🏡 Gentoo Overlay: Home Assistant on Gentoo Linux without virtualenv or docker.
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README.md

Home Assistant Gentoo Overlay

2020/09/25: Publishing new Main Ebuilds

Since homeassistant-0.115.3 the Main Ebuild is released in three different stages of expansion, only one of them can be installed. These three only differ in the amount of USE Flags they hold.

app-misc/homeassistant

This is the Ebuild we have since 0.97.0, it currently holds 261 USE Flags. As soon as I know that at least one user is actively using a component, it will be added. These all compile fine, but some version conflicts could occure.

app-misc/homeassistant-min

New Ebuild, generated for 0.115.3 and later, currently holds 45 USE Flags. These are the USE Flags I use in production myself. These all will compile fine and are extensively tested in every release.

app-misc/homeassistant-full

This Ebuild contains 746 USE Flags for (nearly) all components of Home Assistant with external dependencies. Most components compile, but these are too many (for me) to run tests for all of them on a regular schedule. This will be tested from time to time. Who would blame me for this at 800 USE Flags ;-)

Commons for all three Main Ebuilds

Some core dependecies are pulled in from suggested USE Flags (+). You should have a good reason to deselect suggested USE Flags. Other components are known to have issues, these are deselected (-) in the Ebuilds. Perhaps they compile, perhaps they run. Normally, they have dependencies which interfere with very common libraries. The suggest/deselect prefixes are the same in all three expansion stages.

Best you start using the app-misc/homeassistant-min Ebuild. If you have it running and your stuff is added, you should take a look in /etc/homeassistant/deps. This directory holds Home Assistants virtual environment. If you find anything there, you can:

  1. do nothing and let it live in the virtual environment (not suggested)
  2. install the missing dependency with emerge -tav {dependency}, remove the contents of /etc/homeassistant/deps and restart Home Assistant. If there is still something missing, it will be downloaded and installed again in the virtual enviroment. Things you install this way will be recorded in /var/lib/portage/world. These modules will then be maintained and updated by portage.
  3. If you get a big /var/lib/portage/world, you can choose to use a bigger Ebuild anytime. Remove the old one first.

Breaking Change: many USE Flags changed in 0.115.0

Beginning with 0.115.0_beta10 many USE Flags have changed. All USE Flags have exactly the same name as the components domain in Home Assistant now. OK, this is a hard cut, but overdue. Mostly caused by the creation of an automated import routine, at first I planned to keep the old names, the replacement class was already written, but during data collection I discovered that the original domain names aren't so bad anyway.

Some outdated components have disappeared forever.

You will find the detailed changes in commit: 3fec35c803, scroll down to metadata.xml. But emerge will also tell.

Home Assistant without Docker & Virtual Environments

https://www.home-assistant.io/ https://github.com/home-assistant/home-assistant

"Open source home automation that puts local control and privacy first."

Origin: Ireland, Home: Bavaria

Once this was a fork of Paul Healy's https://cgit.gentoo.org/user/lmiphay.git/tree/app-misc/homeassistant-bin, which seemed unmaintained to me. At first I just wanted to compile it for my personal use. This happened at Home Assistant 0.77 in September 2018. Some friends told me they wanted to use/see it, so I placed it on my public git server, and was caught by surprise by several hundred page views in the very first days. I'll do my best to keep it close to the official releases, though it might get slower during summers. After three months it had ~170 ebuilds, Nov 2019 > 1599 Ebuilds in > 830 packages are on file, 970 packages in 2380 Ebuilds in September 2020. As long as I certainly do not count automatically consolidated collections, this Overlay has grown to one of the largest Gentoo Repos during the last year.

If you have questions or suggestions: contact me, any help is very welcome. If you want to help or contribute, please join me.

Reporting Issues

First, please also check if your issue is already reported at git.edevau.net.

If not, please report it here or at GitHub.

Please let me know if anything is wrong or dependencies are missing, since I use only some of the components myself.

From time to time a fresh compile test on empty boxes (one with Python 3.8 and one with Python 3.7) is run to catch general faults, last good (full) compile test was September 2020 with v0.115.0. It was not possible to fix everything, work is in progress, some open problems remain.

Authors welcome

If you are an author of an integration / component or other stuff related to Home Assistant and I have your stuff not added already, please file a pull request, or just drop me a note. For adding a component, I need a release file in tar.gz or zip format. Tagged releases on GitHub are OK, but a PyPI SDIST tar.gz source release would be preferred, because I can automatically merge it and it will use Gentoo's mirror system. Most of the integrations/components do both. I cannot add packages only available in wheels format. Please make sure you have a proper license assigned, selected license should be unique on all platforms ( PyPI/GitHub/Sourceforge).

