/homebridge-homeassistant

 Homebridge plugin for Home Assistant

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

Home Assistant for Homebridge

Control your accessories from Home Assistant with Siri and HomeKit. Set it up and poof, all of your supported accessories will be instantly controllable via Siri.

Device Support

Home Assistant is a home automation platform already, so this plugin aims to just expose your devices in a way that you can control them with Siri. While you can integrate your accessories into HomeKit for automations, the goals of this plugin are strictly to allow Siri to be a frontend for your accessories.

When you set up the Home Assistant plugin, all you have to do is point it at your Home Assistant server. The plugin pulls all your devices and exposes them automatically. Easy peasey.

Here's a list of the devices that are currently exposed:

  • Binary Sensor - door, leak, moisture, motion, smoke, and window state
  • Cover - exposed as a garage door or window covering (see notes)
  • Fan - on/off/speed
  • Input boolean - on/off
  • Lights - on/off/brightness
  • Lock - lock/unlock lock
  • Media Players - exposed as an on/off switch
  • Scenes - exposed as an on/off switch
  • Sensors - temperature, light and humidity sensors
  • Switches - on/off

Binary Sensor Support

Binary Sensors must have a sensor_class set. Accepted sensor_classes are moisture, motion, occupancy, opening and smoke.

For binary sensors with the opening sensor_class you can also set homebridge_opening_type to window to have the entity display as a window instead of a door to Homebridge.

Cover Support

Covers on your Home Assistant will appear as a garage door by default. In order to do change this you may specify its type in the customize section of your Home Assistant's configuration.yaml. Refer to the following example:

customize:
  cover.lounge_main:
    homebridge_cover_type: rollershutter
  cover.garage:
    homebridge_cover_type: garage_door

Media Player Support

Media players on your Home Assistant will be added to your HomeKit as a switch. While this seems like a hack at first, it's actually quite useful. While you can't control everything a media player does, it will give you the ability to toggle them on or off.

There are some rules to know about how on/off treats your media player. If your media player supports play/pause, then turning them on and off via HomeKit will play and pause them. If they do not support play/pause but instead support on/off they will be turned on and off.

Scene Support

Scenes will appear to HomeKit as switches. To trigger them, you can simply say "turn on party time". In some cases, scene names are already reserved in HomeKit...like "Good Morning" and "Good Night". These scenes already exist and cannot be deleted. Simply add your Home Assistant scene to them and set the state you would like them to be when executed. That's most like the ON state.

Installation

After installing and setting up Homebridge, you can install the Home Assistant plugin with:

npm install -g homebridge-homeassistant

Once installed, update your Homebridge's config.json.

Configuration

As with other Homebridge plugins, you configure the Home Assistant plugin by adding it to your config.json.

"platforms": [
  {
    "platform": "HomeAssistant",
    "name": "HomeAssistant",
    "host": "http://127.0.0.1:8123",
    "password": "yourapipassword",
    "supported_types": ["binary_sensor", "cover", "fan", "input_boolean", "light", "lock", "media_player", "scene", "sensor", "switch"]
  }
]

You can optionally whitelist the device types that are exposed to HomeKit with the supported_types array. Just remove a device type that you don't want and they will be ignored.

Using with self signed SSL certificates

If you have set up SSL using a self signed certificate, you will need to start Homebridge after running export NODE_TLS_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED=0 to allow bypassing the Node.js certificate checks.

Customization

If there's an entity you'd like to hide from Homebridge, you can do that by adding a homebridge_hidden tag and setting it to true in your Home Assistant customization configuration. Again, this is set on the Home Assistant side. e.g.:

customize:
  switch.a_switch:
    homebridge_hidden: true

You can also customize the name of a device by setting homebridge_name like this:

customize:
  switch.a_switch:
    homebridge_name: My awesome switch

Contributions

  • fork
  • create a feature branch
  • open a Pull Request