New Wyze Cam Outdoor and his awesome hat! Posted: 08 Aug 2020 10:50 AM PDT |
Introduction to ESP8266 - Getting Started & Arduino IDE Setup (video) Posted: 08 Aug 2020 06:52 AM PDT |
WHA With in-wall volume control Posted: 08 Aug 2020 11:51 PM PDT I just bought a home wired for 8 audio zones. Each zone has an in-wall volume control associated with it. I didn't want to buy 8 all at once, so I bought 3 Sonos Amp modules and wired 6 zones across 3 Amps, e.g., master bed and master bath are now in same zone but with separate in-wall volume controls. In some sense, this is actually useful because I can turn down the volume in part of a zone if I want to without having had to buy a completely new zone source. My question is, is there a smart version of in-wall volume controls? Everywhere I search, they seem to be dumb controls with rotary or slider controls. Using the example above, I'd love to play music in one zone, but turn off (or turn down) the speakers in the master bath while keeping volume up in the bedroom, even though they are on the same zone. Is there such a solution? Or am I over analyzing this and the best way is just more Sonos Amps? Those basically invalidate the in-wall controls altogether if on separate sources since the Sonos volume should be controlled as well. Open to suggestions, and thanks in advance. submitted by /u/benfoldsone [link] [comments] |
What is the most important and useful feature of an IoT cloud platform to you? Like thingspeak, thingsboard, adafruit.io, blynk, etc.? Posted: 08 Aug 2020 10:50 PM PDT Widgets? Reports? Multiplatform like good in web and mobile? Over the air update? Data storage? Integration? Others? PS: We are working on a free iot platform with the easiest way setup. It will be available both on mobile and web. submitted by /u/skygomez [link] [comments] |
Tethys IP Camera connection Posted: 08 Aug 2020 10:25 PM PDT I'm trying to set up a Roku channel (IP Camera Viewer Basic) to view an IP camera I bought. The camera is a Tethys F300 and I can connect the Android MIPC app to it okay. I've gone through the settings on the Roku channel but it cannot find the camera, and the quick setup / discovery doesn't list the manufacturer or model either. Ominously I just noted this text in the manual: Q. Does the Tethys Camera support HTTP/RTSP video feed? A. For our TETHYS Wireless Security Camera, we do not support the ability for users to access the video feed via HTTP or RTSP. There are a couple of reasons for this. For starters, using an HTTP or RTSP is a very high security risk. ...which is quite ironic as I used a packet sniffer to try to determine the URL of the device and saw that it was connecting to IP addresses all over the world (their app, not the camera), so goodness knows what it's sending - I'm not even using the cloud service. What I did note was that all the connections to the camera seemed to be UDP and on a few different ports. The Roku channel app doesn't support UDP so maybe this is it (plus the ominous text above). Any ideas, or am I SOL? https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07TQR22QS submitted by /u/GeoffSim [link] [comments] |
Lutron Serena Shades: 120" Patio/sliding door install, complete with (2) architectural fascias. Gallery inside! Posted: 08 Aug 2020 08:52 PM PDT Hey, it's BeachTechie! You may remember me from such posts as Weatherproof AirPlay2-in-a-box, "How To SERIOUSLY Trigger PoE Extremists in 12 Easy Steps" and "Dude, can't that guy just post once to Reddit? Why does he always delete and re-post?" 😝. Today, I'm here to present my latest -- and one of my last, I fear; there's only so much to do! -- HomeKit additions: Lutron Serena shades. Gallery is here: https://imgur.com/a/41grVeE As always: TLDR: - I have about 120" worth of west-facing patio doors to cover
- I wanted separate right/left shade control (for mid-day sun etc.)
