Skip to main content

Command line tool for Bluetooth Low Energy MicroPython devices

Project description

uPyble

PyPI versionPyPI license

Command line tool for Bluetooth Low Energy devices

uPyble is intended to be a command line tool upydev-like to make easier the development, prototyping and testing process of devices based on boards running *MicroPython with Bluetooth Low Energy capabilities.

*( Any other BLE device should work as well)

⚠️ Keep in mind that this project is in ALPHA state, sometimes, some commands may not work/return anything ⚠️

Features:

  • Command line wireless communication/control of MicroPython/other devices.
  • Custom commands to automate communication/control
  • Command line autocompletion
  • Terminal BLE SHELL-REPL 🔸🔺

🔸 (REPL works, but some SHELL commands are still under development)

🔺 There is a limit in the amount of output it can produce, so long lists or cat a big file will freeze the BLE SHELL-REPL and possibly the device, which makes a reset almost inevitable.


Getting Started

For Terminal BLE SHELL-REPL :

First be sure that the BLE REPL daemon is enabled and running:

    1. Put ble_advertising.py ,ble_uart_peripheral.py and ble_uart_repl.py in the device
    1. Add these lines to main.py:

      import ble_uart_repl
      ble_uart_repl.start()
      

These scripts are in upybleutils directory. (Originals from MicroPython repo bluetooth examples)

Installing :

$ pip install upyble or $ pip install --upgrade upyble to update to the last version available

Finding BLE devices:

Use $ upyble scan or $ upyble tscan for table output format.

$ upyble tscan
Scanning...
Scanning...
BLE device/s found: 1
==============================================================================
        NAME         |                   UUID                   | RSSI (dBm) |
 esp32-30aea4233564  |   9998175F-9A91-4CA2-B5EA-482AFC3453B9   |   -68.0    |

Create a configuration file:

*upyble will use local working directory configuration unless it does not find any or manually indicated with -g option.

  • To save configuration in working directory: $ upyble config -t [UPYDEVICE UUID]

    e.g:

    $ upyble config -t 9998175F-9A91-4CA2-B5EA-482AFC3453B9

  • To save configuration globally use -g flag: $ upyble config -t [UPYDEVICE UUID] -g

    e.g.

    $ upyble config -t 9998175F-9A91-4CA2-B5EA-482AFC3453B9 -g

    * Be aware that some devices may generate random UUID every a couple of minutes, so this won't be useful in those cases.


uPyble Usage:

Usage:

$ upyble [Mode] [options]

This means that if the first argument is not a Mode keyword it assumes it is a 'raw' upy command to send to the upy device

Help: $ upyble -h

uPyble Mode/Tools:

