Thanks to Smart Home Junkie’s video (invidious link), I had my Atom Echos as voice recognition boxes with all audio output redirected to a media player of my choice (because the audio on the Echo is super quiet).
Whenever ESPHome updated, I updated my Echos to get the recent ESPHome updates, and then reinstalled the custom yaml for audio redirection.
However, with ESPHome’s recent 2024.6.4 update, trying to install the yaml triggers errors that don’t seem to make sense. For example, here’s a section of the yaml:
microphone:
- platform: i2s_audio
id: echo_microphone_kitchen
i2s_din_pin: GPIO23
adc_type: external
pdm: true
speaker:
- platform: i2s_audio
id: echo_speaker_kitchen
i2s_dout_pin: GPIO21
dac_type: external
mode: mono
voice_assistant:
id: va
microphone: echo_microphone_kitchen
speaker: echo_speaker_kitchen
noise_suppression_level: 2
auto_gain: 31dBFS
volume_multiplier: 2.0
vad_threshold: 3
on_listening:
- light.turn_on:
id: led
blue: 100%
red: 0%
green: 0%
effect: "Slow Pulse"
on_stt_vad_end:
- light.turn_on:
id: led
blue: 100%
red: 0%
green: 0%
effect: "Fast Pulse"
on_tts_start:
- light.turn_on:
id: led
blue: 100%
red: 0%
green: 0%
brightness: 100%
effect: none
on_tts_end:
- homeassistant.service:
service: media_player.play_media
data:
entity_id: media_player.${media_player}
media_content_id: !lambda 'return x;'
media_content_type: music
announce: "false"
on_end:
- delay: 100ms
- wait_until:
not:
speaker.is_playing:
- script.execute: reset_led
on_error:
- light.turn_on:
id: led
red: 100%
green: 0%
blue: 0%
brightness: 100%
effect: none
- delay: 1s
- script.execute: reset_led
on_client_connected:
- if:
condition:
switch.is_on: use_wake_word
then:
- voice_assistant.start_continuous:
- script.execute: reset_led
on_client_disconnected:
- if:
condition:
switch.is_on: use_wake_word
then:
- voice_assistant.stop:
- light.turn_off: led
external_components:
- source: github://pr#5230
components:
- esp_adf
refresh: 0s
esp_adf:
On lines 3 and 10 I define unique IDs for the device’s microphone and speaker.
But ESPHome won’t compile, telling me:
- on line 46: Too many candidates found for ‘id’ type ‘speaker::Speaker’ Some are ‘echo_speaker’, ‘echo_speaker_kitchen’.
- on line 57: Too many candidates found for ‘id’ type ‘speaker::Speaker’ Some are ‘echo_speaker’, ‘echo_speaker_kitchen’.
- on line 77: Too many candidates found for ‘id’ type ‘microphone::Microphone’ Some are ‘echo_microphone’, ‘echo_microphone_kitchen’.
- on line 90: Too many candidates found for ‘id’ type ‘speaker::Speaker’ Some are ‘echo_speaker’, ‘echo_speaker_kitchen’.
There are no other occurrences of the word “speaker” or “microphone” in the conf yaml (and I’m not including other yaml files).
I’m assuming most of this config is default, and the only things I care about are forcing pin 21 for the speaker (line 11) and redirecting audio to my media player (lines 45-52).
(sorry about my delayed response, @JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl )
I’m sure that the install is successful because there are no errors during/after install, the Echo recognizes speech and interacts with Home Assistant, and when I change something in the yaml (e.g., which media player to pipe the audio to) the change takes effect.
Here’s something weird: I believe the default pin for “speaker” should be GPIO22, and when I switch it to GPIO21 it should not work. This works on some of my Echos, but not all of them!
Also weird: I think the standard pinout is:
- GPIO0: Button (Boot)
- GPIO19: LED (RGB)
- GPIO21: I2C SDA
- GPIO22: I2C SCL
- GPIO23: Speaker (PWM output)
- GPIO25: Microphone (Analog input)
Though I don’t know what these mean, I tried setting “speaker” to GPIO18 - which apparently isn’t used- and still the audio comes out of the Echo speaker! But again, only on some of my Echos.
I’d think that maybe some of these Echos are ignoring the GPIO setting for “speaker” and using a default, but these Echos used to work! (that is, they used to not play audio out of the Echo speaker when “speaker” was GPIO21). And so I want to think that maybe the ESPHome upgrade made them stop working, but all my Echos have the same upgrade and yet still some of them work.
Is there a way to config the Echo speaker to have zero volume? If so, I could just set that and then who cares if the audio is piped to it.