- These are the 98% opaque shades, in "Metal" color
- They cost a little under $2000 installed
Longer version: The Backstory: When I bought my place, it came with these quasi "homemade" shutters. They were nice in theory, but terrible in practice; they were heavy, and falling apart. More importantly, they required room to "Swing out" to close (meaning nothing could be close to the doors) and when they were open, the shutters still took up space. The left one stowed away outside the door frame (still requiring a huge arc of free space to get there) and the right one was stowed right in the way of my view. So basically that sucked. I got estimates for "bypass shutters" but they were around $6000, and that's getting plastic, not wood, and they still would take up part of the door. Enter Serena shades! I basically hemmed and hawed about buying these for the better part of three years (although in my defense, some of that was rebelling against the fact that Lutron used to offer 20% off and then just...stopped). I searched high and low for alternatives, but nothing fit the bill. Now that I have them, I regret not pulling the trigger sooner. There's nothing else that has all the features I was looking for, with the quality I wanted. Full Buy list: - 2 x 62" x 84" Serena Shades, in Palette "Metal"
- 2 x Architectural fascia in white
- 2 x Pico remotes
- Installation
Relevant Info: - The architectural fascia looks fantastic. There aren't a lot of photos of it, but if you're going to buy these, I 100% recommend them. They're modern and clean. The fabric wrapped fascia looks a little like grandma to me, and having them uncovered is tacky (looking at you, Fyrtur.)
- I was worried about the "Gap" between two separate fascia. You can see from the picture it looks great. That's the good...
- ...the bad, is that the gap between the actual shades is bigger than I would like. For my use case -- second story living room, off a balcony, only closed at night -- this doesn't matter. But I can't imagine this setup would work for any sort of light-tight scenario (which sucks, because I want these in my bedroom)
- The "wow" factor of these is off the charts. They really make a home that already is like 95% smart -- see also: my wall mounted iPad -- seem like it's from the future.
- The shades look great. I was worried that at that size -- over 120 inches -- it'd look like a big grey sheet on the wall, but they look classy. During the day, when they're lowered, they look a little green. But that's because of the argon in the sliding doors (You can see it in the pictures). Nothing I can do about it, but if you're getting a Palette series (or whatever they ones they're calling that don't have the white background) that's something to note
- They do catch the wind and "bang" against the door frame a bit. As someone who lives in Socal and basically has those doors open 90% of the year, that's a bit of an issue. Again, for downstairs in a living room, it's fine, but for other contexts it might not work. If you mostly have your doors closed (i.e. you have A/C and/or it's too cold) you'll be fine
- These are supposedly 97% opaque and from the swatch they look like they don't let a ton of light in, but from the pictures you can see they do. Again, this is fine for my setup, but if you're putting these in any sort of light controlled scenario, you might want something a little more opaque. In general, just make a mental note that whatever you see in the swatch will be amplified when it goes up for real
- Good lord they're quiet. Like, it's ridiculous.
- So far we have 2 automations and 1 scene. They "open" when I turn off a white noise machine I have connected to a Vocolinc Smartbar (Basically that means I'm "up", right?) They close 15 minutes after sundown (simple enough). Then we have a "mid day sun" scene which is kind of the whole reason for these in the first place, where the one of the right drops about 30% and the one of the left drops 15% and it blocks out the 4-5pm sun -- which can be kind of oppressive in late summer -- as it sets in the west.
