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This repository has been archived by the owner on Oct 25, 2024. It is now read-only.

ping13/heospy

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*** This is archived as I don't use it personally and won't work on the code any longer ***

Control an HEOS player with a Python script

PyPI version

Requirements

You have an HEOS speaker in your local network and Python 3.

Usage

  1. Install the package with pip install heospy (latest published release from pypi) or pip install git+https://github.com/ping13/heospy.git (if you want to use the latest git version). You can also download the source package and run pip install ..

  2. Create a config.json file, which may reside in a directory called $HOME/.heospy/ or in a directory wich is specified by the environment variable $HEOSPY_CONF. You can also specify the config-file directly witgh -c. The config file contains the name of the lead HEOS player you want to control and the username and password of your HEOS account. See example-config.json for an example.

  3. Run the script for the first time to see how this works:

     $ heos_player
     2017-02-12 20:32:29,880 INFO Starting to discover your HEOS player 'Living room' in your local network
     2017-02-12 20:32:36,824 INFO Found 'Living room' in your local network
     $
    
  4. Now you can call any command from the CLI specs, see also docs/ folder. Additional arguments are given with -p. The player id will be automatically submitted. Some examples:

     heos_player player/toggle_mute
     heos_player player/set_volume -p level=19
     heos_player player/play_preset -p preset=3
     heos_player player/set_play_state -p state=stop
     heos_player group/toggle_mute
     heos_player group/toggle_mute -p gid=-1352658342
    

    Use the flag --help for a detailed help.

Parsing the response from HEOS

heos_player returns a JSON object which directly comes from an HEOS player. For example:

heos_player player/get_volume

gives something like

{
    "heos": {
        "message": "pid=-1352658342&level=13", 
        "command": "player/get_volume", 
        "result": "success"
    }
}

Unfortunately, HEOS hides some of the results in the message property (here: the volume level of the main player). heospy parses the message string and puts the contained attributes in a seperate property heos_message_parsed:

 {
   "heos_message_parsed": {
     "pid": "-1352658342", 
     "level": "13"
   }, 
   "heos": {
     "message": "pid=-1352658342&level=13", 
     "command": "player/get_volume", 
     "result": "success"
   }
 }

With jq, you can directly get the result on the command line:

 $ heos_player player/get_volume | jq .heos_message_parsed.level
 "13"

Main player setting and referencing other players by name

The class HeosPlayer assumes a main HEOS player, stored in the config file. For commands starting with player/, we assume that this player should be used, otherwise you need to specify the player id explicitly as a parameter pid.

You may also specify a player by name by using the fake parameter pname: the class HeosPlayer will search for a player with the given name and will try to translate it to a player id, e.g. with:

  $ heos_player player/get_volume -p pname=Küche
  [...]
  2019-01-15 20:04:51,624 INFO Issue command 'player/get_volume' with arguments {"pname": "K\u00fcche"}
  2019-01-15 20:04:51,624 DEBUG translated name 'Küche' to {'pname': 'pid', 'gname': 'gid'}=941891005
  2019-01-15 20:04:51,625 INFO cmd : player/get_volume, args &pid=941891005
  [...]
  {
     "heos_message_parsed": {
       "pid": "941891005", 
       "level": "12"
     }, 
     "heos": {
       "message": "pid=941891005&level=12", 
       "command": "player/get_volume", 
       "result": "success"
     }
   }

If the main player is a lead player in a group, this group is also the main group for commands starting with group/. Again, you can override this setting be explicitly mention the group id as a parameter. You may also specify the group by name with a fake parameter gname.

Rudimentary scripting of HEOS commands

You can also execute a sequence of commands at once. The sequence can be given in a text file:

heos_player -i cmds.txt

An example for cmds.txt is:

system/heart_beat
# let's set a volume level
player/set_volume level=10
# let's check if the volume is correct
player/get_volume

Note that comments are possible and start with a #. There is also a special command wait, which waits a number of seconds until the next command is played.

# play an MP3 file, wait 360 seconds and then turn the mute button on
player/play_stream pname=Küche url=http://example.com/example.mp3
wait 360 
player/set_mute -p state=on

It's a current limitation that heospy doesn't listen to events emitted from any HEOS player.

You can also get the sequence of commands from stdin:

printf "system/heart_beat\nplayer/set_volume level=10\nplayer/get_volume" | heos_player -i -

Example Usage

Usage with HomeKit

With Homebridge and the Homebridge Script2 plugin, you can bind your heospy-scripts to a HomeKit-button.

Let's assume that you installed HomeBridge via Docker. Set up an environment variable HEOSPY_CONFfor the directory of your config file (could be a mounted directoy). Then add the following to the startup script start.shof the docker container:

# install jq to parse output from heos_player
apk add --no-cache jq openssh sshpass screen

# install heos_player
pip install heospy
# rediscover HEOS devices
heos_player --rediscover

Here is an example configuration for an homebridge-script2plugin, change the pid accordingly:

{
    "on": "cat /homebridge/scripts/heos_on.heospy | heos_player heos_config.json -i -",
    "name": "HEOS",
    "on_value": "play",
    "off": "printf 'player/set_play_state pid=-19041904 state=pause' | heos_player -i -",
    "state": "heos_player -l ERROR player/get_play_state pid=-19041904 | jq -r .heos_message_parsed.state",
    "accessory": "Script2"
}

Example heos_on.heospy-script:

group/set_mute gid=-19041904 state=off --ignore-fail
player/set_play_state pid=-1440680417 state=play
group/set_volume gid=-19041904 level=13 --ignore-fail

Usage with Raspberry Pi and Kodi

If you have OSMC or any other Kodi Media center implementation on your Raspberry Pi, you can map certain actions for your HEOS on a keymap.

Example keyboard.xml-file:

<keymap>
<global>
<keyboard>
<F1>RunScript(heos_player, player/play_preset, -p, preset=1)</F1>
<F2>RunScript(heos_player, player/play_preset, -p, preset=2)</F2>
<F3>RunScript(heos_player, player/play_preset, -p, preset=3)</F3>
<F4>RunScript(heos_player, player/play_preset, -p, preset=4)</F4>
<F12>RunScript(heos_player, player/set_play_state, -p, state=stop)</F12>
</keyboard>
</global>
<Home>
</Home>
</keymap>

Limitations

Currently, heospy cannot listen to events from an HEOS player. Events are described in the specification. Please contact me, if you are interested in helping out.

Credits