tasmotizer
TasmoBackup
tasmotizer | TasmoBackup | |
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12 | 1 | |
1,344 | 16 | |
3.7% | - | |
4.4 | - | |
4 months ago | over 4 years ago | |
Python | PHP | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
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tasmotizer
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Tasmota: Open-source firmware for ESP devices
I tried micropython, liked it, an developed and operated a few home automation devices with it. But changing anything after a few months was a pain - what flashing tool did I use, how did that detail work, etc. Now I run around 15 Tasmota devices in my household and would never look back. The initial flash, depending on the device at hand, can be trivial (e.g. using https://github.com/tasmota/tasmotizer on a device with builtin USB connectivity or with a USB-serial cable) or a bit less so (like the somewhat involved OTA reflashing process https://github.com/yaourdt/mgos-to- for the very handy and inexpensive Shelly devices). In any case, after that it all becomes easy, with web-based configuration, OTA updates, "fleet managament" software like https://github.com/danmed/TasmoBackup, and plug&play integratiom with Home Assistant. If somebody integrated micropython into Tasmota for cases where the countless configuration options and libraries integrated into Tasmota don't suffice, it would be perfect. But meamwhile there is a similar scripting language available within Tasmota for ESP32 devices so I can live with that.
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Need to source Tasmota-compatible 4 Channel relays
If you use a d1 mini it has usb, just use https://github.com/tasmota/tasmotizer
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Totally new to Tasmota, looking for some advice
Oh, that's sad. It seems like such low hanging fruit to support it. There is already a pull request to add the support that OP could use and test.
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How can I get data from a database and display it on a large 7-segment LED
We start with a couple sensors for temperature, humidity, and particulates. Those connect to an ESP8266 via I2C and some proprietary IKEA protocol. That IKEA protocol wasn't in the default build, so I had to enable a define and rebuild. They've made very cool use of Gitpod so I didn't even have to install anything. I used Tazmotizer.py with a USB programming fixture I got off Amazon to load my custom firmware to the board.
- Need help how to tasmotize
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You can also flash some ESP devices too. Any way to upload it without a pc?
It’s a SonOff Basic and flashed it with Tasmotizer. It didn’t work with the first try but after the third it works pretty well. I was too lazy to solder the pins on it. But if you have many of them, it would be great when you can upload it without a pc.
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Can I somehow use this ESP-12S?
Incase you don't have a flasher,tasmotizer is an super easy software to flash a single bin file. https://github.com/tasmota/tasmotizer/releases/download/v.1.2/tasmotizer-1.2.exe
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WLED, OpenRGB, LedFX, EyeTune and iTunes.
Flashing software https://github.com/tasmota/tasmotizer/releases
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sonoff Zigbee bridge tasmota reset
do i have to do the wiring and run Tasmotizer ?i assume not because the tasmota interface comes up just fine.
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State of the Art flash for Sonoff Basic R3?
Tasmotizer is probably the easiest way to serial flash in Windows (and has cross platform versions for Mac and Linux). That said, it does require a hardwired serial connection.
TasmoBackup
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Tasmota: Open-source firmware for ESP devices
I tried micropython, liked it, an developed and operated a few home automation devices with it. But changing anything after a few months was a pain - what flashing tool did I use, how did that detail work, etc. Now I run around 15 Tasmota devices in my household and would never look back. The initial flash, depending on the device at hand, can be trivial (e.g. using https://github.com/tasmota/tasmotizer on a device with builtin USB connectivity or with a USB-serial cable) or a bit less so (like the somewhat involved OTA reflashing process https://github.com/yaourdt/mgos-to- for the very handy and inexpensive Shelly devices). In any case, after that it all becomes easy, with web-based configuration, OTA updates, "fleet managament" software like https://github.com/danmed/TasmoBackup, and plug&play integratiom with Home Assistant. If somebody integrated micropython into Tasmota for cases where the countless configuration options and libraries integrated into Tasmota don't suffice, it would be perfect. But meamwhile there is a similar scripting language available within Tasmota for ESP32 devices so I can live with that.
What are some alternatives?
tuya-convert - A collection of scripts to flash Tuya IoT devices to alternative firmwares
ansible-tasmota - Ansible Role for managing tasmota devices with tasmota commands
tdm - GUI application to discover and monitor devices flashed with https://github.com/arendst/tasmota
pydantic-cli - Turn Pydantic defined Data Models into CLI Tools
ansible-gentoo-laptop - One ring to rule them all machine provisioner for Lenovo P50 and Lenovo P1 Gen 2
rdiff-backup - Reverse differential backup tool, over a network or locally. [Moved to: https://github.com/rdiff-backup/rdiff-backup]
Rdiff-backup - Reverse differential backup tool, over a network or locally.
install - Tasmota Web Installer and firmware repository
cronicle - Use cron to rotate files and keep time-spaced copies using symlinks.
esp8266_deauther - Affordable WiFi hacking platform for testing and learning
WLED - Control WS2812B and many more types of digital RGB LEDs with an ESP8266 or ESP32 over WiFi!
Tasmota - Alternative firmware for ESP8266 and ESP32 based devices with easy configuration using webUI, OTA updates, automation using timers or rules, expandability and entirely local control over MQTT, HTTP, Serial or KNX. Full documentation at