Python 3.9 Support

Just cloned a box for first tests. but it is too early to try bigger things, most of the dependencies from Main Repo are ready, but some are still missing. Forking them only for adding compatibility would get out of hand. So we'll just wait a bit... things are moving fast.

Python 3.8 Support

Since 0.114.4 (09/2020) everything compiles fine on Python 3.8. Still some smaller things to clean up. I upgraded my production box to Python 3.8 ONLY on 2020/09/12. Everything looks good. I am doing most of the tests/work on such a box with Python 3.8 only. During compile tests, I have all available tests turned on. ESPHome runs on the same box (and in the same environment) with some small patches (included in my Ebuild), the current esphome-9999 doesn't even need a src_prepare().

... Python 3.7

You will need at least Python 3.7.7 for running Home Assistant on Gentoo Linux. If you are new here, forget about 3.7, set it up straight on Python 3.8. With 0.108.0 I will discontinue compile tests for 3.7 (and better start with 3.9). I won't do any production tests anymore on Python 3.7.

Python 2.7 on Gentoo

In August 2020 I discovered that it is now possible to remove Python 2.7 completely. I have done this on all my test servers and my Home Assistant Box. All still work like a charm.

~arm64

By user request, I have populated an ~arm64 KEYWORD on all Ebuilds, which is (currently) completely untested. I know of at least two guys using it, but I got no feedback yet. Some day I will prepare a cross compile environment to build a public binary repo for Home Assistant on Sakakis-'s Image.

~arm

By another request, I merged ~arm KEYWORD from @ivecera on all Ebuilds at 0.117.6. This guy is running an Odroid XU4. I updated all my scripts to keep it running.

Nearly all Home Assistant Components are now included

Except of some modules with uncorrectable errors (e.g. hard drive crashes, lost sources) I believe all possible integrations for Home Assistant and their stated dependencies are included as Ebuilds, based on the integrations list from /usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/homeassistant/components/*/manifest.json. Many fixed dependencies (necessary or not) to old releases forbid installation of packages requiring newer ones, but I filed all dependencies strict as they have been declared in setup.py or requirements.txt (sometimes other sources) anyway. The exception proves the rule.

Currrently missing (0.115.3):

  • azure-eventhub-5.1.0
  • azure-servicebus-0.50.1
  • google-cloud-texttospeech-0.4.0 (no potential need, there are good alternatives on the market)
  • google-cloud-pubsub-0.39.1
  • opencv-python-headless-4.3.0.36
  • pyuptimerobot-0.0.5 (unmaintained, could not find a valid source)

In some cases I added small patches to the Ebuilds, some packages have versions pinned without any reason. For me its OK, if the packages compile and complete all their own tests in the sandbox. Please let me know if you encounter problems. I will continuously expand my tests and do more cleanups.

I am continuously filing pull requests to reduce the amount of needed patches. Most of them are caused by missing files in SDIST archives and/or having wrong package exclude masks in setup.py.

Why I don't (want to) use a virtual environment for Home Assistant

On Gentoo, we have a very powerful package manager. So I (now) try to put everything Home Assistant uses into Ebuilds.

Some years ago I started with only those packages Home Assistant needed absolutely to start. Home Assistant then downloads and installs modules it requires and cannot find. After some time, /etc/homeassitant/deps grew larger and larger, things messed up, I had a well-maintained system, except the directory where a lot of packages (also outdated ones) live without our knowledge.

So I started to add more important components as Ebuilds, I did not touch the internal requirement check. If a package is installed via portage and Home Assistants constraints match, Home Assistant does not download its own copy.

You can find the current constraints in:

You should take a look in /etc/homeassistant/deps/ from time to time, I do this after every upgrade, if it is not empty, install the missing package, emtpy this directory, restart Home Assistant, if it is still downloaded, possibly the wrong (mostly too new) version of a component or a library is installed. eix, /etc/portage/package.accept_keywords and --autounmask=y are your friends. You should not unmask too much, and think about the next releases when you unmask packages.

Sources Missing, older release tags

Some packages with missing or hidden older releases have been forked after the originating author has been queried and notified. I did not touch any source, no changes except of adding the missing release tags have been made. I used these forks ONLY for generating consitent sources. If patches are needed, they will be applied during the compile process. As soon as another usable release will be available, I'll swap the SRC_URI back to PyPI, the original GitHub or wherever it should come from. For every fork in use I have an open ticket at git.edevau.net. Please drop me a note if you find a valid origin or something wrong.

