DALI <-> MQTT bridge
This daemon is inspired in zigbee2mqtt and provides the means to integrate a DALI light controller into your Home Assistant setup.
Previously I developed a Home Assistant custom component (https://github.com/dgomes/home-assistant-custom-components/tree/master/light) but I've since decided to run Home Assistant in another device, away from the physical DALI Bus.
This daemon relies in python-dali so all devices supported by this library should also be supported by dali2mqtt.
This package depends on https://github.com/trezor/cython-hidapi
python3 -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements.txt
You can create a configuration file when you call the daemon the first time
venv/bin/python3 -m dali2mqtt.dali2mqtt
Then just edit the file accordingly. You can also create the file with the right values, by using the arguments of dali_mqtt_daemon.py:
--config CONFIG configuration file
--mqtt-server MQTT_SERVER
MQTT server
--mqtt-port MQTT_PORT
MQTT port
--mqtt-username MQTT_USERNAME
MQTT user name
--mqtt-password MQTT_PASSWORD
MQTT password
--mqtt-base-topic MQTT_BASE_TOPIC
MQTT base topic
--dali-driver {hasseb,tridonic,dali_server}
DALI device driver
--dali-lamps DALI_LAMPS
Number of lamps to scan
--ha-discover-prefix HA_DISCOVER_PREFIX
HA discover mqtt prefix
--log-level {critical,error,warning,info,debug}
Log level
--log-color Coloring output
Default all lamps will be displayed in Home Assistant by short address, numbers from 0 to 63
You can give lamps special names to help you identify lamps by name. On the first execution, devices.yaml
file will be create with all lamps available.
Example devices.yaml
:
0:
"friendly_name": "Lamp in kitchen"
8:
"friendly_name": "Lamp in bathroom"
Please note that MQTT topics support a minimum set of characters, therefore friendly names are converted to slug strings, so a lamp with address 0 (as an example) in MQTT will be named "lamp-in-kitchen"
edit dali2mqtt.service and change the path of python3 to the path of your venv, after:
sudo cp dali2mqtt.service /etc/systemd/system/
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl enable dali2mqtt.service
sudo adduser homeassistant plugdev
cp 50-hasseb.rules /etc/udev/rules.d/
You might need to reboot your device after the last change.
In this example the user is homeassistant
sudo systemctl start dali2mqtt.service
sudo systemctl status dali2mqtt.service
When the daemon first runs, it creates a default config.yaml
file.
You can edit the file to customize your setup.