This is a fork of lirc_web
by Alex
Bain to accommodate breaking changes in LIRCv0.9.4. irsend list
's output
format changed in this version, breaking the original lirc_node
. This fork
is not compatible with prior versions of LIRC (i.e. 0.9.0) as it is a quick and
dirty fix.
lircv0.9.4_web
is a nodejs app that creates a web interface & JSON API for the LIRC project. It uses lircv0.9.4_node to handle communication between LIRC and nodejs.
This project allows you to control LIRC from any web browser - phone, tablet, or desktop. The mobile web interface is responsive and optimized for all sized displays. In addition, with the JSON API, you can control LIRC from any web connected device - pebble watch, myo armband, emotiv EEG headset, or beyond.
This is part of the Open Source Universal Remote project.
You'll need to have LIRC installed and configured on your machine to use lircv0.9.4_web
. In addition, you'll need to install nodejs. Once you have LIRC and nodejs installed and configured, you'll be able to install lircv0.9.4_web
:
npm install -g lircv0.9.4_web
lircv0.9.4_web
Note that you may need to run the npm install
command with sudo
.
Verify the web interface works by opening http://SERVER:3000/
in a web browser.
If you want to have lircv0.9.4_web
available via port 80 and start on boot, there are example NGINX and Upstart configuration files included in the example_configs/
directory.
lircv0.9.4_web
includes performance and user experience optimizations for mobile devices. These can be enabled by adding the lircv0.9.4_web
URL as a bookmark to the home screen of your device. Bookmarking lircv0.9.4_web
is performed from your phone's web browser. lircv0.9.4_web
will then load full screen, as if it was a native iOS or Android app. The URL bar will no longer be visible and lircv0.9.4_web
will be selectable from the device's multitasking screen.
Bookmarking is higly recommended for the best mobile experience.
As of v0.3.0, lircv0.9.4_web
uses an Application Cache. The enables all assets to be cached locally on the phone. This reduces load time dramatically.
As of v0.0.8, lircv0.9.4_web
supports customization through a configuration file.
You may place this configuration file in one of two locations and lircv0.9.4_web
will detect it:
- Place a file named
.lirc_web_config.json
in the home directory of the user runninglircv0.9.4_web
(global installation) - Place a file named
config.json
in the root of thelircv0.9.4_web
project directory (local / development installation)
These are the available configuration options:
repeaters
- buttons that repeatedly send their commands while pressed. A common example are the volume buttons on most remote controls. While you hold the volume buttons down, the remote will repeatedly send the volume command to your device.macros
- a collection of commands that should be executed one after another. This allows you to automate actions like "Play Xbox 360" or "Listen to music via AirPlay". Each step in a macro is described in the format[ "REMOTE", "COMMAND" ]
, whereREMOTE
andCOMMAND
are defined by what you have programmed into LIRC. You can add delays between steps of macros in the format of[ "delay", 500 ]
. Note that the delay is measured in milliseconds so 1000 milliseconds = 1 second. You can also add a repeater macro with a delay by using the format[ "REMOTE", ["COMMAND", delay]]
in place of a normalCOMMAND
(Refer to Xbox Off command below).commandLabels
- a way to rename commands that LIRC understands (KEY_POWER
,KEY_VOLUMEUP
) with labels that humans prefer (Power
,Volume Up
).remoteLabels
- a way to rename the remotes that LIRC understands (XBOX360
) with labels that humans prefer (Xbox 360
).blacklists
- a way to hide unused commands from your remotes.server
- server configuration settings (ports, SSL).socket
- to specify the lircd socket for irsend.
{
"server" : {
"port" : 3000,
"ssl" : false,
"ssl_cert" : "/home/pi/lircv0.9.4_web/server.cert",
"ssl_key" : "/home/pi/lircv0.9.4_web/server.key",
"ssl_port" : 3001
},
"repeaters": {
"SonyTV": {
"VolumeUp": true,
"VolumeDown": true
}
},
"macros": {
"Play Xbox 360": [
[ "SonyTV", "Power" ],
[ "delay", 500 ],
[ "SonyTV", "Xbox360" ],
[ "Yamaha", "Power" ],
[ "delay", 250 ],
[ "Yamaha", "Xbox360" ],
[ "Xbox360", "Power" ]
],
"Listen to Music": [
[ "Yamaha", "Power" ],
[ "delay", 500 ],
[ "Yamaha", "AirPlay" ]
],
"Xbox Off": [
[ "XboxOne", [ "Power", "1600" ] ],
[ "delay", "1010" ],
[ "XboxOne", "Up" ],
[ "XboxOne", "Select" ]
],
},
"commandLabels": {
"Yamaha": {
"Power": "Power",
"Xbox360": "Xbox 360",
"VolumeUp": "Volume Up",
"VolumeDown": "Volume Down"
}
},
"remoteLabels": {
"Xbox360": "Xbox 360"
},
"blacklists": {
"Yamaha": [
"AUX2",
"AUX3"
]
},
"socket": "/run/lirc/lircd1"
}
Please see the example_configs/
directory.
Building an app on top of lircv0.9.4_web
is straight forward with the included JSON based RESTful API.
API endpoints:
GET
/remotes.json
- Returns all known remotes and commandsGET
/remotes/:remote.json
- Returns all known commands for remote:remote
GET
/macros.json
- Returns all known macrosPOST
/remotes/:remote/:command
- Send:command
to:remote
one timePOST
/remotes/:remote/:command/send_start
- Begin sending:command
POST
/remotes/:remote/:command/send_stop
- Stop sending:command
POST
/macros/:macro
- Send all commands for:macro
one time
Would you like to contribute to and improve lircv0.9.4_web
? Fantastic. To contribute
patches, run tests or benchmarks, install lircv0.9.4_web
locally:
git clone git://github.com/alexbain/lirc_web.git
cd lirc_web
npm install
Next, you'll need to setup the development environment. lircv0.9.4_web
uses the GruntJS built system to make development easier.
Install GruntJS (build environment):
npm install -g grunt-cli
npm install -g grunt-init
grunt server
You may need to reload your shell before continuing so the Grunt binares are detected.
grunt
will create all of the static assets.grunt server
will start a development server (using sample data) and watch all static assets for change
You can run the test suite by running:
npm test
If you develop test driven, you may want to launch a continuous test which automatically restarts when server or tests are modified:
npm run test:watch
You can run the linter to confirm JS conforms to standards by running:
npm run lint-js
You can also run the linter continuously via grunt:
grunt watch
Before you submit a pull request with your change, please be sure to:
- Add new tests that prove your change works as expected
- Ensure all existing tests are still passing
- Run the linter to ensure your code conforms to the js styleguide
- Update CHANGELOG.md file ('Unreleased' section) with concise bullet points
Once you're sure everything is still working, open a pull request with a clear description of what you changed and why. I will not accept a pull request which breaks existing tests or adds new functionality without tests.
The exception to this would be refactoring existing code or changing documentation.
(The MIT License)
Copyright (c) 2013-2016 Alex Bain <alex@alexba.in>
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.