Okay, so lets talk about the elephant in the room: Cost. Now, I don't want to come across as snobby, but just...don't. Yes, they're not cheap. But no, they're not "expensive". Have you ever tried to cover 120" worth of glass with, uh, anything? Your choices are basically curtains (thanks grandma), vertical or horizontal blinds (1986 was a lovely year, but I have no intention of going back) or something like shutters. As I stated above, shutters were actually three times the price for this kind of size. So yeah, I actually think the Serenas are a bargain for this context. Sure, paying $500 for the same motor to cover a 20" accent window is tough to swallow. But for this, it's a no brainer. And again, forgive me, but miss me with that Somfy/Ikea stuff. They're not even in the same category of product. All in all, I couldn't be happier. The install was wondering, and if you're in SoCal, definitely look up Jason Parilla at Budget Blinds in Long Beach. He's top notch! Otherwise, happy to answer any questions! *The original iPad post -- with all the comments -- is here, but if you have questions about that setup, please post in the new thread 🙂 submitted by /u/BeachTechie [link] [comments] |
Does anyone have any experience with Brilliant Home Control? Posted: 08 Aug 2020 03:59 PM PDT |
Hoping to interview people about Smart Home Technology for Undergraduate project Posted: 08 Aug 2020 10:53 AM PDT Hey all, I am doing a mini-research project for my undergraduate that might play into my decision for my senior design. For my project, I want to interview ~10 people about Smart Home devices, and what they believe is important (and not important) in the devices they use. Each interview will take no more than 10 minutes. I would prefer to have it over Skype or the phone, but am also open to having it through email or text chat. The goal of my interviews is to get a better understanding of what consumers care about when they purchase Smart Home devices (so when I do my senior design, I am not wasting time building a project nobody wants). If you'd like to help me out, shoot me a Reddit DM or drop a comment below, and I'll get back to you ASAP! Thanks for taking the time to read this! submitted by /u/LordPeachez [link] [comments] |
Radio RA2 vs Insteon Posted: 08 Aug 2020 04:45 PM PDT I'm not new to home automation, I've done Lutron Caseta, Z-Wave, Zigbee, Homeseer, Hubitat, Smarthings, as well as RadioRA2 for others (I have level2 training and the Inclusive software so needing a dealer does not factor into my decision). We're getting ready to build our dream house on 10 acres, plus a guest house and want good home automation in both. I've never used Insteon but, I like what I see about it, however I'm wonder how good it really is in practice? is is as good as the Lutron systems I'm used to? The other worry I have is looking around it looks like insteon is almost a dead company are they? there seems to be no updates and lots of products just disappearing. We don't want to go the path of Z-wave again, just wasn't for us, It's cool technology but has enough quirks to be annoying. I want something that works, and always works as expected, so the technology just stays out of the way in a way that you don't really know it's there. Is Insteon at that level like Lutron is or is it going to be a system that needs lots of tinkering like Z-wave tends to need? submitted by /u/engineer2008 [link] [comments] |
Most Up to Date Guide for Chromebox Setup? Posted: 08 Aug 2020 08:24 PM PDT Hey all, I just purchased a new (and first) home and am another user just getting started. I've been reading for months as many as guides here and over at community.home-assistant.io. While I still don't have a firm grasp on how you geniuses manage to make your automation works, I'm hoping to avoid the whole paralysis by analysis thing and get started.. I purchased an ASUS CN60 Chromebox after seeing a few users mention they had Home Assistant running and had great experiences. Those posts were from a year+ out. I plan on following these guides: Absolute Beginners guide to installing HA on Intel NUC using Docker Setting up Home Assistant in a virtual environment on Intel NUC (or any other x86 machine) JANUARY 2018 Those guides don't mention a Chromebox specifically, so - I'm not sure if they apply to me.
- Since they're slightly dated, are those guides the best method to get me started?
I know how things can change quite quickly, so I thought I'd at least ask this community for a nudge in the right direction. Thanks for any help! submitted by /u/Checksout__ [link] [comments] |
Getting started, looking for some help Posted: 08 Aug 2020 08:39 AM PDT I know this has been ask before, but I wanted some advice based on my own setup and needs. Background: I started with an EZ-Viz doorbell, then added a couple of WeMo plugs (that I got super cheap) then added a Ring Floodlight Cam and a Wyze Cam with sensors (on the overhead garage door). Now I am pulling the EZ-Viz and replacing it with a Ring Doorbell Pro and replacing the WeMo with Kasa Plugs. So that is where I am now. I am wanting to add a ring alarm with the retrofit kit (house if fully hard wired and everything tests out good for the retrofit. I am wondering if I should get a hub like a Smartthings, Hubitat Elevation, or Build a HASS. I have both Echos and Google home devices, plus my car has Google Auto so I am trying to build the best neutral platform I can and make the most of the tech. I am still within my return window on the Kasa devices, I snagged them on sale on Amazon a week or so back... Edit, I am also looking to add a BOND or other RF controller later Suggestions? Questions? I am open to any hub I just want the one that will work best for my setup submitted by /u/Baron-VonEvil [link] [comments] |
Control4 Timers,Variables & Contidionals Posted: 08 Aug 2020 08:26 AM PDT |
