A Homebridge plugin for Aranet4 devices.
It uses Bluetooth 4 (Low Energy) to connect to the Aranet.
It reports the CO2 level, humidity and temperature and the device's battery into HomeKit.
It requires an Aranet device running at least the v1.2.0 firmware.
You'll have to manually pair the device with the computer running homebridge before it can be used by this plugin.
It's very much in beta currently (I've only tested this with a single device, on macOS). If you run into problems, please start a discussion.
XCode
needs to be installed for the bluetooth library to be compiled.
You can download it from the Mac App Store or from the command line:
xcode-select --install
On macOS 13 or later, please make sure that node
has permission to access Bluetooth (in "Privacy & Security"):
- Locate where
node
is located (e.g.which node
). - Open the directory where it's located and then drag & drop
node
into the allowed Bluetooth apps list
open -R $(which node)
This is a template Homebridge dynamic platform plugin and can be used as a base to help you get started developing your own plugin.
This template should be used in conjunction with the developer documentation. A full list of all supported service types, and their characteristics is available on this site.
Click the link below to create a new GitHub Repository using this template, or click the Use This Template button above.
To develop Homebridge plugins you must have Node.js 18 or later installed, and a modern code editor such as VS Code. This plugin template uses TypeScript to make development easier and comes with pre-configured settings for VS Code and ESLint. If you are using VS Code install these extensions:
Using a terminal, navigate to the project folder and run this command to install the development dependencies:
$ npm install
Open the package.json
and change the following attributes:
name
- this should be prefixed withhomebridge-
or@username/homebridge-
, is case-sensitive, and contains no spaces nor special characters apart from a dash-
displayName
- this is the "nice" name displayed in the Homebridge UIrepository.url
- Link to your GitHub repobugs.url
- Link to your GitHub repo issues page
When you are ready to publish the plugin you should set private
to false, or remove the attribute entirely.
Open the src/settings.ts
file and change the default values:
PLATFORM_NAME
- Set this to be the name of your platform. This is the name of the platform that users will use to register the plugin in the Homebridgeconfig.json
.PLUGIN_NAME
- Set this to be the same name you set in thepackage.json
file.
Open the config.schema.json
file and change the following attribute:
pluginAlias
- set this to match thePLATFORM_NAME
you defined in the previous step.
TypeScript needs to be compiled into JavaScript before it can run. The following command will compile the contents of your src
directory and put the resulting code into the dist
folder.
$ npm run build
Run this command so your global installation of Homebridge can discover the plugin in your development environment:
$ npm link
You can now start Homebridge, use the -D
flag, so you can see debug log messages in your plugin:
$ homebridge -D
If you want to have your code compile automatically as you make changes, and restart Homebridge automatically between changes, you first need to add your plugin as a platform in ~/.homebridge/config.json
:
{
...
"platforms": [
{
"name": "Config",
"port": 8581,
"platform": "config"
},
{
"name": "<PLUGIN_NAME>",
//... any other options, as listed in config.schema.json ...
"platform": "<PLATFORM_NAME>"
}
]
}
and then you can run:
$ npm run watch
This will launch an instance of Homebridge in debug mode which will restart every time you make a change to the source code. It will load the config stored in the default location under ~/.homebridge
. You may need to stop other running instances of Homebridge while using this command to prevent conflicts. You can adjust the Homebridge startup command in the nodemon.json
file.
You can now start customising the plugin template to suit your requirements.
src/platform.ts
- this is where your device setup and discovery should go.src/platformAccessory.ts
- this is where your accessory control logic should go, you can rename or create multiple instances of this file for each accessory type you need to implement as part of your platform plugin. You can refer to the developer documentation to see what characteristics you need to implement for each service type.config.schema.json
- update the config schema to match the config you expect from the user. See the Plugin Config Schema Documentation.
Given a version number MAJOR
.MINOR
.PATCH
, such as 1.4.3
, increment the:
- MAJOR version when you make breaking changes to your plugin,
- MINOR version when you add functionality in a backwards compatible manner, and
- PATCH version when you make backwards compatible bug fixes.
You can use the npm version
command to help you with this:
# major update / breaking changes
$ npm version major
# minor update / new features
$ npm version update
# patch / bugfixes
$ npm version patch
When you are ready to publish your plugin to npm, make sure you have removed the private
attribute from the package.json
file then run:
$ npm publish
If you are publishing a scoped plugin, i.e. @username/homebridge-xxx
you will need to add --access=public
to command the first time you publish.
You can publish beta versions of your plugin for other users to test before you release it to everyone.
# create a new pre-release version (eg. 2.1.0-beta.1)
$ npm version prepatch --preid beta
# publish to @beta
$ npm publish --tag=beta
Users can then install the beta version by appending @beta
to the install command, for example:
$ sudo npm install -g homebridge-example-plugin@beta
Consider creating your plugin with the Homebridge Verified criteria in mind. This will help you to create a plugin that is easy to use and works well with Homebridge. You can then submit your plugin to the Homebridge Verified list for review. The most up-to-date criteria can be found here. For reference, the current criteria are:
- The plugin must successfully install.
- The plugin must implement the Homebridge Plugin Settings GUI.
- The plugin must not start unless it is configured.
- The plugin must not execute post-install scripts that modify the users' system in any way.
- The plugin must not contain any analytics or calls that enable you to track the user.
- The plugin must not throw unhandled exceptions, the plugin must catch and log its own errors.
- The plugin must be published to npm and the source code available on GitHub.
- A GitHub release - with patch notes - should be created for every new version of your plugin.
- The plugin must run on all supported LTS versions of Node.js, at the time of writing this is Node.js v16 and v18.
- The plugin must not require the user to run Homebridge in a TTY or with non-standard startup parameters, even for initial configuration.
- If the plugin needs to write files to disk (cache, keys, etc.), it must store them inside the Homebridge storage directory.
Note these links are here for help but are not supported/verified by the Homebridge team