ESPHome: Difference between revisions
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To use it in Home Assistant, install the ESPHome integration. Once you do, it will find your ESPHome devices. This is slick. | To use it in Home Assistant, install the ESPHome integration. Once you do, it will find your ESPHome devices. This is slick. | ||
My yaml file includes "ota:" which adds the "over-the-air" updates capability. | My yaml file includes "ota:" which adds the "over-the-air" updates capability. After the first successful upload over USB, it is faster to use OTA subsquently, | ||
After the first successful upload over USB, it is faster to use OTA subsquently, | and it is no longer necessary to pull the (for example) [[Martin Jerry]] S-01 switch out of the wall to update it, it can happen over-the-air and in-the-wall. | ||
and it is no longer necessary to pull the (for example) [[Martin Jerry]] S-01 switch | |||
out of the wall to update it, it can happen over-the-air and in-the-wall. | |||
Check /etc/hosts on Bellman to find the correct IP address; this is for wemos02 | Check /etc/hosts on Bellman to find the correct IP address; this is for wemos02 | ||
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When leftover entries clog up Home Assistant due to changes during development, run this | When leftover entries clog up Home Assistant due to changes during development, run this | ||
esphome | esphome clean-mqtt config.yaml | ||
== Motion sensor == | == Motion sensor == |
Revision as of 00:16, 20 December 2024
Use ESPHome to set up ESP8266 and ESP32 devices to work with Home Assistant. It requires a configuration file to load firmware into your device. That's it. See the README but basically set up.
I gave up on installing it on my Windows laptop; it wanted some extra component installed, so I run it on Linux only now.
Once a device has been set up with OTA, it no longer needs a direct serial connection, additional updates are done Over The Air.
This creates a fresh esphome set up, I found I needed to delete the old one first yesterday to get all updates.
conda create -n esphome conda activate esphome pip install esphome
I keep my files in ~/Documents/source/esphome/
Build an initial yaml file, possibly with
esphome wizard esp12e.yaml
and install onto a device
esphome run esp12e.yaml
To use it in Home Assistant, install the ESPHome integration. Once you do, it will find your ESPHome devices. This is slick.
My yaml file includes "ota:" which adds the "over-the-air" updates capability. After the first successful upload over USB, it is faster to use OTA subsquently, and it is no longer necessary to pull the (for example) Martin Jerry S-01 switch out of the wall to update it, it can happen over-the-air and in-the-wall.
Check /etc/hosts on Bellman to find the correct IP address; this is for wemos02
esphome --device 192.168.123.204 --client-id wemos02 --verbose run wemos02.yaml
Clean MQTT
When leftover entries clog up Home Assistant due to changes during development, run this
esphome clean-mqtt config.yaml
Motion sensor
I built up a protoboard with a Wemos D1 Mini, an OLED display (ssd1306_i2c), two push buttons, an LED, and a RADAR motion sensor.
Everything is exposed in Home Assistant via the integration, so for example, when I push a button, "wemos02 button 1" in Home Assistant changes state from OFF to ON.
Communication runs both directions, so in Home Assistant I can adjust the brightness of the LEDs on my little board.
According to Adafruit, the pixels will dim out after 1000 hours of use so I need to switch it off when it's not needed.
Cree Connected Max remote
I picked up a remote at Lowe's clearance table for $8. No idea if I can use it. So far I have learned it's a Tuya device built on a CBU mcu.
In theory I can put ESPHome on it, see https://community.home-assistant.io/t/detailed-guide-on-how-to-flash-the-new-tuya-beken-chips-with-openbk7231t/437276
Not working on it today, though.