Other things

Aside from Home Assistant's stuff this repo contains some Ebuilds I use with my Home Assistant, some have to be explicitly mentioned:

ESPHome

Thanks to @OttoWinter for his fabulous idea and great work, really cool stuff, as soon as your name server accepts dynamic names from DHCP, a lot of ESP devices are very easy to deploy and maintain. Its integration in Home Assistant is easy and reacts fast on state changes. I love its integration in Home Assistant, since you have one single point where you define and name a switch or a sensor (instead of > three points using MQTT). Together with the possibility of OTA updates my sensors now have a unique name everywhere in the system, and names can be changed very easily. I installed the dashboard in HA's Gui, so updates and changes are made with a few clicks. In the meantime I migrated all my Magichome Controllers, very happy with it, and I have a couple of binary input arrays running with it without any problems. However, my Sonoff POW and POW R2 are still running with various versions of Tasmota. Some required libraries are too old for Home Assistants environment, and I do NOT use virtual environments, so I simply patched it, it runs on my productive system without any problems, please report if you find any. You can also use the dev Ebuild (dev-embedded/esphome-9999.ebuild), which uses newer libraries, but will be compiled every time you run a world update, it is also very stable most of the time.

Platformio

Platformio is needed for ESPHome and other stuff.

Git Server & Mirrors

You will find this Repository at

Location Web Clone me here
Main https://git.edevau.net/onkelbeh/HomeAssistantRepository https://git.edevau.net/onkelbeh/HomeAssistantRepository.git
Mirror https://github.com/onkelbeh/HomeAssistantRepository https://github.com/onkelbeh/HomeAssistantRepository.git

Sorry, due to technical reasons, I currently cannot offer public ssh access to my git server.

Sure, you can submit issues and pull requests on both sites, but I prefer them on my own server (requires registration).

Installation on Python 3.7 or Python 3.8

Since Python 3.7 is default target since 05/2020, installation is very easy now.

But, before installing on 3.7, please think about using 3.8, this will save you the migration from 3.7 -> 3.8. And: you will notice an appreciable improvement in frontend performance.

Anyway, we will be forced to have 3.8 very soon: 8d94dff75c

If you insist on 3.7, simply decrease all version numbers in the manual below by 1 :-)

Let's get started:

First add the Overlay to /etc/portage/repos.conf/homeassistant.conf, make sure not to interfere with your main Gentoo repo, which is at /usr/portage/gentoo in my boxes, because I always have more than one repo active by default. Others use /usr/local/portage/homeassistant

[HomeAssistantRepository]
location = /usr/portage/homeassistant
sync-type = git
sync-uri = https://git.edevau.net/onkelbeh/HomeAssistantRepository.git
auto-sync = yes
sync-rsync-verify-metamanifest = no

Sync it:

$ emerge --sync

Make sure you have a proper locale setting. I use

$ cat /etc/locale.gen
de_DE ISO-8859-1
de_DE@euro UTF-8

It will make things easier if you take the example files from /etc/portage/package.accept_keywords/99_homeassistant and /etc/portage/package.use/60_homeassistant and copy it to your /etc/portage. The clean way is to let portage build your own.

Check your /etc/portage/make.conf for the correct Python Targets:

USE_PYTHON="3.8"
PYTHON_TARGETS="python3_8"
PYTHON_SINGLE_TARGET="python3_8"

Run eselect python to put Python 3.8 on position 1

Finally install Home Assistant:

$ emerge -tav app-misc/homeassistant
$ rc-update add homeassistant

It could be necessary to install some components by hand, there are too many components to mask all in USE Flags. If you use a component which you want to be added as a USE Flag, send a pull request, or just let me know.

Upgrading to Python 3.8 from a pre 3.8 system (same as it was from Python 3.6 to 3.7).

The fastest way:

  • Remove app-misc/homeassistant (emerge -cav)
  • run emerge --depclean -a, this will remove all dependent packages
  • update your naked core system as described below
  • reinstall app-misc/homeassistant with only the new Python Version

This avoids a lot of recompiling all Home Assistant deps, and a lot of dependency trouble. Very recommended. I did not, but I just wanted to see if the hard way works too ;-)

The upgrade steps:

Make sure your system is up to date:

$ emerge -tauvDUN @world

Install Python 3.8:

$ emerge -tav dev-lang/python:3.8

Edit your /etc/portage/make.conf to set the new Python Targets, make sure you have both versions active now:

USE_PYTHON="3.8 3.7"
PYTHON_TARGETS="python3_8 python3_7"
PYTHON_SINGLE_TARGET="python3_8"

Run eselect python to put Python 3.8 on position 1, perhaps you'll have to edit /etc/python-exec/python-exec.conf.