Smooth z-wave LED dimmer? Posted: 08 Aug 2020 12:01 PM PDT So I recently picked up an inovelli LSW31, black series dimmer, and although I love the functionality, I'm having a major issue with visible "steps" in dimming, particularly at the low end of the bulbs range. My bulbs are Toggled 48in. 3000k dimmable LED fluorescent replacement bulbs. This issue has come up in the inovelli forums recently here and here, and the manufacturer seems to have indicated it is a hardware limitation. I have 30 days to return the switch if I'm not satisfied, so I'm wondering if anyone has any experiences with Z-wave switches that dim LEDs smoothly? submitted by /u/Polite_Elephant [link] [comments] |
Smart intercom phone whit video whitout camera for apartment buildings Posted: 08 Aug 2020 05:59 AM PDT I live in an apartment, i own the house but not the building, so while i can change the intercom at my house i can't change the system that is at the entrance to the building, the current system already has voice and a camera. Is there any product that i can hook up to the cables that come to my home that connects to the wifi and sends the video and audio to my smartphone and i can open and answer from the smartphone? I know of the existence of Nello one, but that only lets you open it does not deal whit audio nor video. I would also not mind make a DIY one whit a raspberry or something, i am a programmer so i may be able to make the software, but i am no electrical engineer so I don't have the sightless idea how intercom cables work. submitted by /u/lyoko1 [link] [comments] |
HA automation to turn up Alexa volume when no sound playing? Posted: 08 Aug 2020 11:27 AM PDT So, been fighting with YAML for a couple days trying to get my Echos volume to reduce when playing Spotify and increase back to previous level after its stopped. The first part I can make happen without any issues, when Spotify plays HA turns its volume down to 5. When it stops though, it does not increase again. It stays at 5. I was reading that Alexa has to be playing something to change volume, so it was suggested to make her say " ... " which equates to silence but is enough to do it, but that doesnt seem to work. Nor does making her say long phrases in a test to see if its just length. The echo does not want to turn the volume up no matter what I try. What can i do to fix this. Heres my YAML action: - data: data: type: tts message: ... target: media_player.family_room_echo service: notify.alexa_media - data: volume_level: '0.70' entity_id: media_player.spotify service: media_player.volume_set mode: single submitted by /u/th3suffering [link] [comments] |
Smart Lock for Mortise Lock Posted: 08 Aug 2020 02:52 PM PDT |
Best options for Motorized roller shades? Posted: 08 Aug 2020 02:41 PM PDT What are the best options on the market for motorized roller shades that integrate with home automation? (New install not retrofit, max width 145" if possible) Any guidance is appreciated! submitted by /u/butter_waffles_-_ [link] [comments] |
Trane XL950 Thermostat keeps disconnecting from Nexia - Thoughts? Posted: 08 Aug 2020 02:06 PM PDT Looking for some help diagnosing an intermittent connection issue with my Trane Comfortlink II XL950: About 2 years ago, it developed an issue where it would sporadically lose connection to the Nexia servers and was thus uncontrollable via the remote interface. Normal in-person controls and functionality are unaffected, and the thermostat itself always thinks it's connected to WiFi. After a few months of trying firmware upgrades and static IPs and different DNS servers, we finally got to a stable state by creating a 2.4GHz SSID that was just for the thermostat, and it lived in relative peace there for about 9 months. Recently it's started acting up again, and I'm unable to replicate the previous success. I dumped some logs, but I'm not an expert with any of the protocols being used and don't have much to go on as this is a fairly niche device. Does any of this indicate an obvious problem to any of you? NOTE: For context, the reported behavior on Nexia's side is: Disconnect from Nexia at 11:21 Reconnected at 11:23 Disconnected again at 11:26 Reconnected at 12:07 Disconnected 12:11 Reconnected 12:53 Aug 8 11:21:35 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[5123:1073865936]: SSL_read: Connection timed out (110) Aug 8 11:21:35 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[5123:1073865936]: Connection reset: 27903 bytes sent to SSL, 8533 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 11:21:45 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[22120:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 11:21:45 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[22120:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 11:21:51 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[22120:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 3.217.23.92:8090 Aug 8 11:21:51 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[22120:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:49796 Aug 8 11:21:51 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[22120:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 11:21:51 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[22120:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=NC/L=Davidson/O=Ingersoll Rand/OU=Nexia SSL/CN=.mynexia.com/emailAddress=postmaster@mynexia.com Aug 8 11:23:43 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[27537:1073865936]: SSL_write: Broken pipe (32) Aug 8 11:23:43 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[27537:1073865936]: Connection reset: 529664 bytes sent to SSL, 4035 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 11:23:45 daemon.err mDNSResponder: mDNS_Execute: mDNSPlatformRawTime went backwards by 3081 ticks; setting correction factor to -2064571838 Aug 8 11:24:41 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[24976:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 11:24:41 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[24976:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 11:24:45 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[24976:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 34.226.11.228:443 Aug 8 11:24:45 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[24976:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:34923 