go-hass-app
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A Home Assistant, native app
integration
for desktop/laptop devices.
π Features
This app will add some sensors to a Home Assistant instance:
- Device location.
- Current active application and list of running applications.
- Battery status (for example, laptop battery and any peripherals).
- Network status (for example, network connection status, internal and external
IP addresses and Wi-Fi details where relevant).
- Memory and swap usage (total/free/used).
- Disk usage.
- Load Averages.
- Uptime.
- Power profile.
- Screen lock.
- Problems detected by ABRT.
The code can be extended to add additional sensors. See the development
docs for details.
π€ Use-cases
As examples of some of the things that can be done with the data published by this app:
- Change your lighting depending on what active/running apps are on your
laptop/desktop. For example, you could set your lights dim or activate a scene
when you are gaming.
- With your laptop plugged into a smart plug that is also controlled by Home
Assistant, turn the smart plug on/off based on the battery charge to
force a full charge/discharge cycle of the battery, extending its life over
leaving it constantly charged.
- Like on mobile devices, create automations based on the location of your
laptop running this app.
- Receive notifications from Home Assistant on your desktop/laptop.
See also the FAQ.
π€ Compatibility
Currently, only Linux is supported. Though the code is designed to be extensible
to other operating systems. See the development docs for
details on how to extend for other operating systems.
β¬οΈ Installation
Head over to the releases
page and download the appropriate package for your operating system and/or
distribution:
- For Fedora, use the
.rpm
.
- For Ubuntu, use the
.deb
.
- For Debian, use the
.tar.xz
.
- For Arch, use the
.tar.zst
.
For other distributions not listed above, you can try the binary, or build it
yourself from source (see development). Note that while
Go is known for statically compiled binaries that "run anywhere", the Fyne UI
toolkit used by go-hass-agent makes use of shared libraries that may need to
be installed as well.
π±οΈ Usage
go-hass-agent runs as a tray icon by default. It is operating system,
distribution and desktop-environment agnostic and should manifest itself in any
tray of any desktop environment.
First-run
On first-run, go-hass-agent will display a window where you will need to enter
some details, so it can register itself with a Home Assistant instance to be
able to report sensors and receive notifications.
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You will need:
- A long-lived access token. You can generate one on your account profile
page.
- The web address (URL) on which a Home Assistant instance can be found.
- go-hass-agent will try to auto-detect this for you, and you can select it in
the Auto-discovered servers list. Otherwise, you will need to select Use
Custom Server?, and enter the details manually in Manual Server Entry.
When you have entered all the details, click Submit and the agent should
start running and reporting sensors to the Home Assistant instance.
As alternative, you can register go-hass-agent on the command-line with by
running:
go-hass-agent register --token _TOKEN_ --server _URL_
You will need to provide a long-lived token _TOKEN_
and the URL of your Home
Assistant instance, _URL_
.
Regular Usage
When running, go-hass-agent will appear as a device under the Mobile
App integration in your
Home Assistant instance. It should also report a list of sensors/entities you
can use in any automations, scripts, dashboards and other parts of Home
Assistant.
Running Headless
go-hass-agent can run in a βheadlessβ mode, without any GUI elements, by
specifying the -t
or --terminal
command-line option. On Linux systems, There
is also a systemd service file that can be used for automatic start-up,
installed (but not activated by default) in /usr/lib/systemd/system
.
π§βπ€βπ§ Contributing
ποΈ Development
I would welcome your contribution! If you find any improvement or issue you want
to fix, feel free to send a pull request!
Some documentation for development can be found in
the development docs. There is information for developing
go-hass-agent for different operating systems as well as adding additional
sensors. This might help anyone to look to contribute, extend or fork this tool.
π Translations
While this application does not have many points where text is displayed to
the end user (logging aside), translation is supported through the language
and message
packages that are part of
golang.org/x/text.
I would welcome pull requests for translations!
π Acknowledgements
The app icon is taken from the Home Assistant
project.
License
MIT