Run the Update:

$ emerge --depclean
$ emerge -1vUD @world
$ emerge --depclean

If everything is clean, double check with:

  • eix --installed-with-use python_targets_python3_7 (<- old version)
  • eix --installed-without-use python_targets_python3_8 (<- new version)

or

  • diff <(equery h python_targets_python3_7) <(equery h python_targets_python3_8)
  • diff <(equery h python_single_target_python3_7) <(equery h python_single_target_python3_8)

Help it with:

eix -I# --installed-without-use python_targets_python3_8 | xargs emerge -1tv

Now you have all Python packages for both versions installed, time to get rid of the packages compiled for the old Python:

Edit your /etc/portage/make.conf to remove old Python Targets:

USE_PYTHON="3.8"
PYTHON_TARGETS="python3_8"
PYTHON_SINGLE_TARGET="python3_8"

Run the Update again:

# emerge --depclean
# emerge -1vUD @world
# emerge --depclean

Sometimes I had dependencies portage didn't respect, in some cases it seems not to know in which Python's site-packages modules are already installed. Install them manually (after compile errors). Once all packages are updated, you can remove the older Python targets in package.use and run another upgrade to remove now obsolete support for old Python versions. This will save hard disk space and compile time.

It does not make sense to compile all this stuff for more than one Python target.

Check if all is gone:

# eix --installed-with-use python_targets_python3_7

Recompile all packages which are still present in the old Python. Repeat until all have vanished.

Remove the old Python

# emerge -cav /dev-lang/python:3.7

Tools that might help to clean up:

$ eix --installed-with-use python_targets_python3_7
$ diff <(equery h python_targets_python3_7) <(equery h python_targets_python3_8)

To-dos

  • If it moves, compile it :-)
  • update the missing component descriptions for metadata.xml
  • Publish my ESPHome Configurations
  • Add test support for Python 3.9 in new dev branches
  • Add more libraries if I need it or someone asks for
  • Write a real good installation page for the home-assistant.io Documentation and get it added there.
  • Convince the world to not run Home Assistant with Docker (see https://xkcd.com/1988/)

Experiments in progress:

  • grafana with influxdb, will have to use it at work soon and have to get used to it anyway, fits much better for irregular measurements than Cacti/RRD.
  • remote IOS authentication with haproxy and client certificates.
  • play with Node-RED, there are user requests for it, but my skills are too low for this Ebuild :-)
  • first tests with Python 3.9 are in progress

some Background...

I run Home Assistant on a virtual X64 box, 4GB RAM, 3 Cores of an older Xeon E5-2630 v2 @ 2.60GHz and 30GB Disk from a small FC SAN (HP MSA). Recorder writes to a local mariadb socket, moved this from my 'big' mariadb machine because of some performance issues. Currently 10.2.29 without problems. Influxdb and Graphana are also on the same box. You'll find a list of the integrations I use myself on my production box here.

Some of my devices are connected via Eclipse Mosquitto (https://mosquitto.org/), I use the stable version coming with the original distribution (1.6.8), no SSL inside my isolated IOT Vlan, so no need to upgrade. Along MQTT I am actively using (and therefore testing) the following platforms/components:

