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mirror of https://github.com/home-assistant/operating-system.git synced 2026-04-02 08:32:46 +01:00
Jan Čermák ccf92bc87f Disable setting default keymap in systemd-vconsole-setup (#3261)
Since buildroot commit 3ceb8c97bcb6753740fa27a58b8e0dc00dbbbd19, systemd
has new option BR2_PACKAGE_SYSTEMD_VCONSOLE_DEFAULT_KEYMAP which
defaults to "us". With this option specified, systemd-console depends on
kbd package and causes the following message to be printed during
startup on HAOS:

systemd-vconsole-setup[253]: sh: gzip: not found

This comes from the loadkeys call which tries to open the gzipped file,
so likely the kbd package should also depend on gzip. However, since we
don't want the kbd package at this point, I'm leaving this for later
investigation and simply unsetting the new option to revert to
pre-2024.02 setup.
2024-03-20 12:25:43 +01:00
2019-05-09 10:10:53 +02:00
2018-04-15 10:27:33 +02:00

Home Assistant Operating System

Home Assistant Operating System (formerly HassOS) is a Linux based operating system optimized to host Home Assistant and its Add-ons.

Home Assistant Operating System uses Docker as its container engine. By default it deploys the Home Assistant Supervisor as a container. Home Assistant Supervisor in turn uses the Docker container engine to control Home Assistant Core and Add-Ons in separate containers. Home Assistant Operating System is not based on a regular Linux distribution like Ubuntu. It is built using Buildroot and it is optimized to run Home Assistant. It targets single board compute (SBC) devices like the Raspberry Pi or ODROID but also supports x86-64 systems with UEFI.

Features

  • Lightweight and memory-efficient
  • Minimized I/O
  • Over The Air (OTA) updates
  • Offline updates
  • Modular using Docker container engine

Supported hardware

  • Nabu Casa
  • Raspberry Pi
  • Hardkernel ODROID
  • Asus Tinker Board
  • Generic x86-64 (e.g. Intel NUC)
  • Virtual appliances

See the full list and specific models here

Getting Started

If you just want to use Home Assistant the official getting started guide and installation instructions take you through how to download Home Assistant Operating System and get it running on your machine.

If you're interested in finding out more about Home Assistant Operating System and how it works read on...

Development

If you don't have experience with embedded systems, Buildroot or the build process for Linux distributions it is recommended to read up on these topics first (e.g. Bootlin has excellent resources).

The Home Assistant Operating System documentation can be found on the Home Assistant Developer Docs website.

Components

  • Bootloader:
    • Barebox for devices that support UEFI
    • U-Boot for devices that don't support UEFI
  • Operating System:
  • File Systems:
    • SquashFS for read-only file systems (using LZ4 compression)
    • ZRAM for /tmp, /var and swap (using LZ4 compression)
  • Container Platform:
    • Docker Engine for running Home Assistant components in containers
  • Updates:
    • RAUC for Over The Air (OTA) and USB updates
  • Security:

Development builds

The Development build GitHub Action Workflow is a manually triggered workflow which creates Home Assistant OS development builds. The development builds are available at https://os-artifacts.home-assistant.io/index.html.

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