Code Snippets

From piMyHome Project
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Sending messages with netcat

The Linux command netcat makes it very easy to send messages from a Raspberry Pi to a Bticino Gateway. The syntax is:

pi@raspberry ~ $ echo "<message>" | netcat <gateway-IP> <gateway-port>

A Python Monitor Session with Bticino Gateway

To understand the OWN messages better, you should start a monitor session on your Raspberry Pi and watch the OWN messages flying in from your domotic system. Analyzing these messages gives you an idea how it works. Below is a simple monitor script in Python.

start editor nano and create monitor.py

nano monitor.py

Copy and paste the script below into that file and save it. After you saved the file, you have to make the file executable:

chmod 755 monitor.py

Copy the content of this script to monitor.py

#!/usr/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import socket

# IP address and port to connect to the gateway, please 
# change these values according to your environment
default_gateway_host = "192.168.60.201"
default_gateway_port = 20000

gateway_addr_port = default_gateway_host, default_gateway_port

def monitor():
    sock = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
    try:
        sock.connect(gateway_addr_port)
        data = sock.recv(1024)
        # expect ACK from gateway
        if data != "*#*1##":
            raise Exception("Did not receive expected ACK, but: "+data)
        # Switch session to MONITOR mode
        sock.send("*99*1##")
        data = ""
        while 1:
            # Read data from MyHome BUS
            next = sock.recv(1024)
            if next == "":
                break               # EOF
            data = data + next
            eom = data.find("##")
            if eom < 0:
                continue;           # Not a complete message, need more
            if data[0] != "*":
                raise Exception("Message does not start with '*': "+data)
            print data
            msg = data[1:eom]
            data = data[eom+2:]
    finally:
        sock.close()

monitor()

Now start the monitor and watch the messages fly by. Exit with CTRL-C.

./monitor.py