  • some (~9) Z-Wave devices, mostly Fibaro Roller Shutter 3 with a ZMEEUZB1 Stick connected to my VM with ser2net, socat & OpenZWave. I would not buy the Fibaro stuff again, because of their weird firmware policy. You need to have their expensive (and otherwise useless) gateway to make an update. The cheap chinese stuff will do better. And they are very badly shielded.
    • in the vm run socat pty,link=/dev/ttyUSB0,raw,user=homeassistant,group=dialout,mode=777 tcp:[ip of usbhost]:3333
    • at the usb host run ser2net with 3333:raw:0:/dev/ttyACM0:115200 8DATABITS NONE 1STOPBIT
  • some Zigbee devices from Xioami, via an CC2531 USB stick from Amazon -> zigbee2mqtt
  • a bunch of OneWire and I2C Sensors (mostly via ESPHome and MQTT) and
  • ESPHome - see description above - (https://esphome.io/ & https://github.com/esphome/esphome/)
  • ESPEasy (https://www.letscontrolit.com/wiki/index.php/ESPEasy/). I formerly used it to avoid some serious design problems in Tasmota, but since I use ESPHome, these devices live only until they have to be touched for some reason, their firmware will get replaced with ESPHome.
  • Sonoff/Tasmota (mostly via MQTT) (https://github.com/arendst/Sonoff-Tasmota), same here: as soon a device has to be touched, its firmware will be replaced with Otto Winter's ESPHome.
    • Sonoff S20
    • Sonoff 4ch
    • Sonoff Dual
    • Sonoff RF Bridge with remote Switches
    • Sonoff Touch
    • Sonoff Basic (Wifi not working well with ESPHome or Tasmota in newer versions)
    • Sonoff Pow R2 The Sonoff Pow (and R2) will stay with Tasmota for a while, because I have no good implementation of Tasmota's energy summary in ESPHome.
  • Experimenting with Shelly Devices, a friend has some Shelly 1/2, bought a Pro, but this one has a Chip from TI, no ESP, so we'll have to use the original Firmware.
  • Now all of my HC-SR501 PIR Sensors and some of my traditional light switches are connected to two big input arrays I built into old CAT6 patch panels with an ESP12 and 4 PCF8574 I2C I/O Expanders, this makes 24 I/O lines per panel. All these panels run ESPHome.
  • Yamaha RXV (4 devices)
  • SamsungTV (partly not working anymore due to Samsung's newest firmware 'improvements', at least I can read its status for controlling lights & the shutters)
  • Some Tradfri lights
  • 4 IKEA Shutters, which finally can be bought now. A bit expensive, but nice and easy to install.
  • Sonos (had many, sold most of them, because they destroyed a formerly very cool Gui, only two boxes left)
  • Calendar (connected to a locally run ownCloud, OC not in this Repository) (https://owncloud.org/)
  • Kodi on Raspberry (3, all with OSMC) (https://osmc.tv/download/)
  • Enigma2 on Dreambox (2 left) (https://wiki.blue-panel.com/index.php/Enigma2)
  • Hyperion with APA102 (very cool stuff) (https://hyperion-project.org/)
  • EQ3-Max! (I accidently bought some, so I have to use them until they die, 8 devices and a cube). Currently the integration maxcube-api is broken, added a hack to keep them running, just add maxcube_hack USE Flag to Home Assistant, then the patch will be applied before installation. Recently I saw some other interesting soft for this hardware. Perhaps I'll try one of these, and forget about maxcube-api.
  • Axis Camera (1, a few more to come)
  • yr.no weather (best reliable forecast you can get for low money) (https://www.yr.no/)

Privacy

I have no Google, Amazon or Apple involved in my privacy (at least in this case) and I am not planning to let them in.

Some thoughts

  • Be aware that all dependent libraries could be marked as stable here as soon as they compile. Outside HA dependencies except of portage are not tested.
  • Since I use Gentoo mostly on servers, I do not use systemd, one reason to run Gentoo is that you are NOT forced to run this crap.
  • I use an own profile based on "amd64/17.1/no-multilib"
  • python-3.8.6 is set as default target.
  • I do no tests anymore on Python 3.6, and only sandbox tests on Python 3.7.

Licenses

The repository itself is released under GPL-3, all work on the depending components under the licenses they came from, which could be (as my grep told me in 3/2020):

grep -r "LICENSE=" | cut -d ":" -f2 | sort | uniq -c | sed 's;LICENSE=";|;' | sed 's;";|;' | sed 's/ //g' | xargs -L1 printf '|%s\n'
Count License
3 AGPL-3
4 AGPL-3+
21 all-rights-reserved
460 Apache-2.0
3 Apache-2.0
2 Apache-2.0 MIT
2 Artistic-2
1 Boost-1.0
180 BSD
6 BSD-2
5 BSD-2 Unlicense
8 BSD-4
1 BSD
4 CC0-1.0
1 CC-BY-NC-SA-3.0
2 CC-BY-NC-SA-4.0
2 ECL-2.0
13 EPL-1.0
2 GPL-1
21 GPL-2
5 GPL-2+
174 GPL-3
25 GPL-3+
2 ISC
1 LGPL-2
10 LGPL-2+
17 LGPL-2.1
2 LGPL-2.1+
45 LGPL-3
17 LGPL-3+
1479 MIT
7 MPL-2.0
1 NEWLIB
11 PSF-2
3 PSF-2.4
4 public-domain
13 Unlicense
5 ZPL

(last counted 11/2020)

I did my best to keep these clean. If a valid license was published on PyPI, it has been automatically merged. Otherwise I took it from GitHub or alternatively from comments in the source. Sometimes these differed and have been not unique. All license strings have been adjusted to the list in /usr/portage/gentoo/licenses/. Some packages do not have any license published. Authors have been asked for clarification, some still did not respond. These were added with an all-rights-reserved license and RESTRICT="mirror" was set. Find the appropriate licenses referenced in the Ebuild files and in the corresponding homepages or sources.

A big thanks goes to Iris for reviewing this README. Last update 14.11.2020