Home Assistant Presence Tracker (HAPT) is an event-driven device presence tracker for Home Assistant on an OpenWRT router or access point.
HAPT listens on association and disassociation events to wireless networks, using the hostapd control interface. It keeps track of which device is connected to which networks. When a device connects to its first network, or disconnects from its last network, a service call to Home Assistant is performed to mark the device as home or away. By tracking active device connections, HAPT ensures that a device switching between different networks (e.g. the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands) is not marked as away.
Download a package from the releases page, and install it either by uploading it in LuCi (System > Software)
or running opkg install <file>
from a shell.
Once the package is installed, you must update the configuration in /etc/config/hapt
. At minimum the host
option
should be set to the address of your Home Assistant installation, and the token
option to a Home Assistant
long-lived access token (these can be generated in the Home Assistant web interface).
The consider_home_timeout
and consider_home_disconnect
settings can be used to configure for how long (in seconds)
after the first association and last disassociation event the device should be considered home. Since Home Assistant
does not support marking a device as away (on disconnects), this is implemented by marking the device as home for a
negligible amount of time, after which Home Assistant will mark the device as away. The default values should be fine
here.
With the wifi_interfaces
option, it is possible to specify the wireless interfaces that must be monitored. This can be
used (for example) to ignore devices on a guest network.
By listing MAC addresses in the track_mac_address
option, it is possible to whitelist MAC addresses which are tracked.
This prevents uninteresting devices from being synchronized with Home Assistant and cluttering the entity registry.
After modifying the configuration, you must restart the service by service hapt restart
. This can also be done from
the LuCi interface (System > Startup). HAPT prints log messages to the system log, so that you can verify it is working
as expected.
It is possible to synchronize just the currently connected devices with Home Assistant by running hapt
from the
command line. This can be especially useful to debug the connection with Home Assistant, as this will also print any
errors that occur.
You can build a custom package by running the makepkg.sh
script, which will run the package build in a Docker
container and place the compiled package in the build/bin
directory.
This project has been inspired by the openwrt_hass_devicetracker package.