Step 12: Scroll down to “OAuth” – Select “Enable OAuth in Smart App” Step 10: Select “Save” and then “Publish – For me” Step 8: Paste the code you copied earlier. Step 7: Select the middle tab “From Code” If you had the previous SmartThings plugin, go ahead and remove that. If your Hub doesn’t show up then the Community Installer won’t show up in your SmartThings app, so this is critical. You can also try logging out and back in again.
Sometimes you have to click around between “Locations” and “Hubs” until it shows up. Step 4: Make sure that your Hub shows up under “Hubs”. Step 3: Login with your Samsung or SmartThings Account Step 2: Go to the SmartThings IDE for your country. Step 1: Select the code on this page, and copy it. The easy way of installing this plugin is via the SmartThings Community Installer.
If you need to install Homebridge, i’ve got a full guide here. Just a few things before we get started I did this with a headless (monitor-less) Raspberry Pi controlled with a Mac via terminal, and an iPhone for the iOS part of things. The device state works perfectly no matter how you turn on or off your devices. This version of SmartThings homebridge plugin has been a whole lot more responsive and stable than before. So if you have the previous SmartThings plugin, you’ll have to completely remove it from Homebridge in order to get this new one to work and it is completely worth it.
As of December 2019, the SmartThings plugin has been redone and updated, but has to be installed completely anew.