This package is currently in maintenance mode. Please use airthings-ble for new projects.
The Airthings Wave
is a series of devices that track Radon levels in the home. Radon is a radioactive
gas that comes from the breakdown of uranium in soil and rock. It's invisible, odourless and tasteless.
This is an unofficial Airthings Wave community library designed to provide utilities for device and web communication.
- Using
bleak
as a dependency for platform cross-compatibility and support for asynchronous operation. - Support for major models: Wave+, Wave, Wave (Version 2) and Wave Mini devices. View Plus is not supported, as it sends data over WiFi, not BTLE.
- Code testing, coverage reporting, linting, type hinting, and formatting.
- Provide a more comprehensive programming interface for a developer audience.
- Auxillary module that provides a web client for Airthings API and OAuth2 authentication.
In Ubuntu/Debian, make sure you have libglib2.0-dev
and bluez
installed:
sudo apt-get install libglib2.0-dev bluez -y
Other Linux distributions should have equivalent packages. In theory, other platforms
(Windows, Mac) are supported by using bleak
as a dependency, but open a ticket
if you run into any issues.
You can install the library by running:
pip install wave-reader
There are various concrete examples available in the examples
directory. That includes
CLI interaction and other interesting scenarios that demonstrate API usage.
import asyncio
from wave_reader import wave
if __name__ == "__main__":
# Scan for BTLE Wave devices.
devices = wave.scan()
# Event loop to run asynchronous tasks.
loop = asyncio.new_event_loop()
# Get sensor readings from available wave devices.
for d in devices:
sensor_readings = loop.run_until_complete(d.get_sensor_values())
print(sensor_readings)
# >>> DeviceSensors (humidity: 32.5, radon_sta: 116, radon_lta: 113 ...
The wave_reader/web
module in this library provides a client for the Airthings
web API. See this page for more details.
If you identify a bug, please open a ticket. Pull requests are always welcome.
You can run the entire test suite by running tox
. It will run flake8
, isort
and pytest
.
If you'd like to just run unit tests, running pytest ./tests
is sufficient.