ouimeaux is a Python interface to Belkin WeMo devices. It uses gevent for async I/O and requests for communication with the devices. It also provides a minimal command-line interface for discovery and switch toggling.
Currently supported devices include Motions, Switches and Light Switches.
Contents
The main interface is presented by an Environment, which optionally accepts
functions called when a Switch or Motion device is identified:
>>> from ouimeaux.environment import Environment >>> >>> def on_switch(switch): ... print "Switch found!", switch.name ... >>> def on_motion(motion): ... print "Motion found!", motion.name ... >>> env = Environment(on_switch, on_motion)
Start up the server to listen for responses to the discovery broadcast:
>>> env.start()
Discovery of all WeMo devices in an environment is then straightforward; simply pass the length of time (in seconds) you want discovery to run:
>>> env.discover(seconds=3) Switch found! Living Room
During that time, the Environment will continually broadcast search requests
and parse responses. At any point, you can see the names of discovered devices:
>>> env.list_switches() ['Living Room', 'TV Room', 'Front Closet'] >>> env.list_motions() ['Front Hallway']
Devices can be retrieved by using get_switch and get_motion methods:
>>> switch = env.get_switch('TV Room')
>>> switch
<WeMo Switch "TV Room">
All devices have an explain() method, which will print out a list of all
available services, as well as the actions and arguments to those actions
on each service:
>>> switch.explain() basicevent ---------- SetSmartDevInfo(SmartDevURL) SetServerEnvironment(ServerEnvironmentType, TurnServerEnvironment, ServerEnvironment) GetDeviceId() GetRuleOverrideStatus(RuleOverrideStatus) GetIconURL(URL) SetBinaryState(BinaryState) ...
Services and actions are available via simple attribute access. Calling actions returns a dictionary of return values:
>>> switch.basicevent.SetBinaryState(BinaryState=0)
{'BinaryState': 0}
By default, ouimeaux subscribes to property change events on discovered
devices (this can be disabled by passing with_subscribers=False to the
Environment constructor). You can register callbacks that will be called
when switches and motions change state (on/off, or motion detected):
>>> def on_motion(value):
... print "Motion detected!"
...
>>> env.get_motion('Front Hallway').register_listener(on_motion)
>>> env.wait()
Note the use of Environment.wait() to give control to the event loop for
events to be detected.
Switches have three shortcut methods defined: get_state, on and off.
Motions have one shortcut method defined: get_state.
By default, device results are cached on the filesystem for quicker
initialization. This can be disabled by passing with_cache=False to the
Environment constructor. On a related note, if you want to use the cache
exclusively, you can pass with_discovery=False to the Environment
constructor to disable M-SEARCH requests.
You can clear the device cache either by deleting the file ~/.wemo/cache
or by using the wemo clear command.
A configuration file in YAML format will be created at ~/.wemo/config.yml:
# ip:port to bind to when receiving responses from discovery. # The default is first DNS resolution of local host, port 54321 # # bind: 10.1.2.3:9090 # Whether to use a device cache (stored at ~/.wemo/cache) # # cache: false aliases: # Shortcuts to longer device names. Uncommenting the following # line will allow you to execute 'wemo switch lr on' instead of # 'wemo switch "Living Room Lights" on' # # lr: Living Room Lights
The wemo script will discover devices in your environment and turn
switches on and off. To list devices:
$ wemo list
Default is to search for 5 seconds; you can pass --timeout to change that.
You can also print the status of every device found in your environment (the
-v option is available to print on/off instead of 0/1):
$ wemo status
To turn a switch on and off, you first have to know the name. Then:
$ wemo switch "TV Room" on $ wemo switch "TV Room" off
You can also toggle the device:
$ wemo switch "TV Room" toggle
Or check its current status (the -v option will print the word on/off
instead of 0/1):
$ wemo -v switch "TV Room" status on
The wemo script will do fuzzy matching of the name you pass in (this can be
disabled with the -e option):
$ wemo switch tvrm on
Aliases configured in the file will be accessible on the command line as well:
aliases:
tv: TV Room Lights
$ wemo switch tv on
Note: If an alias is used on the command line, fuzzy matching will not be attempted.
You can also clear the device cache from the command line:
$ wemo clear
The wemo script will obey configured settings; they can also be overridden
on the command line:
-b,--bind IP:PORT- Bind to this host and port when listening for responses
-d,--debug- Enable debug logging to stdout
-e,--exact-match- Disable fuzzy matching
-f,--no-cache- Disable the device cache
-v,--human-readable- Print statuses as human-readable words
ouimeaux requires Python header files to build some dependencies, and is installed normally using pip or easy_install.
Debian/Ubuntu:
sudo apt-get install python-setuptools python-dev sudo easy_install pip sudo pip install ouimeaux
RHEL/CentOS/Fedora:
sudo yum -y install python-setuptools python-devel sudo easy_install pip sudo pip install ouimeaux
If you wish to build from a local copy of the source, you can of course always execute:
sudo python setup.py install
ouimeaux requires gevent version 1.0rc2 or higher. If you don't have the ability to compile gevent and greenlet (a sub-dependency) locally, you can find and download the binary installers for these packages here:
- gevent: https://github.com/SiteSupport/gevent/downloads
- greenlet: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/greenlet
- Fixed #14: Indicate Connection:close header to avoid logging when WeMo sends invalid HTTP response.
- Fixed #10: Updated subscriber listener to use more reliable method of retrieving non-loopback IP address; updated docs to fix typo in listener registration example (thanks to @benhoyle, @francxk)
- Fixed #11: Remove instancemethod objects before attempting to pickle devices in the cache (thanks @piperde, @JonPenner, @tomtomau, @masilu77)
- Added fuzzy matching of device name when searching/toggling from command line
- Added
statusmode to print status for all devices - Added
switch statusmode to print status for specific device - Added flags for all command-line options
- Fixed #9: Removed unused fcntl import that precluded Windows usage (thanks to @deepseven)
- Used new method of obtaining local IP for discovery that is less likely to return loopback
- Exit with failure and instructions for solution if loopback IP is used
- Updated installation docs to include python-dev and pip instructions (patch by @fnaard)
- Fixed README inclusion bug that occasionally broke installation via pip.
- Added
--debugoption to enable debug logging to stdout
- Fixed #7: Added support for light switch devices (patch by nschrenk).
- Fixed #6: Added "wemo clear" command to clear the device cache.
- Fixed #4: Added ability to specify ip:port for discovery server binding. Removed documentation describing need to disable SSDP service on Windows.
- Fixed #5: Added device cache for faster results.
- Added configuration file.
- Added ability to configure aliases for devices to avoid quoting strings on the command line.
- Added 'toggle' command to command line switch control.
- Fixed #1: Added ability to subscribe to motion and switch state change events.
- Added Windows installation details to README (patch by @brianpeiris)
- Cleaned up UDP server lifecycle so rediscovery doesn't try to start it back up.
- Initial release.