Skip to content

Python API for talking to a MySensors gateway

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

afeno/pymysensors

 
 

Repository files navigation

pymysensors Build Status

Python API for talking to a MySensors gateway (http://www.mysensors.org/). Currently supports serial protocol v1.4, v1.5 and v2.0. Not all features of v2.0 are implemented yet.

  • Supports smartsleep with serial API v2.0.
  • Supports the MQTT client gateway with serial API v2.0.
  • Supports OTA updates, for DualOptiboot bootloader.

Usage

Currently the API is best used by implementing a callback handler

import mysensors.mysensors as mysensors

def event(update_type, nid):
    """Callback for mysensors updates."""
    print(update_type + " " + str(nid))

GATEWAY = mysensors.SerialGateway('/dev/ttyACM0', event)
GATEWAY.start()

In the above example PyMysensors will call "event" whenever a node in the Mysensors network has been updated.

The data structure of a gateway and it's network is described below.

SerialGateway/TCPGateway/MQTTGateway
    sensors - a dict containing all nodes for the gateway; node is of type Sensor

Sensor - a sensor node
    children - a dict containing all child sensors for the node
    sensor_id - node id on the MySensors network
    type - 17 for node or 18 for repeater
    sketch_name
    sketch_version
    battery_level
    protocol_version - the mysensors protocol version used by the node

ChildSensor - a child sensor
    id - Child id on the parent node
    type - Data type, S_HUM, S_TEMP etc.
    values - a dictionary of values (V_HUM, V_TEMP, etc.)

Getting the type and values of node 23, child sensor 4 would be performed as follows:

s_type = GATEWAY.sensors[23].children[4].type
values = GATEWAY.sensors[23].children[4].values

To update a node child sensor value and send it to the node, use the set_child_value method in the Gateway class:

# To set sensor 1, child 1, sub-type V_LIGHT (= 2), with value 1.
GATEWAY.set_child_value(1, 1, 2, 1)

PyMysensors also supports four other settings. Debug mode, which prints debug information, persistence mode, which saves the sensor network between runs, persistence file path, which sets the type and path of the persistence file and protocol version which sets the MySensors serial API version.

Debug mode is enabled by setting SerialGateway.debug = True. With persistence mode on, you can restart the gateway without having to restart each individual node in your sensor network. To enable persistance mode, the third argument in the constructor should be True. A path to the config file can be specified as a fourth argument. The file type (.pickle or .json) will set which persistence protocol to use, pickle or json. JSON files can be read using a normal text editor.

The serial gateway also supports setting the baudrate, read timeout and reconnect timeout.

import mysensors.mysensors as mysensors

def event(update_type, nid):
    """Callback for mysensors updates."""
    print(update_type + " " + str(nid))

GATEWAY = mysensors.SerialGateway(
  '/dev/ttyACM0', event_callback=event, persistence=True,
  persistence_file='somefolder/mysensors.pickle', protocol_version='1.4', baud=115200,
  timeout=1.0, reconnect_timeout=10.0)
GATEWAY.debug = True
GATEWAY.start()

There are two other gateway types supported besides the serial gateway: the tcp-ethernet gateway and the MQTT gateway.

The ethernet gateway is initialized similar to the serial gateway. The ethernet gateway supports setting the tcp host port, receive timeout and reconnect timeout, besides the common settings and the host ip address.

GATEWAY = mysensors.TCPGateway(
  '127.0.0.1', event_callback=event, persistence=True,
  persistence_file='somefolder/mysensors.pickle', protocol_version='1.4',
  port=5003, timeout=1.0, reconnect_timeout=10.0)

The MQTT gateway requires MySensors serial API v2.0 and the MQTT client gateway example sketch loaded in the gateway Arduino. The gateway also requires an MQTT broker and a python MQTT client interface to the broker. See mqtt.py for an example of how to implement this and initialize the MQTT gateway.

Over the air (OTA) firmware updates

Call Gateway method update_fw to set one or more nodes for OTA firmware update. The method takes three positional arguments and one keyword arguement. The first argument should be the node id of the node to update. This can also be a list of many node ids. The next two arguments should be integers representing the firwmare type and version. The keyword argument is optional and should be a path to a hex file with the new firmware.

GATEWAY.update_fw([1, 2], 1, 2, fw_path='/path/to/firmware.hex')

After the update_fw method has been called the node(s) will be requested to restart when pymysensors Gateway receives the next set message. After restart and during the MySensors begin method, the node will send a firmware config request. The pymysensors library will respond to the config request. If the node receives a proper firmware config response it will send a firmware request for a block of firmware. The pymysensors library will handle this and send a firmware response message. The latter request-response conversation will continue until all blocks of firmware are sent. If the CRC of the transmitted firmware match the CRC of the firmware config response, the node will restart and load the new firmware.

About

Python API for talking to a MySensors gateway

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 100.0%