Aug 8 11:28:05 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[24976:1073865936]: SSL_connect: Peer suddenly disconnected Aug 8 11:28:05 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[24976:1073865936]: Connection reset: 0 bytes sent to SSL, 0 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 11:28:30 local0.info udhcpc[2874]: Sending renew… Aug 8 11:28:30 local0.info udhcpc[2874]: Lease of 192.168.1.85 obtained, lease time 3600 Aug 8 11:29:05 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[29239:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 11:29:05 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[29239:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 11:29:10 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[29239:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 34.226.11.228:443 Aug 8 11:29:10 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[29239:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:37301 Aug 8 11:29:20 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[29239:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 11:29:20 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[29239:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=NC/L=Davidson/O=Ingersoll Rand/OU=Nexia SSL/CN=.mynexia.com/emailAddress=postmaster@mynexia.com Aug 8 11:36:24 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[29239:1073865936]: SSL_read: Connection timed out (110) Aug 8 11:36:24 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[29239:1073865936]: Connection reset: 286 bytes sent to SSL, 134 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 11:37:24 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[4930:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 11:37:24 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[4930:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 11:37:25 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[4930:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 34.226.11.228:443 Aug 8 11:37:25 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[4930:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:50247 Aug 8 11:37:26 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[4930:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 11:37:26 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[4930:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=NC/L=Davidson/O=Ingersoll Rand/OU=Nexia SSL/CN=.mynexia.com/emailAddress=postmaster@mynexia.com Aug 8 11:44:40 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[4930:1073865936]: SSL_read: Connection timed out (110) Aug 8 11:44:40 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[4930:1073865936]: Connection reset: 215 bytes sent to SSL, 108 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 11:45:41 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[12853:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 11:45:41 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[12853:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 11:45:46 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[12853:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 34.226.11.228:443 Aug 8 11:45:46 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[12853:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:41520 Aug 8 11:45:55 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[12853:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 11:45:55 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[12853:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=NC/L=Davidson/O=Ingersoll Rand/OU=Nexia SSL/CN=.mynexia.com/emailAddress=postmaster@mynexia.com Aug 8 11:47:25 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[25935:1073865936]: SSL_read: Connection timed out (110) Aug 8 11:47:25 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[25935:1073865936]: Connection reset: 496436 bytes sent to SSL, 3640 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 11:52:16 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[12853:1073865936]: SSL_read: Connection timed out (110) Aug 8 11:52:16 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[12853:1073865936]: Connection reset: 191 bytes sent to SSL, 108 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 11:52:31 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[19509:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 11:52:31 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[19509:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 11:52:40 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[19509:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 168.65.229.203:443 Aug 8 11:52:40 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[19509:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:40293 Aug 8 11:53:17 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[20239:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 11:53:17 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[20239:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 11:53:17 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[20239:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 34.226.11.228:443 Aug 8 11:53:17 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[20239:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:47246 Aug 8 11:53:18 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[20239:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 11:53:18 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[20239:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=NC/L=Davidson/O=Ingersoll Rand/OU=Nexia SSL/CN=.mynexia.com/emailAddress=postmaster@mynexia.com Aug 8 11:53:41 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[19509:1073865936]: SSL_connect: Peer suddenly disconnected Aug 8 11:53:41 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[19509:1073865936]: Connection reset: 0 bytes sent to SSL, 0 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 11:58:20 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[20239:1073865936]: SSL_read: Connection timed out (110) Aug 8 