a Z-Wave controller) for accent lighting and pathway lighting

Automation thoughts

  • Turn on extractor fans when the humidity is more than 5 points above the adjacent room, turning off once they drop to within 5 points
  • During darkness, if a bathroom door is opened, turn the bathroom light on at a low level, turning up to medium when the door closes, turning it off when the person leaves
  • Turn on the outside front light when the front door opens, the doorbell rings, or somebody is less than 5 minutes away, and coming home
  • Other than bedrooms, when the room is in darkness and there's movement turn on the light at a very low level
  • During daytime, if the lights are on for too long turn them off
  • Seasonal use of the digital LED strip
  • Flash the relevant section of the LED strip red if the garage door is opening or closing

Useful links

  • Home Assistant documentation and integration list
  • Problems with Z-Wave delays and inconsistencies? Try this script in the dev-states section and you'll see if you've problem devices - shown by an RTT value of 1,000 or more, and retries significantly more than other devices
  • My blog on home automation and other things

Coffee

If I've helped you, and you really want to, you can buy me a coffee, but don't feel obliged - I'm not doing this for free coffee ;)

About

My Home Assistant configuration files

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • HTML 83.3%
  • CSS 10.3%
  • Shell 6.4%