![]() A systemd service may be marked as enabled as vendor preset, and this breaks the check we used to check if it was active. Here's what you get in an Ubuntu 20.04 installation: ❯ sudo systemctl status ModemManager ● ModemManager.service - Modem Manager Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/ModemManager.service; disabled; vendor preset: enabled) Active: inactive (dead) ❯ systemctl list-unit-files ModemManager.service UNIT FILE STATE VENDOR PRESET ModemManager.service disabled enabled 1 unit files listed While the list-unit-files can be filtered using `--state=enabled`, we can just rely on `systemctl is-enabled` instead. |
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.github | ||
files | ||
azure-pipelines.yml | ||
installer.sh | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md |
This installation method is for advanced users only
Make sure you understand the requirements
Install Home Assistant Supervised
This installation method provides the full Home Assistant experience on a regular operating system. This means, all components from the Home Assistant method are used, except for the Home Assistant Operating System. This system will run the Home Assistant Supervisor. The Supervisor is not just an application, it is a full appliance that manages the whole system. It will clean up, repair or reset settings to default if they no longer match expected values.
By not using the Home Assistant Operating System, the user is responsible for making sure that all required components are installed and maintained. Required components and their versions will change over time. Home Assistant Supervised is provided as-is as a foundation for community supported do-it-yourself solutions. We only accept bug reports for issues that have been reproduced on a freshly installed, fully updated Debian with no additional packages.
This method is considered advanced and should only be used if one is an expert in managing a Linux operating system, Docker and networking.
Installation
Run as root (sudo su):
curl -Lo installer.sh https://raw.githubusercontent.com/home-assistant/supervised-installer/master/installer.sh
bash installer.sh
Command line arguments
argument | default | description |
---|---|---|
-m | --machine | On a special platform they need set a machine type use | |
-d | --data-share | $PREFIX/share/hassio | data folder for hass.io installation |
-p | --prefix | /usr | Binary prefix for hass.io installation |
-s | --sysconfdir | /etc | Configuration directory for hass.io installation |
you can set these parameters by appending --<parameter> <value>
like:
curl -Lo installer.sh https://raw.githubusercontent.com/home-assistant/supervised-installer/master/installer.sh
bash installer.sh --machine MY_MACHINE
Supported Machine types
- intel-nuc
- odroid-c2
- odroid-n2
- odroid-xu
- qemuarm
- qemuarm-64
- qemux86
- qemux86-64
- raspberrypi
- raspberrypi2
- raspberrypi3
- raspberrypi4
- raspberrypi3-64
- raspberrypi4-64
- tinker
Troubleshooting
If somethings going wrong, use journalctl -f
to get your system logs. If you are not familiar with Linux and how you can fix issues, we recommend to use our Home Assistant OS.