11:58:20 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[20239:1073865936]: Connection reset: 120 bytes sent to SSL, 0 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 11:58:30 local0.info udhcpc[2874]: Sending renew… Aug 8 11:58:30 local0.info udhcpc[2874]: Lease of 192.168.1.85 obtained, lease time 3600 Aug 8 11:58:48 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[25588:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 11:58:48 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[25588:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 11:58:53 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[22120:1073865936]: SSL_read: Connection timed out (110) Aug 8 11:58:53 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[22120:1073865936]: Connection reset: 4913 bytes sent to SSL, 1556 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 11:58:58 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[25588:1073865936]: connect_blocking: s_poll_wait 168.65.229.203:443: timeout Aug 8 11:58:58 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[25588:1073865936]: Connection reset: 0 bytes sent to SSL, 0 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 11:59:04 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[25842:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 11:59:04 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[25842:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 11:59:14 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[25842:1073865936]: connect_blocking: s_poll_wait 3.217.111.238:8090: timeout Aug 8 11:59:14 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[25842:1073865936]: Connection reset: 0 bytes sent to SSL, 0 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 11:59:20 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26117:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 11:59:20 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26117:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 11:59:21 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26117:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 34.226.11.228:443 Aug 8 11:59:21 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26117:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:45693 Aug 8 11:59:21 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26117:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 11:59:21 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26117:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=NC/L=Davidson/O=Ingersoll Rand/OU=Nexia SSL/CN=.mynexia.com/emailAddress=postmaster@mynexia.com Aug 8 11:59:24 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26183:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 11:59:24 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26183:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 11:59:34 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[26183:1073865936]: connect_blocking: s_poll_wait 3.216.188.105:8090: timeout Aug 8 11:59:34 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26183:1073865936]: Connection reset: 0 bytes sent to SSL, 0 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 11:59:44 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26523:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 11:59:44 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26523:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 11:59:54 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26523:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 3.217.111.238:8090 Aug 8 11:59:54 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26523:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:58821 Aug 8 11:59:54 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26523:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 11:59:54 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26523:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=NC/L=Davidson/O=Ingersoll Rand/OU=Nexia SSL/CN=.mynexia.com/emailAddress=postmaster@mynexia.com Aug 8 12:00:54 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[26117:1073865936]: SSL_read: Connection timed out (110) Aug 8 12:00:54 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26117:1073865936]: Connection reset: 150 bytes sent to SSL, 85 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 12:01:54 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[28701:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 12:01:55 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[28701:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 12:01:59 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[28701:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 34.226.11.228:443 Aug 8 12:01:59 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[28701:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:45697 Aug 8 12:02:43 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[28701:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 12:02:43 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[28701:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=NC/L=Davidson/O=Ingersoll Rand/OU=Nexia SSL/CN=.mynexia.com/emailAddress=postmaster@mynexia.com Aug 8 12:04:05 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[30740:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 12:04:05 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[30740:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 12:04:15 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[30740:1073865936]: connect_blocking: s_poll_wait 168.65.229.203:443: timeout Aug 8 12:04:15 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[30740:1073865936]: Connection reset: 0 bytes sent to SSL, 0 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 12:06:24 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[28701:1073865936]: SSL_connect: Peer suddenly disconnected Aug 8 12:06:24 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[28701:1073865936]: Connection reset: 0 bytes sent to SSL, 0 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 12:07:05 