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layout | title | description | date | sidebar | comments | sharing | footer | logo | ha_category | ha_release |
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page | Snips | Instructions on how to integrate Snips within Home Assistant. | 2018-03-22 12:00 | true | false | true | true | snips.png | Voice | 0.65 |
The Snips Voice Platform allows users to add powerful voice assistants to their Raspberry Pi devices without compromising on privacy. It runs 100% on-device, and does not require an internet connection. It features Hotword Detection, Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR), Natural Language Understanding (NLU) and Dialog Management.
The latest documentation can be found here: Snips Platform Documentation.
Snips takes voice or text as input and produces intents as output, which are explicit representations of an intention behind an utterance and which can subsequently be used by Home Assistant to perform appropriate actions.
{% linkable_title The Snips Voice Platform %}
{% linkable_title Installation %}
All of the Snips installation documentation can be found at [
Unfortunately, only Debian Jessie is supported at this time. Debian/AMD64
Docker supports both AMD64 and ARM architechtures Docker
{% linkable_title Creating an assistant %}
Head over to the Snips Console to create your assistant. Launch the training and download by clicking on the "Download Assistant" button.
The next step is to get the assistant to work on your device. Assuming your downloaded assistant folder is on your desktop (your assistant name will vary), just run:
$ scp -r ~/Desktop/assistant.zip pi@<raspi_hostname.local_or_IP>:/home/pi/.
Now ssh into your Raspberry Pi:
$ ssh pi@<raspi_hostname.local_or_IP>
unzip -o -d /usr/share/snips /home/pi/assistant.zip
{% linkable_title Running Snips %}
Make sure that a microphone is plugged to the Raspberry Pi. If you are having trouble setting up audio, we have written a guide on Raspberry Pi Audio Configuration.
Start the Snips Voice Platform by starting the snips-*
services:
$ sudo systemctl start 'snips-*'
Snips is now ready to take voice commands from the microphone. To trigger the listening, simply say
Hey Snips
followed by a command, e.g.
Turn on the living room lights
As the Snips Platform parses this query into an intent, it will be published on MQTT, on the hermes/intent/<intentName>
topic. The Snips Home Assistant component subscribes to this topic, and handles the intent according to the rules defined in configuration.yaml
, as explained below.
{% linkable_title Optional: specifying an external MQTT broker %}
By default, Snips runs its own MQTT broker. But we can also tell Snips to use an external broker by specifying this when launching Snips. In this case, we need to specify this in the /etc/snips.toml
configuration file. For more information on configuring this, see the Using an external MQTT broker article.
{% linkable_title Home Assistant configuration %}
{% linkable_title Specifying the MQTT broker %}
Messages between Snips and Home Assistant are passed via MQTT. We can either point Snips to the MQTT broker used by Home Assistant, as explained above, or tell Home Assistant which MQTT broker to use by adding the following entry to the configuration.yaml
file:
mqtt:
broker: MQTT_BROKER_IP
port: MQTT_BROKER_PORT
By default, Snips runs a mosquitto broker on port 1883. So if we wish to use this broker, and if Snips and Home Assistant run on the same device, the entry will look as follows:
mqtt:
broker: 127.0.0.1
port: 1883
Alternatively, MQTT can be configured to bridge messages between servers if using a custom MQTT broker such as mosquitto.
{% linkable_title Triggering actions %}
In Home Assistant, we trigger actions based on intents produced by Snips using the intent_script
component. For instance, the following block handles a ActivateLightColor
intent to change light colors:
{% raw %}
snips:
intent_script:
TurnOn:
action:
- service: light.turn_on
data_template:
entity_id: light.{{ objectLocation | replace(" ","_") }}
{% endraw %}
In the data_template
block, we have access to special variables, corresponding to the slot names for the intent. In the present case, the ActivateLightColor
has two slots, objectLocation
and objectColor
.
Sending TTS Notifications
You can send TTS notifications to Snips using the snips.say and snips.say_action services. Say_action starts a session and waits for user response, "Would you like me to close the garage door?", "Yes, close the garage door".
{% linkable_title Service snips/say
%}
Service data attribute | Optional | Description |
---|---|---|
text |
no | Text to say. |
site_id |
yes | Site to use to start session. |
custom_data |
yes | custom data that will be included with all messages in this session. |
{% linkable_title Service snips/say_action
%}
Service data attribute | Optional | Description |
---|---|---|
text |
no | Text to say. |
site_id |
yes | Site to use to start session. |
custom_data |
yes | custom data that will be included with all messages in this session. |
can_be_enqueued |
yes | If True, session waits for an open session to end, if False session is dropped if one is running. |
intent_filter |
yes | Array of Strings - A list of intents names to restrict the NLU resolution to on the first query. |
Configuration Examples
script:
turn_on_light:
sequence:
service: script.turn_on_light
service: snips.say
data:
text: 'OK, the light is now on'
automation:
query_garage_door:
trigger:
- platform: state
entity_id: binary_sensor.my_garage_door_sensor
from: 'off'
to: 'on'
for:
minutes: 10
sequence:
service: snips.say_action
data:
text: 'Garage door has been open 10 minutes, would you like me to close it?'
intentFilter:
- closeGarageDoor
# This intent is fired if the user responds with the appropriate intent after the above notification
intent_script:
closeGarageDoor:
speech:
type: plain
text: 'OK, closing the garage door'
action:
- service: script.garage_door_close