Then just click UPLOAD and the sensor will magically appear in Home Assistant:
<imgtitle="ESPHome Home Assistant MQTT discovery"src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/esphome/hassio/master/esphome-dev/images/temperature-humidity.png"width="600px"></img>
## Installation
To install this Hass.io add-on you need to add the ESPHome add-on repository
first:
1. Add the epshomeyaml add-ons repository to your Hass.io instance. You can do this by navigating to the "Add-on Store" tab in the Hass.io panel and then entering https://github.com/esphome/hassio in the "Add new repository by URL" field.
2. Now scroll down and select the "ESPHome" add-on.
3. Press install to download the add-on and unpack it on your machine. This can take some time.
4. Optional: If you're using SSL certificates and want to encrypt your communication to this add-on, please enter `true` into the `ssl` field and set the `fullchain` and `certfile` options accordingly.
5. Start the add-on, check the logs of the add-on to see if everything went well.
6. Click "OPEN WEB UI" to open the ESPHome dashboard. You will be asked for your Home Assistant credentials - ESPHome uses Hass.io's authentication system to log you in.
You can view the ESPHome docs here: https://esphome.io/
## Configuration
**Note**: _Remember to restart the add-on when the configuration is changed._
Host the ESPHome dashboard under a relative URL, so that it can be integrated
into existing web proxys like nginx under a relative URl. Defaults to `/`.
### Option: `status_use_ping`
By default the dashboard uses mDNS to check if nodes are online. This does
not work across subnets unless your router supports mDNS forwarding or avahi.
Setting this to `true` will make ESPHome use ICMP ping requests to get the node status. Use this if all nodes always have offline status even when they're connected.