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[26523:1073865936]: Connection closed: 151 bytes sent to SSL, 132 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 12:07:15 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1308:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 12:07:15 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1308:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 12:07:24 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1308:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 3.217.23.92:8090 Aug 8 12:07:24 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1308:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:38324 Aug 8 12:07:25 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1308:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 12:07:25 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1308:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=NC/L=Davidson/O=Ingersoll Rand/OU=Nexia SSL/CN=.mynexia.com/emailAddress=postmaster@mynexia.com Aug 8 12:07:25 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1462:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 12:07:25 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1462:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 12:07:25 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1462:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 34.226.11.228:443 Aug 8 12:07:25 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1462:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:36723 Aug 8 12:07:25 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1462:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 12:07:25 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1462:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=NC/L=Davidson/O=Ingersoll Rand/OU=Nexia SSL/CN=.mynexia.com/emailAddress=postmaster@mynexia.com Aug 8 12:08:32 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[1462:1073865936]: SSL_read: Connection timed out (110) Aug 8 12:08:32 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1462:1073865936]: Connection reset: 150 bytes sent to SSL, 85 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 12:09:23 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3434:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 12:09:23 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3434:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 12:09:28 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3434:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 168.65.229.203:443 Aug 8 12:09:28 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3434:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:50403 Aug 8 12:09:28 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3434:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 12:09:28 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3434:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=Tennessee/L=Clarksville/O=Trane U.S. INC./OU=eBusiness/CN=xxl.staging.comfortsite.com/emailAddress=aeagen@trane.com Aug 8 12:09:32 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3577:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 12:09:32 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3577:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 12:09:35 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3577:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 34.226.11.228:443 Aug 8 12:09:35 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3577:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:50653 Aug 8 12:09:35 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3577:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 12:09:35 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3577:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=NC/L=Davidson/O=Ingersoll Rand/OU=Nexia SSL/CN=.mynexia.com/emailAddress=postmaster@mynexia.com Aug 8 12:12:54 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[3577:1073865936]: SSL_read: Connection timed out (110) Aug 8 12:12:54 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3577:1073865936]: Connection reset: 150 bytes sent to SSL, 85 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 12:13:54 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[7754:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 12:13:54 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[7754:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 12:14:03 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[7754:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 34.226.11.228:443 Aug 8 12:14:03 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[7754:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:47513 Aug 8 12:15:06 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[7754:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 12:15:06 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[7754:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=NC/L=Davidson/O=Ingersoll Rand/OU=Nexia SSL/CN=.mynexia.com/emailAddress=postmaster@mynexia.com Aug 8 12:20:36 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[14319:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 12:20:36 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[14319:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 12:20:41 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[14319:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 168.65.229.203:443 Aug 8 12:20:41 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[14319:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:37889 Aug 8 12:24:17 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[7754:1073865936]: Connection closed: 7447 bytes sent to SSL, 2559 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 12:25:41 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[14319:1073865936]: Connection reset: 0 bytes sent to SSL, 0 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 12:28:32 local0.info udhcpc[2874]: Sending renew… Aug 8 12:28:32 local0.info udhcpc[2874]: Unicasting a release of 192.168.1.85 to 192.168.1.1 Aug 