Nothing EVER Works! - Making a dumb door smart

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Just wait until he realizes how often Chamberlain changes things and breaks the MyQ integrationโ€ฆ

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 159 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/PufffSmokeySmoke ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 10 2021 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

His audience is huge, so this could cause a significant bump in interest in home assistant, but I hope nobody sees this video and thinks they need 14 cores and 64 GB of RAM!

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 125 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/cosmicosmo4 ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 10 2021 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

I love this video, I feel like at least 50% of HA users went through some similar bullshit and just decided "fuck it I am doing this on my own"

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 88 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/MikiZed ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 10 2021 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

Just watched this myself. When I saw the thumbnail I thought to myself "He should try HA".

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 170 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/HDmaniac ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 10 2021 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

His description of the Nabu Casa cloud is a bit wrong, but I can understand his desire not to pay for a subscription since that's what he's trying to avoid in the first place.

I'm interested to see if he does more HA stuff in the future.

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 22 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/icoup ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 10 2021 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

This is great. I was going to similar problems before I discovered HA and this was the start of exploring the rabbit hole.

Its a very deep hole (full of excitement).

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 21 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/AnalphaBestie ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 10 2021 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

Iโ€™ve felt his pain.

I started with gocontrol garage door with wink. The go control would give false statuses in winter or just not work but it was awesome for summer... I live in Canada.

Then I switched to home assistant and messed around with a product I canโ€™t remember the name that would trigger but not monitor and a tilt sensor. I found the tilt sensor also unreliable.

Iโ€™ve been running a 5 dollar solution by Dr zzz for the past 2 years with no issues. It was diy sonoff with a reed switch but it never fails. I donโ€™t use google, I use Alexa but had a shortcut on my iPhone to trigger it.

I started all this with the idea of paying no subscriptions, and have no cloud / foreign servers for my info.

Home Assistant is so awesome and I use it for my alarm, garage, temp, cameras, docker control, wall tablet, lights, scenes, washer notifications, etc... 2 years ago I started paying the subscription just to support the people. Itโ€™s by far the most supported, and frequently updated software I have... followed closely by unraid.

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 19 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/umad_cause_ibad ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 10 2021 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

Glad to see more tech youtubers realizing the power of Home Assistant.

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 44 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/angrygeeknc ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 10 2021 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

This is huge for HA! I was going to pause the video and write a comment to use HA when he suddenly started talking about it! Awesome.

