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83 lines
3.4 KiB
Markdown
83 lines
3.4 KiB
Markdown
# Home Assistant Community Add-on: ESPHome
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## Installation
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The installation of this add-on is pretty straightforward and not different in comparison to installing any other Home Assistant add-on.
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1. Search for the “ESPHome” add-on in the Supervisor add-on store.
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2. Press install to download the add-on and unpack it on your machine. This can take some time.
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3. Optional: If you're using SSL/TLS 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.
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4. Start the add-on, check the logs of the add-on to see if everything went well.
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5. Click "OPEN WEB UI" to open the ESPHome dashboard. You will be asked for your Home Assistant credentials - ESPHome uses Home Assistant's authentication system to log you in.
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You can view the ESPHome documentation at https://esphome.io/
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## Configuration
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**Note**: _Remember to restart the add-on when the configuration is changed._
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Example add-on configuration:
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```json
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{
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"ssl": false,
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"certfile": "fullchain.pem",
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"keyfile": "privkey.pem"
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}
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```
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### Option: `esphome_fork`
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Install ESPHome from a fork or branch.
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For example to test a pull request, use `pull/XXXX/head` where `XXXX` is the PR number,
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or you can specify the username of the fork owner and branch `username:branch` which
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assumes the repository is named `esphome` still.
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Please note that the fork or branch you are using **must** be up to date with ESPHome dev
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or the add-on **will not start**.
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### Option: `ssl`
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Enables or disables encrypted SSL/TLS (HTTPS) connections to the web server of this add-on.
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Set it to `true` to encrypt communications, `false` otherwise.
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Please note that if you set this to `true` you must also generate the key and certificate
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files for encryption. For example using [Let's Encrypt](https://www.home-assistant.io/addons/lets_encrypt/)
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or [Self-signed certificates](https://www.home-assistant.io/docs/ecosystem/certificates/tls_self_signed_certificate/).
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### Option: `certfile`
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The certificate file to use for SSL. If this file doesn't exist, the add-on start will fail.
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**Note**: The file MUST be stored in `/ssl/`, which is the default for Home Assistant
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### Option: `keyfile`
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The private key file to use for SSL. If this file doesn't exist, the add-on start will fail.
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**Note**: The file MUST be stored in `/ssl/`, which is the default for Home Assistant
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### Option: `leave_front_door_open`
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Adding this option to the add-on configuration allows you to disable
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authentication by setting it to `true`.
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### Option: `relative_url`
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Host the ESPHome dashboard under a relative URL, so that it can be integrated
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into existing web proxies like NGINX under a relative URL. Defaults to `/`.
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### Option: `status_use_ping`
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By default the dashboard uses mDNS to check if nodes are online. This does
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not work across subnets unless your router supports mDNS forwarding or avahi.
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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.
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### Option: `streamer_mode`
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If set to `true`, this will enable streamer mode, which makes ESPHome hide all
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potentially private information. So for example WiFi (B)SSIDs (which could be
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used to find your location), usernames, etc. Please note that you need to use
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the `!secret` tag in your YAML file to also prevent these from showing up
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while editing and validating.
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