Ecovacs
The ecovacs
integration is the main integration to integrate all Ecovacs (Deebot) vacuums. You will need your Ecovacs account information (username, password) to discover and control vacuums in your account.
There is currently support for the following device types within Home Assistant:
Configuration
To add your Ecovacs devices into your Home Assistant installation, add the following to your configuration.yaml
file:
ecovacs:
username: YOUR_ECOVACS_USERNAME
password: YOUR_ECOVACS_PASSWORD
country: YOUR_TWO_LETTER_COUNTRY_CODE
continent: YOUR_TWO_LETTER_CONTINENT_CODE
Note: For some countries, you will need to set continent
to ww
(meaning worldwide.) There is unfortunately no way to know the correct settings other than guessing and checking. See the py-sucks library protocol documentation for more information about what has been figured out about the Ecovacs servers.
Additional note: There are some issues during the password encoding. Using some special characters (e.g., -
) in your password does not work.
Stability and Reporting Bugs
The library that talks to the Ecovacs servers is in a very early state and still under development. As such, it is likely that not all regions and devices will work at the current time.
Please see the py-sucks library documentation for some more information about what has been tested, and check out the GitHub issues to see if the issue you’re having is known or being worked on.
If you have an issue with the Ecovacs integration, please file a GitHub Issue and include your Home Assistant logs in the report. To get full debug output from both the Ecovacs integration and the underlying sucks
library, place this in your configuration.yaml
file:
logger:
logs:
homeassistant.components.ecovacs: debug
homeassistant.components.vacuum.ecovacs: debug
sucks: debug
Warning: doing this will cause your authentication token to be visible in your log files. Be sure to remove any tokens and other authentication details from your log before posting them in an issue.
Vacuum
The ecovacs
vacuum platform allows you to monitor and control your Ecovacs Deebot vacuums.
Vacuum services
The ecovacs
vacuum platform does not support eithor of the services vacuum.pause
or vacuum.start
, it supports the following services instead.
Service vacuum.turn_on
Start a new cleaning task.
Service data attribute | Optional | Description |
---|---|---|
entity_id |
yes | Only act on specific vacuum. Use entity_id: all to target all. |
Service vacuum.turn_off
Stop the current cleaning task and return to the dock.
Service data attribute | Optional | Description |
---|---|---|
entity_id |
yes | Only act on specific vacuum. Use entity_id: all to target all. |
Service vacuum.start_pause
Start, pause or resume a cleaning task.
Service data attribute | Optional | Description |
---|---|---|
entity_id |
yes | Only act on specific vacuum. Use entity_id: all to target all. |
Integration lifespan
The remaining lifespan of components on your Deebot vacuum will be reported as attributes on the vacuum entity. The value will be a whole number representing the percentage of life remaining.
Here’s an example of how to extract the filter’s lifespan to its own sensor using a template sensor:
# Example configuration.yaml entry
template:
- sensor:
- name: "Vacuum Filter Remaining Lifespan"
unit_of_measurement: "%"
state: "{{ state_attr('vacuum.my_vacuum_id', 'component_filter') }}"
Or, if you want a simple binary sensor that becomes On
when the filter needs to be replaced (5% or less):
# Example configuration.yaml entry
template:
- binary_sensor:
- name: "Vacuum Filter"
device_class: problem
state: "{{ state_attr('vacuum.my_vacuum_id', 'component_filter') <= 5 }}"
Handling Errors
The vacuum entity has an error
attribute that will contain the most recent error message that came from the vacuum. There is not a comprehensive list of all error messages, so you may need to do some experimentation to determine the error messages that your vacuum can send.
If the vacuum fires a “no error” event, the error
attribute will change back to None
. Note, however, that this does not happen for all types of errors.
Alternatively, you can use the ecovacs_error
event to watch for errors. This event will contain a data payload that looks like:
{
"entity_id": "vacuum.deebot_m80",
"error": "an_error_name"
}
Finally, if a vacuum becomes unavailable (usually due to being idle and off its charger long enough for it to completely power off,) the vacuum’s status
attribute will change to offline
until it is turned back on.