Spelling fixes (#4532)

* Spelling fixes

* "It's" -> "its" fixes

* Fix capitalization of "Pi" in "Raspberry Pi"

"Pi", not "PI" or "pi".
This commit is contained in:
Ville Skyttä 2018-01-28 23:28:56 +02:00 committed by Franck Nijhof
parent 2216828c53
commit b39bd81c6e
85 changed files with 111 additions and 111 deletions

View file

@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ Since the configurator script on its own is no service, you will have to take so
1. Fork the process into the background with the command:
`nohup sudo ./configurator.py &`
2. If your system is using systemd (that's usually what you'll find on a Raspberry PI), there's a [template file](https://github.com/danielperna84/hass-configurator/blob/master/hass-poc-configurator.systemd) you can use and then apply the same process to integrate it as mentioned in the [Home Assistant documentation](https://home-assistant.io/docs/autostart/systemd/). If you use this method you have to set the `BASEPATH` variable according to your environment.
2. If your system is using systemd (that's usually what you'll find on a Raspberry Pi), there's a [template file](https://github.com/danielperna84/hass-configurator/blob/master/hass-poc-configurator.systemd) you can use and then apply the same process to integrate it as mentioned in the [Home Assistant documentation](https://home-assistant.io/docs/autostart/systemd/). If you use this method you have to set the `BASEPATH` variable according to your environment.
3. If you have [supervisor](http://supervisord.org/) running on your system, [hass-poc-configurator.supervisor](https://github.com/danielperna84/hass-configurator/blob/master/hass-poc-configurator.supervisor) would be an example configuration you could use to control the configurator.
4. A tool called [tmux](https://tmux.github.io/), which should be pre-installed with [HASSbian](https://home-assistant.io/docs/hassbian/).
5. A tool called [screen](http://ss64.com/bash/screen.html) (alternative to tmux). If it's not already installed on your system, you can do `sudo apt-get install screen` or `sudo yum install screen` to get it. When it's installed, start a screen session by executing `screen`. Then navigate to your Home Assistant directory and start the configurator like described above. Put the screen session into the background by pressing `CTRL+A` and then `CTRL+D`. It is now safe to disconnect from your SSH session.