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 10 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/[deleted] ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 10 2021 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies
Captions
- Back in 2019, I took my 1980s garage door opener which used to work like this and made it smart, meaning that I could control it with my phone. Unfortunately, while it worked perfectly at the time the two years that followed have been, less than stellar to say the least. See, look, here's the board we were using. It's not in there anymore, is it? Fortunately, today, I think we finally have the ultimate solution. And since this video is sponsored by Pulseway that should give you some idea as to what the solution is. For those of you who are a little slow, it's a server. It's always a server, isn't it, Jake? - [Jake] Hell, yeah! (enchanted playful music) (garage door rambling) - When I bought this house it still had the original garage door openers from the 1980s. So when I wanted to add some kind of smart remote control functionality to it, the most obvious solution was to just replace them. So I went on Amazon and bought a smart Chamberlain garage door opener with the intention of installing it myself, only to read through the documentation and realized that it was a $1 a month subscription fee for If This Then That integration so I could use my Google Assistant... A dollar a month? I was outraged. I'm not paying a subscription fee. So instead I spent a whole year subscription worth of money on this cheap Chinese Relay thing that connects to your wifi and will actually press the button just by bridging the contacts for you. And as I said before, it worked perfectly. I'd give my voice command. It would go through my If This Then That recipe and then click click, it would activate the door. The only non-ideal thing was that this has no way of knowing if the garage door is open or closed. But that was easy enough to install with a little roost device or with a garage security camera. Only it's traumatic to think about that time now because that's when the first major thing went wrong. I had the audacity to replace my wireless access point. I went from my ruckus one to my ubiquity one which should have been fine, except that my Relay wouldn't connect to the new access point even after I changed the SSI ID and the password to exactly the same one. No problem, I thought, I've seen that before. All I got to do as a factory rese.., Oh my God! There is no way to factory reset this thing. You actually just have to throw it away if you don't remember to change the credentials on it before you change your wifi. So that's okay. I went and bought a more expensive and feature rich four channels, Sonoff one. And it was back to working perfectly. Until, Okay Google, open the Volt garage door. One day, it randomly stopped working. After some quick Googling, it turns out that eWeLink stopped allowing If This Then That integration free of charge, which after I threw a temper tantrum on Twitter, I found out was because If This Then That changed their billing policies, making it so that eWeLink had to pay far more per user. I had a call with If This Then That CEO where it was off the record, unfortunately. So I can't really share all the details but ultimately they walked me through how If This Then That is to survive they basically have to make some kind of change. And they feel like allowing individual users for free to create up to three recipes of their own and then use an unlimited number of other already existing recipes, seems like a reasonable middle ground. Unfortunately for me, that means that something as simple as open Odyssey garage door close Odyssey garage door, open Volt garage door and close Volt garage door exceeds the freaking limit. No bother, said, I. I will just change all of the voice commands to activate Odyssey garage door and activate Volt garage door, since quite frankly, the Relay stupid doodad whether it's this one or the Sonoff has no idea if it's open or closed, anyway. It was just kind of like a user friendliness thing. Then it really hit the fan, my ancient garage door opener that I had spent all this freaking time smartifying outright died. So when I called a local garage door installer company because frankly, I didn't feel like installing it myself. They basically said, look, there's only like one unit that we install in everything. So either you take it or you don't, and I kind of went, yeah, okay, sure. I come home from work and sure enough, there it is. A brand new LiftMaster. And those of you who know anything about the industry will probably know that like I glass frames the garage door opener industry is basically a monopoly and LiftMaster is owned by, you guessed it, Chamberlain. The company that I was trying to freaking avoid because of their subscription fee in the first place. No problem said, I. I'll just take the same leads off of my Relay and plunk them onto the back of the wall unit, just like before. No subscription fee for me. It is what I thought. But the installer explains to me, and this was very helpful that these smart garage door openers no longer actually work the way the old ones did where they just pretty much closed a circuit. These ones are only powered by the wires in your wall. And instead they actually transmit wirelessly to the garage door opener units, just like the fob that you have in your car. So you can't use a relay in the way that you used to, where you just kind of, well, bridge the contacts at the back. Ha, ha, ha, not to be defeated. I quickly grabbed one of the PCVs out of a wall unit and soldered some leads of my