# Cherry
An extensible hub for home automation/Internet of Things.
## Overview
Cherry acts as a hub for your house and allows any connected component to communicate with each other. Cherry's power comes from its plugin system. Connected devices can talk to each other. Adding a new component to the system is as simple as writing a few lines of code (Node.js module).
As an example, let's say you have a Philips Hue light and you want to turn it on by pressing a button. You just need a few lines of code:
module.exports = function (cherry) {
console.log("lightswitch ready to rock");
cherry.handle({
pin: function (message) {
var plugins = cherry.plugins();
if (message.state === "high") {
plugins.hue({on: true});
} else if (message.state === "low") {
plugins.hue({on: false});
}
}
});
}
See this blog post for more background: https://wit.ai/blog/2014/09/12/office-automation-with-raspberry-pi.
## Using
npm install -g cherry-core
cherry path/to/config.json
config.json
looks something like that (cf. config.json.sample):
{
"port": 4433,
"witd_url": "http://192.168.1.68:8080",
"wit_token": "MY_WIT_TOKEN",
"hipchat_jid": "38888_1000000@chat.hipchat.com",
"hipchat_pwd": "mypwd",
"hipchat_room": "38888_myroom@conf.hipchat.com/Cherry",
"hue_host": "http://192.168.1.169",
"hue_user": "willyblandin",
"demo_port": 5576,
"gpio_pins": {
"22": ["in", "both"]
},
"plugins": [
"cherry-spotify",
"cherry-hue",
"cherry-wit",
"cherry-gpio",
"cherry.integration.hipchat",
"./contrib/cambridge.js",
]
}
## Using existing plugins
In your config.json
file, you specify the list of plugins you want to use.
Each item can either be:
- the name of a globally or locally installed npm package, e.g.
cherry-spotify
- a path to a Javascript file, e.g.
./examples/lightswitch.js
- a CoffeeScript file
## Creating a plugin
We've focused on making it really simple and easy to write a plugin for Cherry.
You can check the examples
directory, cherry-spotify, cherry-hue or below:
mkdir cherry-logger
npm init
cat > index.js <<EOF
module.exports = function (cherry) {
// listen for chat messages and turn lights on or play next song
cherry.handle({
chat: function (msg) {
var plugins = cherry.plugins();
if (msg === 'next song') {
plugins.spop('next');
} else if (msg === 'lights on') {
plugins.hue({on: true});
}
}
});
}
EOF
npm publish
Built-in plugins
You can configure plugins through a config.json
file.
HipChat
Note: this will be extracted into a cherry-hipchat
plugin pretty soon.
Produces: "from: chat"
"hipchat_jid": "88888_8888888@chat.hipchat.com",
"hipchat_pwd": "mypassword",
"hipchat_room": "88888_yay@conf.hipchat.com/My Username",
## Dev
cp config.json.sample config.json
lein cljsbuild auto
node dist/cherry.js config.json
## Cambridge
We use cherry everyday at the office and have put together a small script that should get everything up and running from a Raspberry Pi:
curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/wit-ai/cherry/master/cambridge.sh | sudo -E sh
## TODO
- figure out how to allow CLJS plugins