LIRC
LIRC integration for Home Assistant allows you to receive signals from an infrared remote control and control actions based on the buttons you press. You can use them to set scenes or trigger any other automation.
Sending IR commands is not supported in this component (yet), but can be accomplished using the shell_command component in conjunction with the irsend
command.
Installation
To allow Home Assistant to talk to your IR receiver, you need to first make sure you have the correct dependencies installed:
$ sudo apt-get install lirc
If you are configuring on a Raspberry Pi, there are excellent instructions with GPIO schematics and driver configurations here. Consider following these.
Configuring LIRC
Now teach LIRC about your particular remote control by preparing a lircd configuration file (/etc/lirc/lircd.conf
). Search the LIRC remote database for your model. If you can’t find it, then you can always use the irrecord
program to learn your remote. This will create a valid configuration file. Add as many remotes as you want by pasting them into the file. If irrecord
doesn’t work (e.g. for some air conditioner remotes), then the mode2
program is capable of reading the codes in raw mode, followed by irrecord -a
to extract hex codes.
Next, you have to make a ~/.lircrc
file that maps keypresses to system actions. The configuration is a bit tedious but it must be done. Use the prog = home-assistant
for all keys you want to be recognized by Home Assistant. The values you set for button
must be the same as in the lircd.conf
file and the values you put for config
entry will be the sensor value in Home Assistant when you press the button. An example may look like this:
begin remote = SONY button = KEY_1 prog = home-assistant config = KEY_1 end begin remote = SONY button = KEY_2 prog = home-assistant config = KEY_2 end begin remote = SONY button = KEY_3 prog = home-assistant config = KEY_3 end
Test your LIRC installation before proceeding by running:
$ irexec -n home-assistant
and pressing some buttons on the remote.
Configuration Home Assistant
# Example configuration.yaml entry lirc:
If you are on a Debian based system (like Raspberry Pi) and are having issues loading the component due to it being unable to install python-lirc, install it manually using apt-get install python3-lirc
.
Events
The LIRC component fires ir_command_received
events on the bus. You can capture the events and respond to them in automation scripts like this:
# Example configuration.yaml automation entry automation: - alias: Off on Remote trigger: platform: event event_type: ir_command_received event_data: button_name: KEY_0 action: service: homeassistant.turn_off entity_id: group.a_lights
The button_name
data values (e.g. KEY_0
) are set by you in the .lircrc
file.