own to the activation switch. So that effectively my relay going off was just pushing the same switch that I would normally push with my finger. Ha, ha, ah, genius. Too bad the system worked too well. I sent this video over to Maddie from Electra Boom, showing that while my Google Voice Assistant commands to open and close the door did in fact work with my soldered leads here, unfortunately, the garage door would also just randomly activate itself. He explained it to me and it's something to do with analog circuitry and having a very high level of sensitivity to electromagnetic interference. Essentially, what it means is that these wires coming off of the switch were acting as antennas and triggering it sometimes repeatedly in the middle of the night. I mean, that's a bit of a security problem, don't you think? With guidance from Maddie, I salvaged some capacitors and resistors from a random donor board that I had kicking around and attempted to put some kind of filtering on this circuit in order to prevent it from happening. But after spending an entire afternoon on it, I thought you know what, enough's enough. My wife will not get off my case about how the garage doors don't freaking work properly. I'm just gonna use chamberlains own myQ software. How bad can it be? Terrible, it turns out so here's my current setup then. With the Chamberlain, myQ app, you can from anywhere the world, see the status of your garage doors, how long they've been in that state. So here you can see the Volt has been open for four minutes and you can activate them either way. Well, what's so bad about that? That sounds pretty great. Oh, a couple of things. For starters, it constantly logs both me and my wife out seemingly whenever our IP address changes. Like, oh, I don't know. Say for example, when we're just coming into wifi at home or just leaving the range of our wifi and switching over to cellular data, that seems like a pretty small problem. And blindness, you might say. I mean, why are you pulling out your phone anyway. This whole journey freaking started because you wanted to open and close your garage door with a voice command. Why not just use myQ use integration with If This Then That which by the way, they don't charge a dollar a month for anymore. They now provide it for free. I'll tell you why, because it only allows you to close the door. When I get home at the end of the day I cannot say, well, okay, well open the garage door. It doesn't allow it through If This Then That, So I'm stuck with one of the following; A, a Relay that randomly opened my garage doors, and it does randomly close them as well. So that's good, that's a good feature. B, an app that constantly logs me out. So I have to log into it in my driveway in order to go home to my house. Or C, a voice assistant that only closes the doors, but does not open them. Oh, right, also there is D, I could just use the stupid fob thing that goes on your visor, like a normal human being but it's a huge security problem to keep those things in your car. And quite frankly, I cannot be arsed to like, carry it around with me all the time. So I know I'll end up leaving it in my car which is how people break into your house. So what this whole experience has highlighted for me is a couple of the big problems with smart home stuff in general. One, is unexpected service interruptions or policy changes that can break already perfectly functioning setups. And number two, is poor or incomplete interoperability between different brands and platforms. Now there's only so much we can do about the first one, terms of service can change. But at least for the second thing there actually is a solution. And it's called Home Assistant. Conveniently, I already have a home server that's perfectly capable of running Docker containers or virtual machines already running on Raid. So we're gonna show you guys the steps that we went through to get Home Assistant up and running. Now, what we're doing with it today is pretty basic. Taking a myQ device and having it work with Google Assistant. But there is so much that you can do with this that we are barely even scratching the surface. It's super cool. In a nutshell, Home Assistant is an open source home automation platform. It's kind of like If This Then That, except that you can host it yourself, and it's a lot more versatile. Basically, if you can dream it or well, at least program it, it's doable with Home Assistant. Our first Home Assistant inspired solution was based around using my existing Sonoff Inching Relay Opener and then a cheap ZigBee hub and a door sensor. The idea was that after issuing our chosen voice command through Google Assistant, Home Assistant would run a little script in the background to check the door status and then decide whether or not to trigger the garage. That would be to prevent me from accidentally opening a garage door that was already open, which would actually close it and vice versa. Now this is a great configuration because it relies on fewer cloud services. But for me, the whole ZigBee thing is a rabbit hole that I'm not ready to go down yet. Partly because I don't have to. It turns out that the fancy new garage door openers that I splurged on have a direct integration, thanks to Home Assistant, with support for opening the door, which really makes those other limitations seem pretty frustrating and arbitrary, doesn't it? It'll just take some setting up. First off, because of the way Google Assistant works, a few things need to be in place for it to be able to access your self hosted Home Assistant instance. First you'll need a domain name that you can use. So Google knows where to look. Second, you'll need