developers.home-assistant/docs/frontend/development.md

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Frontend development Development

The Home Assistant frontend is built using web components. For more background about our technology choices, see this blog post.

:::caution Do not use development mode in production. Home Assistant uses aggressive caching to improve the mobile experience. This is disabled during development so that you do not have to restart the server in between changes. :::

Setting up the environment

Getting the code

The first step is to fork the frontend repository and add the upstream remote. You can place the forked repository anywhere on your system.

git clone git@github.com:YOUR_GIT_USERNAME/frontend.git
cd frontend
git remote add upstream https://github.com/home-assistant/frontend.git

Configuring Home Assistant

You will need to have an instance of Home Assistant set up. See our guide on setting up a development environment.

Developing with Visual Studio Code + dev container

If you are using Visual Studio Code with dev containers for Home Assistant Core, you need to mount the frontend repository into the dev container. Add the following section to .devcontainer/devcontainer.json in the Home Assistant Core repository:

"mounts": [
  "source=/path/to/hass/frontend,target=/workspaces/frontend,type=bind,consistency=cached"
]

Rebuild the dev container by pressing Shift+Command+P (Mac) / Ctrl+Shift+P (Windows/Linux) to open the Command Palette, then selecting the Dev Containers: Rebuild Container command.

Edit config/configuration.yaml at the root of the Home Assistant Core repository to add this entry:

frontend:
  development_repo: /workspaces/frontend

:::note This is the mounted path inside the dev container, see the target parameter above. If the source path is incorrect, the web frontend won't work. :::

Run Home Assistant Core from VS Code:

  1. Open the Command Palette:
    • Mac: Shift+Command+P
    • Windows/Linux: Ctrl+Shift+P
  2. Select Tasks: Run Task
  3. Select Run Home Assistant Core

:::caution The change to .devcontainer/devcontainer.json should be excluded from any PR as it contains your local path to the frontend repository. Since the settings in .devcontainer/devcontainer.json are only processed during the container rebuild, you can safely roll back the change after the rebuild has completed. :::

Developing with a manual environment

If you set up the development environment for Home Assistant Core manually, fill in the frontend repository path in configuration.yaml:

frontend:
  # Example path: /home/paulus/dev/hass/frontend
  development_repo: /path/to/hass/frontend

:::tip The configuration.yaml file can be found in the config directory at the root of the Home Assistant Core repository. If the path is incorrect or otherwise inaccessible, the web frontend won't work. :::

Installing Node.js (manual environment only)

Node.js is required to build the frontend. The preferred method of installing node.js is with nvm. Install nvm using the instructions in the README, and install the correct node.js by running the following command:

nvm install

Yarn is used as the package manager for node modules. Install yarn using the instructions here.

Install development dependencies and fetch latest translations

Bootstrap the frontend development environment by installing development dependencies and downloading the latest translations.

nvm use
script/bootstrap
script/setup_translations

:::note This needs to be done manually, even if you are using dev containers. Also, you will be asked to enter a code and authorize the script to fetch the latest translations. :::

Development

Run development server

Run this script to build the frontend and run a development server:

nvm use
script/develop

When the script has completed building the frontend, and Home Assistant Core has been set up correctly, the frontend will be accessible at http://localhost:8123. The server will automatically rebuild the frontend when you make changes to the source files.

Browser settings

Open Google Chrome's Developer tools, and make sure you have cache disabled and correct settings to avoid stale content:

:::info Instructions are for Google Chrome :::

  1. Disable cache by ticking the box in Network > Disable cache

  1. Enable Bypass for network in Application > Service Workers > Bypass for network

Creating pull requests

If you're planning on issuing a PR back to the Home Assistant codebase you need to fork the frontend project and add your fork as a remote to the Home Assistant frontend repo.

git remote add fork <github URL to your fork>

When you've made your changes and are ready to push them change to the working directory for the frontend project and then push your changes

git add -A
git commit -m "Added new feature X"
git push -u fork HEAD

Building the frontend

If you're making changes to the way the frontend is packaged, it might be necessary to try out a new packaged build of the frontend in the main repository (instead of pointing it at the frontend repo). To do so, first build a production version of the frontend by running script/build_frontend.

To test it out inside Home Assistant, run the following command from the main Home Assistant repository:

pip3 install -e /path/to/hass/frontend/ --config-settings editable_mode=compat
hass --skip-pip-packages home-assistant-frontend