8 12:28:32 local0.info udhcpc[2874]: Sending release… Aug 8 12:28:32 local0.info udhcpc[2874]: Entering released state Aug 8 12:28:33 daemon.info ntpd[2303]: Deleting interface #4 wlan0, 192.168.1.85#123, interface stats: received=0, sent=0, dropped=0, active_time=7200 secs Aug 8 12:28:36 local0.info udhcpc[2874]: Performing a DHCP renew Aug 8 12:28:36 local0.info udhcpc[2874]: Sending discover… Aug 8 12:28:36 local0.info udhcpc[2874]: Sending select for 192.168.1.85… Aug 8 12:28:36 local0.info udhcpc[2874]: Lease of 192.168.1.85 obtained, lease time 3600 Aug 8 12:28:38 daemon.info ntpd[2303]: Listen normally on 5 wlan0 192.168.1.85 UDP 123 Aug 8 12:28:38 daemon.debug ntpd[2303]: new interface(s) found: waking up resolver Aug 8 12:30:48 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[24179:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 12:30:48 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[24179:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 12:30:48 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[24179:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 168.65.229.203:443 Aug 8 12:30:48 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[24179:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:50829 Aug 8 12:30:48 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[24179:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 12:30:48 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[24179:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=Tennessee/L=Clarksville/O=Trane U.S. INC./OU=eBusiness/CN=xxl.staging.comfortsite.com/emailAddress=aeagen@trane.com Aug 8 12:45:04 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[3434:1073865936]: SSL_read: Connection timed out (110) Aug 8 12:45:04 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[3434:1073865936]: Connection reset: 6207 bytes sent to SSL, 728 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 12:53:25 daemon.err stunnel: LOG3[1308:1073865936]: SSL_read: Connection timed out (110) Aug 8 12:53:25 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[1308:1073865936]: Connection reset: 5940 bytes sent to SSL, 1556 bytes sent to socket Aug 8 12:53:35 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[13784:1073865936]: stunnel 4.27 on arm-unknown-linux-gnu with OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 Aug 8 12:53:35 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[13784:1073865936]: Threading:PTHREAD SSL:ENGINE Sockets:POLL,IPv6 Aug 8 12:53:35 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[13784:1073865936]: connect_blocking: connected 3.217.111.238:8090 Aug 8 12:53:35 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[13784:1073865936]: stunnel connected remote server from 192.168.1.85:46367 Aug 8 12:53:36 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[13784:1073865936]: CRL: verification passed Aug 8 12:53:36 daemon.notice stunnel: LOG5[13784:1073865936]: VERIFY OK: depth=0, /C=US/ST=NC/L=Davidson/O=Ingersoll Rand/OU=Nexia SSL/CN=*.mynexia.com/emailAddress=postmaster@mynexia.com submitted by /u/DZB [link] [comments] |
Need a button presser (compatible with Google home, without needing a specialized HUB)? Posted: 08 Aug 2020 10:14 AM PDT Hello everyone, My situation is the following: I'm new to home automation. I want to have a "combo" that will turn on a power outlet and then push a button. I know I can do this through "routines", as I can chain commands there (in my case, just a smart plug won't cut it, I will need something that physically moves and pushes a button). For the smart outlets, I see there are many on the market that don't require their own hub. But for button pressers I don't see that many options. I've been checking threads here and in the smarthome subreddit, and I've found "switchbot" and "microbot push". However, they both need their own "hub" if I want to use them through Google home/Google mini. Now, I don't want to buy another hub, especially if it's just for one button pusher. So, does anyone know if there's a way of getting either of these "button pushers" to work with google home without getting the specialized hub? It seems the main issue is that they are bluetooth devices, and therefore need a "hub" to connect to the wifi... Is there some sort of instruction I could add to my google home that would make this work? Someone in this thread talked about a "home assistant" integration. I don't mind having to download apps, as long as I don't have to buy hubs. Or maybe another alternative device that could work as a "button presser" without a hub? Thanks for the help! NOTE: To clarify, I wouldn't mind having ONE hub that all my appliances will connect to. What I don't want is to get a hub that is specifically just for the switchbot. submitted by /u/kashiyazu [link] [comments] |
Was gifted a eufy robovac. It works on wifi with Alexa. Can I connect it to my smartthome? Posted: 08 Aug 2020 01:56 PM PDT |
Turn old automation system back to life or replace? Posted: 08 Aug 2020 01:43 PM PDT I bought a 15 year old house with an automation system that must have been pretty sweet back then. The brand is Aritech? It has water sensors that detect if water is on the floor and turn the water off in the whole house, smoke sensors that open up windows to let the smoke out and sensors in every room to detect intrusion. Now this is a hard wired system that connects to a control board in a closet. But I don't know how to turn it on. It's connected to an alarm and if I turn it on it starts blaring. I don't have the code but it's 4 digits so with a little patience I can crack it. Now, should I revive this? What it does is perfectly fine for me. I like automated stuff and don't need a lot of recipes and tweaks. Or should I replace it with a modern hardwired system to take advantage of all the cabling? If so what brands and systems are out there that support this? submitted by /u/bfig [link] [comments] |
[WIP] Reverse engineering IOLITE remote API Posted: 08 Aug 2020 09:28 AM PDT |
Zigbee2mqtt Posted: 08 Aug 2020 04:35 AM PDT |
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