an SSL certificate set up for that domain for security. And third you'll need remote access to that instance by way of port forwarding. Luckily for us, there are a few ways that we can make this a lot easier than it sounds, but for those of you who don't wanna dabble in all this techno wizardry there is a workaround that avoids all of it as well as helping with the security concerns of having your Home Assistant instance being public facing, it's called Home Assistant Cloud. It's a partnered service run by the founder of Home Assistant, where they hosted in the cloud for you. And then you can actually just tie it into Google Assistant directly without any annoying manual configuration. However, that means that you are again, relying on a cloud service to host it as well as paying a bloody subscription, which was what I was trying to avoid. So here comes the more DIY fun way to do it, featuring my Unraid NAS. Let's check that out real quick. This is my combination, home NAS and server. So it's got about 60 terabytes of storage, which is more than I need, at least for my personal projects 14 core processor, 64 gigs of Ram, and naturally it's running Pulseway for monitoring so I can keep tabs on it, have remote access and of course get notifications if anything goes wrong. To help you guys follow along, a full text tutorial on the Linus tech tips forum will be linked in the video description because it is simply too much to fit into a video. First up, snag a domain from your favorite registrar, for the purposes of this video we'll be using autopilottonowhere.com. If you have a static IP, just set it in your DNS provider. But if your IP is dynamic, that means changing, you'll need to set up dynamic DNS or a program that updates your DNS record when your IP changes. Since our domain is managed through CloudFlare the Unraid community app CloudFlare DDNS works perfectly for this. Then to proxy our local Home Assistant Instance into a public facing domain and to handle the free automatically renewing SSL certificate we will use another community app called NginxProxyManager. Before we can set up the SSL certificate in it though, we'll need to set up our port forwarding rules so that we can actually verify that we own the domain. This is gonna vary based on your router. So use your Google-fu if you aren't familiar but in the ubiquity control panel anyway, it's super easy. Note, by the way, you'll wanna make sure that your Unraid NAS or other machine that's running all this gear actually has a static local IP. Otherwise those port-forwarding rules that you set up could just break unexpectedly. Back into the proxy manager, set up your SSL certificate as well as the host proxy with your domain. And bam, we install Home Assistant and we can access it remotely. The sky is now officially the limit. But like really, with Home Assistant you could make it turn off all your lights when all paired devices leave a geo-fenced location like your house. Or you could have it turn on your sprinklers for you at a certain time, unless your moisture sensor in your yard has detected rain, or if you don't feel like one of those you can also just integrate it with the local weather report. Or you could make a Sonoff button work with a Yeelight bulb. The possibilities are endless. In our case we're just simply going to link my garage door openers, myQ program to Home Assistant and set up Google Assistant integration. This is a pretty long process for self hosted peeps. So follow the instructions linked in the description for that. But once it's set up, we can add it directly to our Google Home app then, bada bing, bada boom, two garages, yes. So it's all working in theory. What about in practice? - [Google Assistant] Okay nerd. - Open both garages And finally works. Oh man. I know, right. So, big thank you to you for watching. Thank you to Jake for fixing my garage again. And of course thank you to Pulseway for sponsoring this video. Pulseway, if you guys aren't familiar is the solution to monitoring your systems and your servers. They've got support for Windows, Mac, and Linux and they allow you to see all kinds of important steps on your systems. Like what the CPU usage is, Ram usage is, storage. Basic stuff like that, but also apply custom scripts, roll updates and remotely access your machines. And all of that stuff can be done from the comfort of your own chair, through their mobile apps available for iOS and Android. So naturally I use Pulseway for all kinds of things. So let me know if my server is down or unresponsive or if my storage is reaching a critical level but you can use it for basically anything. So learn more at the link down below and check out Pulseway for yourself. Even personal users can actually get a lot of benefit. So guys, do go check it out. If you guys enjoyed this video and you want the full history of how this got started, maybe check out the original where we smartified my OG 1985 garage door openers. - [Jake] It looks like a (indistinct) here. - It's so slow, I hate that. But because we're using the micQ integration there's no getting around it. When I was just using the Relay, I didn't have to wait for that. - [Jake] Ahhh. - Yeah, so if I could still use the relay, honestly I would but this is fine.
Info
Channel: Linus Tech Tips
Views: 1,849,255
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: garage, door, myq, ewelink, ifttt, smarthome, smart, automation, homeassistant, hass.io, cover, unraid, self hosted, server, networking, zigbee
Id: x7pSkVarixU
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 16min 57sec (1017 seconds)
Published: Sat Apr 10 2021
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