  • upyble check: to check local machine Bluetooth characterisctics
  • upyble config: save upy device settings (see -t, -g), so the target uuid argument wont be required any more
  • upyble scan: to scan for BLE devices (see -n for max number of scans)
  • upyble tscan: to scan for BLE devices, results with table format
  • upyble sconf: to scan and configure a device that matches a name -d [NAME]
  • upyble get_services: to get services of a device, use -r to read them and -mdata to see available metadata
  • upyble get_stag: to get service tag from a service code, use -scode to indicate the code
  • upyble get_scode: to get service code from a service tag, use -stag to indicate the tag
  • upyble get_ctag: to get characteristic tag from characteristic code, use -ccode to indicate the code
  • upyble get_ccode: to get characteristic code from a characteristic tag, use -ctag to indicate the tag
  • upyble get_aptag: to get appearance tag from an appearance code, use -apcode to indicate the code
  • upyble get_apcode: to get appearance code from an appearance tag, use -aptag to indicate the tag
  • upyble get_mtag: to get manufacturer tag from manufacturer code, use -mcode to indicate the code
  • upyble get_mcode: to get manufacturer code from a manufacturer tag, use -mtag to indicate the tag
  • upyble cmdata: to get characteristic metadata (name, type, uuid, unit, format, notes...). (Not all characteristics are available yet), Use -c option to indicate characteristic or -c all to see all that are available. Use -xml to see the xml file instead.
  • upyble cmdata_t: get_cmdata in table format.
  • upyble dmdata : to get descriptor metadata (Name, uuid, format...). Use -desc option to indicate a descriptor or -desc all to see all that are available.
  • upyble follow: to read from a service (see -s, -c , -tm) , e.g : upyble follow -s "Battery Service" , will read all readable characteristics, or use -c to indicate a specific one/group. e.g: upyble follow -s "Battery Service" -c "Battery Level". This mode autodetects format and unit from characteristic metadata
  • upyble rfollow: to read from a service (see -s, -c , -tm, -u , fmt and -x) , e.g : upyble follow -s "Battery Service" , will read all readable characteristics, or use -c to indicate a specific one/group. e.g: upyble follow -s "Battery Service" -c "Battery Level"
  • upyble see: to get specific info about a devices group use -G option as see -G [GROUP NAME]
  • upyble brepl: to enter the BLE SHELL-REPL
  • upyble ble@[DEVICE]: to access brepl in a 'ssh' style command if a device is stored in a global group called UPYBLE_G (this needs to be created first doing e.g. $ upyble make_group -g -f UPYBLE_G -devs foo_device UUID) The device can be accessed as $ upyble ble@foo_device or redirect any command as e.g. $ upyble get_services -@foo_device.

Examples:

Follow the Battery Level and Temperature (cpu) of an Esp32.

​ This needs ble_batt_temp.py in the device. (See upybleutils)

​ In the device REPL do:

>>> import ble_batt_temp
>>> ble_batt_temp.ble_batt.start_batt_bg()

Now in local Shell/Terminal:

  1. Scan and configure device:

    $ upyble scan
    Scanning...
    Scanning...
    BLE device/s found: 1
    NAME: esp32-batt-temp, UUID: 9998175F-9A91-4CA2-B5EA-482AFC3453B9, RSSI: -59.0 dBm, Services: Environmental Sensing
    
    $ upyble config -t 9998175F-9A91-4CA2-B5EA-482AFC3453B9 -g
    upyble device settings saved globally!
    
  2. Follow services

$ upyble follow -s all
Following service: all
[Service] 180A: Device Information
	[Characteristic] 2A01: (read) | Name: Appearance
	[Characteristic] 2A29: (read) | Name: Manufacturer Name String
[Service] 180F: Battery Service
	[Characteristic] 2A19: (read,notify) | Name: Battery Level
		[Descriptor] 2902: (Handle: 19)
[Service] 181A: Environmental Sensing
	[Characteristic] 2A6E: (read,notify) | Name: Temperature
		[Descriptor] 2902: (Handle: 23)
15:35:28,813 [upyble@esp32-batt-temp] Battery Service [Battery Level] : 77.0 %
15:35:28,843 [upyble@esp32-batt-temp] Environmental Sensing [Temperature] : 56.67 °C
15:35:33,883 [upyble@esp32-batt-temp] Battery Service [Battery Level] : 76.0 %
15:35:33,913 [upyble@esp32-batt-temp] Environmental Sensing [Temperature] : 56.67 °C
15:35:38,954 [upyble@esp32-batt-temp] Battery Service [Battery Level] : 76.0 %
15:35:38,983 [upyble@esp32-batt-temp] Environmental Sensing [Temperature] : 56.67 °C
15:35:44,024 [upyble@esp32-batt-temp] Battery Service [Battery Level] : 71.0 %
15:35:44,053 [upyble@esp32-batt-temp] Environmental Sensing [Temperature] : 56.67 °C
^CDisconnected successfully

See more usage examples at EXAMPLES doc.


ABOUT

To see more information about upyble dependencies, requirements, tested devices, etc see ABOUT doc.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

upyble-0.0.3.tar.gz (570.2 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

upyble-0.0.3-py3-none-any.whl (725.0 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Python 3

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page