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* Remove the fifos at the beginning of the test |
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platypush | ||
tests | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.requirements | ||
.travis.yml | ||
LICENSE.txt | ||
README.md | ||
run_tests.sh | ||
setup.cfg | ||
setup.py |
Platypush
Execute any command or custom complex logic on your devices, wherever they are, using your PushBullet account.
Installation
pip install platypush
Manual Installation
git clone https://github.com/BlackLight/platypush
cd platypush
python setup.py install
Configuration
Copy /etc/platypush/config.example.yaml to /etc/platypush/config.yaml (system-wise settings) or ~/.config/platypush/config.yaml (user-wise settings).
Edit the file to include:
For the PushBullet backend
- Your PushBullet access token (create one here);
- The name of the (virtual) PushBullet device used to listen for events (create one here).
For the Apache Kafka backend
- The host and port of the Kafka installation
- The topic that will be used to deliver and process messages
device_id
Each target device is identified by a unique device_id in the messages sent over your account. The device_id is the hostname by default, unless changed in config.yaml.
Shell interface
platypush
installs pusher
, a command-line tool to send PushBullet messages to the connected devices in the format used by platypush.
Some examples:
pusher --target laptop --action shell.exec --cmd "scp /home/user/photos/*.jpg backup_host:/mnt/hd/photos"
pusher --target raspberrypi --action music.mpd.play
The logic to execute is specified by the --action
option, whose format is package_name.method_name
(with method_name part of the package main class).
Available plugins
platypush.plugins.shell
: The simplest and yet most versatile plugin. Executes a remote command on the host identified by the--target
device_id. Example:
pusher --target laptop --action shell.exec --cmd "scp /home/user/photos/*.jpg backup_host:/mnt/hd/photos"
platypush.plugins.music.mpd
: Controls the playback on a mpd/mopidy music server. Requires the packagempd2
on the target machine. Example:
pusher --target raspberry --action music.mpd.play
Configure the plugin through an entry like this in your config.yaml
:
music.mpd:
host: your_mpd_host
port: 6600
platypush.plugins.switch.wemo
: Controls a WeMo Switch smart switch device. Requires the packageouimeaux
on the target machine. Example:
pusher --target raspberry --action switch.wemo.on
platypush.plugins.light.hue
: Controls a Philips Hue smart lights system. Requires the packagephue
on the target machine. Example:
pusher --target raspberry --action light.hue.scene --name "Sunset" --group "Living Room"
Writing your plugins
Writing your own platypush
plugin, that would execute your own custom logic whenever a bullet with your plugin name is received, is a very simple task.
-
Create your plugin directory under
platypush/plugins
(e.g.light/batsignal
). -
In the case above,
platypush.plugins.light.batsignal
will be your package name. -
Create an
__init__.py
underplatypush/plugins/light/batsignal
. -
If your module is
light/batsignal
, then its main class should be namedLightBatsignalPlugin
. -
The configuration for your module will be read from a section named
light.batsignal
from yourconfig.yaml
. Its values will passed over the plugin constructor arguments.
The __init__.py
will look like this:
import batman
from platypush.message.response import Response
from .. import LightPlugin
class LightBatsignalPlugin(LightPlugin):
def __init__(self, intensity=100):
super().__init__()
self.batsignal = batman.Batsignal(intensity)
def on(self, urgent=False):
if urgent:
self.batsignal.notify_robin()
self.batsignal.on()
return Response(output='ok')
def off(self):
self.batsignal.off()
return Response(output='ok')
def toggle(self):
self.batsignal.toggle()
return Response(output='ok')
-
Rebuild and reinstall
platypush
if required and relaunch it. -
Test your new plugin by sending some bullets to it:
pusher --target your_pc --action light.batsignal.on --urgent 1
Writing your backends
You can also write your own backends, where a backend is nothing but a thread that listens for messages on a certain channel and pokes the main app whenever it receives one.
-
Create your backend directory under
platypush/backend
(e.g.voicemail
) -
In the case above,
platypush.backend.voicemail
will be your package name. -
Create an
__init__.py
underplatypush/backend/voicemail
. -
If your module is
voicemail
, then its main class should be namedVoicemailBackend
. -
The configuration for your module will be read from a section named
backend.voicemail
from yourconfig.yaml
. Its values will be passed over the backend constructor arguments. -
Implement the
run
method. Since a backend is a thread that polls for new messages on a channel, this will be the thread main method.send_message
should callself.on_message
at the end to post a new message to the application. -
Implement the
send_message
method. This method will be called whenever the application needs to send a new message throughsend_request
andsend_response
. You should never callsend_message
directly.
The __init__.py
will look like this:
from .. import Backend
class VoicemailBackend(Backend)
def __init__(self, phone)
super().__init__()
self.phone = phone
self.voicemail = Voicemail(...)
def send_message(self, msg):
self.voicemail.save_msg(msg)
def run(self):
while True:
msg = self.voicemail.poll()
self.on_message(msg)