Awesome
pebblewatch
A Ruby library for communicating with your Pebble smartwatch.
The protocol implementation was based on the documentation at http://pebbledev.org/, the Python implementation at Hexxeh/libpebble and the .NET implementation at barometz/flint.
To Do
- Basic protocol communication
- Sending of messages (notifications etc)
- Receiving of events (log, music control)
- Full 2-way app message support
- Firmware/app uploading
- CLI
- REPL
Installation
gem install pebblewatch
Usage
Make sure your Pebble is paired with your computer and set up as a serial port. We're going to need the path or index of the port, which in the case of OS X looks like /dev/tty.Pebble7F30-SerialPortSe
for Pebble ID 7F30
.
require "pebble"
# Create your watch using the serial port assigned to your Pebble.
watch = Pebble::Watch.new("7F30", "/dev/tty.Pebble7F30-SerialPortSe")
# You can also use autodetection if you're on OS X:
# watch = Pebble::Watch.autodetect
# The watch object will be on the receiving end of 3 kinds of events:
watch.on_event(:log) do |event|
puts "LOG"
puts "timestamp: #{event.timestamp}"
puts "level: #{event.level}"
puts "filename: #{event.filename}"
puts "linenumber: #{event.linenumber}"
puts "message: #{event.message}"
end
watch.on_event(:system_message) do |event|
puts "System Message: #{event.message} (#{event.code})"
end
handler = watch.on_event(:media_control) do |event|
case event.button
when :playpause
puts "Play or pause music"
when :next
puts "Next track"
when :previous
puts "Previous track"
end
end
# Suddenly had a change of heart? Just cover your ears.
watch.stop_listening(:media_control, handler)
# To make sure we don't miss any events, we haven't connected yet.
# Because we also want to *send* stuff to the watch, we will now.
watch.connect
# We can of course send notifications.
watch.ping
watch.notification_sms("Scarlett Johansson", "Hey baby, what are you doing tonight?")
watch.notification_email("Tim Cook", "RE: Final offer",
"All right, you drive a hard bargain. We'll pay $2 Billion for the whole shop and that is our final offer.")
# Or let Pebble know what we're listening to.
watch.set_nowplaying_metadata(
"Artist you've probably never heard of",
"Album released exclusively through SoundCloud",
"Song that doesn't suck per se but isn't great either"
)
# We can also do some maintenancy things, although there's currently no firmware/app uploading.
versions = watch.get_versions
puts "Normal firmware version: #{versions[:firmwares][:normal][:version]}"
puts "Recovery firmware version: #{versions[:firmwares][:recovery][:version]}"
puts "Bluetooth MAC address: #{versions[:btmac]}"
# Fun fact: We don't have to wait for the results synchronously. (This works on every message with a response.)
watch.get_installed_apps do |apps|
puts "Installed apps: (#{apps[:apps].length} of #{apps[:banks_count]} banks in use)"
apps[:apps].each do |app|
puts "#{app[:index]}/#{app[:id]}: #{app[:name]} by #{app[:author]}"
end
end
# Dieting is not just for dogs anymore.
watch.remove_app(id, index)
time = watch.get_time
# Or asynchronously: watch.get_time { |time| ... }
# Time travel is just one method call away.
watch.set_time(Time.now + (365 * 24 * 60 * 60))
# This is mostly interesting for internal stuff, but since there's a :system_message event as well, I thought why not.
watch.system_message(Pebble::SystemMessages::FIRMWARE_OUT_OF_DATE)
# Yeah, I'd stay away from this one.
watch.reset
# If you're done sending messages but want the program to keep listing for incoming events, say so:
watch.listen_for_events
# Note that listening will only end when the connection is lost, so anything that comes after this call will only then be executed.
# This will generally be the last call in your program.
# If we don't want to wait around and listen, just let the program exit or disconnect explicitly:
watch.disconnect
Oh, and if you want to do some lower level stuff, have a look at Pebble::Protocol
which you can access through watch.protocol
.
watch.protocol.on_receive(endpoint) do |message|
# Do whatever
end
watch.protocol.send_message(endpoint, message)
There is also rudimentary support for reading the Pebble Bundle .pbw
file format. Use the Pebble::Bundle
class to parse a bundle file and read information. Also take a look at the example
bundle = Pebble::Bundle.new("my-pebble-bundle.pbw")
bundle.is_app?
# => true
bundle.app_metadata.name
# => My First Pebble App
bundle.close
Examples
Check out the examples/
folder for two examples that I actually use myself. They're kind of similar, but should give you an idea of how this whole thing works.
License
Copyright (c) 2013 Douwe Maan
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.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.