diff --git a/atom.xml b/atom.xml index 4ba6513274..893d5bf4e3 100644 --- a/atom.xml +++ b/atom.xml @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
Note this command is one line and not run as sudo
-Installation will take approx. 1-2 hours depending on the Raspberry Pi model the installer is being run against.
+Installation will take approx. 1-2 hours depending on the Raspberry Pi model the installer is being run against. The installer will identitfy what Raspberry PI hardware revision you are using and adjust commands accordingly. A complete log of the install is located at: /home/pi/fabric-home-assistant/installation_report.txt
The installer has been updated to simply log any errors encountered, but resume installing. Please consult the “installation report” if your install encountered issues.
BRUH automation has created a tutorial video explaining how to install Raspbian on your Raspberry Pi and install Home Assistant using the All-In-One Installer.
Once rebooted, your Raspberry Pi will be up and running with Home Assistant. You can access it at http://your_raspberry_pi_ip:8123.
-The Home Assistant configuration is located at /home/hass
. The virtualenv with the Home Assistant installation is located at /srv/hass/hass_venv
. As part of the secure installation, a new user is added to your Raspberry Pi to run Home Assistant as named, hass. This is a system account and does not have login or other abilities by design. When editing your configuration.yaml files, you will need to run the commands with “sudo” or by switching user.
+
The Home Assistant configuration is located at /home/hass/.homeassistant
. The virtualenv with the Home Assistant installation is located at /srv/hass/hass_venv
. As part of the secure installation, a new user is added to your Raspberry Pi to run Home Assistant as named, hass. This is a system account and does not have login or other abilities by design. When editing your configuration.yaml files, you will need to run the commands with “sudo” or by switching user.
Windows users - Setting up WinSCP to allow this seemlessly is detailed below.
By default, installation makes use of a Python Virtualenv. If you wish to not follow this recommendation, you may add the flag -n
to the end of the install command specified above.
hass
service account/srv/hass/src/open-zwave-control-panel
To upgrade the All-In-One setup:
+To upgrade the All-In-One setup manually:
ssh pi@your_raspberry_pi_ip
pip3 install --upgrade homeassistant
To upgrade with fabric:
+ +ssh pi@your_raspberry_pi_ip
cd ~/fabric-home-assistant
fab upgrade_homeassistant
To launch the OZWCP webapp: