A pimatic plugin for Amazon's dash-buttons. It is a pretty light-weight implementation which uses a ContactSensor
or ButtonsDevice
device abstraction for the dash-button. Auto-discovery of dash-buttons is supported.
The plugin sniffs for ARP probes which will be sent out by a dash-button when the
button is pressed. The plugin is based on cap, a
cross-platform libpcap
binding for performing packet capturing with node.js. It can be used
on *nix and Windows systems.
If you like this plugin, please consider ★ starring the project on github. Contributions to the project are welcome. You can simply fork the project and create a pull request with your contribution to start with.
Happy with pimatic and using it everyday? If you like to obtain one of these amazing dash-button stickers, please consider a donation to support the pimatic development and the operation of the website and user forum.
This plugin requires libpcap to capture ARP requests on the network. Moreover, it is required to have python v2.7 installed.
On Raspberry PI and comparable systems
libpcap
must be installed, i.e. sudo apt-get install libpcap-dev
.
On Windows, WinPcap must be installed. As the installation procedure uses node-gyp
you will also need to have python v2.7
installed. Note, python v3
is not supported! See node-gyp
installation notes for details.
Follow the instructions given in the Amazon Mobile App, to pair the dash-button with your WiFi network. However, don't select a product as requested in the last configuration step. Now, when the dash-button is pressed, the indicator LED of the dash-button should blink white for about three seconds. Following this, the LED will turn to solid red for a few seconds and might blink red (depending on the type of dash-button you have, apparently there are different makes). This indicates the device is not setup as there is no product setup, but this does not matter.
As an additional line of defense you may consider restricting internet access for the device as part of your router configuration.
The "interfaceAddress" property may be omitted if your system only has a single network interface or the interface to
choose is the first one on the list returned by the ifconfig
command on the host. If the device
discovery or the interaction with dash-button does not work as expected, provide the IP address associated with the
network interface which shall be used to listen to ARP requests needs to be set.
{
"plugin": "amazing-dash-button",
"interfaceAddress": "192.168.1.15",
}
The plugin has the following configuration properties:
Property | Default | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
interfaceAddress | - | String | IP address associated with the network interface which shall be used to listen to ARP requests (optional) |
ignoreMacAddresses | - | Array | MAC addresses of candidate devices which shall be ignored. Typically, this is used to exclude other Amazon devices like Fire Tablet PCs. |
As of pimatic v0.9, dash-button devices can be automatically discovered. Simply open the "Devices" view of the pimatic web frontend and click on "Discover Devices". When the discovery has started, press the dash-button and the device should show up as a discovered device in pimatic after a few seconds.
You can also add the device manually by adding it to the "devices" section of the configuration or by creating the device using the device editor.
{
"id": "AmazingDashButton1",
"name": "AmazingDashButton1",
"class": "AmazingDashButton",
"macAddress": "ac:63:be:b3:be:78"
}
The device has the following configuration properties:
Property | Default | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
macAddress | - | String | MAC address of the device |
invert | false | String | If true, invert the contact state, i.e., contact is 'closed' if dash-button not pressed |
holdTime | 1500 | Integer | The number of milliseconds the contact shall enter the state indicating button pressed (closed if not inverted) |
You can also use your dash-button device as DashButtonDevice
. This device type will act like a ButtonsDevice with one button.
The configuration is
{
"id": "DashButtonDevice1",
"name": "DashButtonDevice1",
"class": "DashButtonDevice",
"macAddress": "ac:63:be:b3:be:78"
}
The DashButtonDevice
only supports the macAddress
property.
When using the automatic discovery mode, just change the class to DashButtonDevice
and copy the macAddress
property.
The AmazingDashButton
is derived from ContactSensor
and provides the following
predicate: {device} is opened|closed
. For example, if you wish to toggle a PowerSwitch
device when the dash-button
is pressed you can create a rule as follows:
when AmazingDashButton1 is closed then toggle {PowerSwitch Device}
For the DashButtonDevice
the predicate is {device} is pressed
, so this would lead to this rule:
when DashButtonDevice1 is pressed then toggle {PowerSwitch Device}
It is also possible to trigger an AmazingDashButton
device using the pimatic REST or WebSocket API as shown
in the example below for a given device with id dash-1
. Calling the device action will
close the contact for the holdTime
configured set as part of device configuration.
curl --user "username:password" /api/device/dash-1/trigger
For a DashButtonDevice
this would be:
curl --user "username:password" /api/device/dash-1/buttonPressed?buttonId=dash-1
-
"TypeError: Buffer.alloc is not a function" during installation
Make sure, you have node version 4.5 or greater installed.
See Release History.
Copyright (c) 2016-2019, Marcus Wittig and contributors. All rights reserved.