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IR remote control for Raspberry Pi

Project description

PiIR

PyPI version CI

IR remote control for Raspberry Pi.

PiIR is a client program for pigpio, the excellent hardware-timed GPIO library. Some code are taken from its sample program irrp.py.

Features

  • Records and plays IR remote control code.
  • Decodes and encodes NEC, Sony, RC5, RC6, AEHA, Mitsubishi, Sharp and Nokia formats.
  • Dumps decoded and prettified data to help you analyze your air conditioner's remote.
  • Both command-line and programmatic control.

Requirements

  • Raspberry Pi (any model where pigpio works should work)
  • IR LED and/or receiver on GPIO (see Hardware section)
  • Python >= 3.6
  • Running pigpiod daemon

Installation

sudo pip3 install PiIR

Start pigpio daemon.

sudo systemctl enable pigpiod
sudo systemctl start pigpiod

Command line usage

In the following example, the transmit GPIO is 17 and the receive GPIO is 22. You may need to change them to fit your hardware configuration.

Recoding

piir record --gpio 22 --file light.json

This asks key names on your remote and to press the keys.

Name of the key (blank to finish): on
Press the key named "on".
Press the same key again to verify.
Name of the key (blank to finish): off
Press the key named "off".
Press the same key again to verify.
Name of the key (blank to finish):
Saved to "light.json".

Alternatively you can give key names in the command-line like this:

piir record --gpio 22 --file light.json on off cool warm bright dark full night

The resulted data is saved to light.json. The file will look like this:

{
  "format": {
    "preamble": [
      8,
      4
    ],
    "coding": "ppm",
    "zero": [
      1,
      1
    ],
    "one": [
      1,
      3
    ],
    "postamble": [
      1
    ],
    "pre_data": "2C 52",
    "timebase": 430,
    "gap": 75000
  },
  "keys": {
    "on": "09 2D 24",
    "off": "09 2F 26",
    "cool": "39 90 A9",
    "warm": "39 91 A8",
    "bright": "09 2A 23",
    "dark": "09 2B 22",
    "full": "09 2C 25",
    "night": "09 2E 27"
  }
}

Playing

piir play --gpio 17 --file light.json off

This sends IR signal for off from light.json.

Analyzing

piir dump --gpio 22

This prints decoded data of received signal like this:

{
  "preamble": [
    8,
    4
  ],
  "coding": "ppm",
  "zero": [
    1,
    1
  ],
  "one": [
    1,
    3
  ],
  "postamble": [
    1
  ],
  "pre_data": "01 10 00 40 BF FF 00 CC 33",
  "post_data": "00 FF 80 7F 03 FC 01 FE 88 77 00 FF 00 FF FF 00 FF 00 FF 00 FF 00",
  "byte_by_byte_complement": true,
  "timebase": 420,
  "gap": 49000,
  "data": "92 42 64 00 00 00 00 00 53 F1 00"
}

It removes pre/post data and byte-by-byte complement from data, so you can focus on the actual data changes. It shold help analyzing data from stateful remotes such as air conditioners. An example of programmatic data generation using this result can be found in piir/remotes.

For more options try -h.

API

Sending

To send an IR signal recorded in a file:

import piir

remote = piir.Remote('light.json', 17)
remote.send('off')

The first argument of Remote can be a content of JSON instead of a file name.

You can also send arbitrary data like this:

remote.send_data('09 2E 27')

or

remote.send_data(bytes([0x09, 0x2E, 0x27]))

Recording

from piir.io import receive
from piir.decode import decode

keys = {}

while True:
    data = decode(receive(22))
    if data:
        break
keys['keyname'] = data

receive returns raw pulses as a list. It may be noise and other meaningless pulses. decode tries to decode it as remote data and returns a dict if successful, otherwise returns None.

When you recorded enough key data, you can call prettify to consolidate them into a JSON data that can be fed to Remote.

from piir.prettify import prettify
import json

print(json.dumps(prettify(keys), indent=2))
{
  "format": {
    "preamble": [
      16,
      8
    ],
    "coding": "ppm",
    "zero": [
      1,
      1
    ],
    "one": [
      1,
      3
    ],
    "postamble": [
      1
    ],
    "byte_by_byte_complement": true,
    "timebase": 560,
    "gap": 76000,
    "carrier": 38000
  },
  "keys": {
    "keyname": "80 12"
  }
}

For more information, consult piir/cli.py.

Hardware

Photo

I'm using Raspberry Pi Zero WH with four IR LEDs. Each LED is driven by a transistor connected to GPIO 17 at a measured current of 120mA.

On an unrelated note, the big gold thing is a carbon dioxide sensor.

Schematic of LED

Also onboard is a 38KHz IR receiver from Sharp, connected to GPIO 22.

Schematic of receiver

Project details


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