
Security News
Static vs. Runtime Reachability: Insights from Latio’s On the Record Podcast
The Latio podcast explores how static and runtime reachability help teams prioritize exploitable vulnerabilities and streamline AppSec workflows.
Screw remotes. Control your Roku <http://www.roku.com>
_ via Python.
.. image:: https://travis-ci.org/jcarbaugh/python-roku.svg?branch=master :target: https://travis-ci.org/jcarbaugh/python-roku
::
pip install python-roku
The Basics
To start, import the Roku object and create it with the IP of your Roku.
::
>>> from roku import Roku
>>> roku = Roku('192.168.10.163')
The Roku object has a method for each of the buttons on the remote.
::
>>> roku.home()
>>> roku.right()
>>> roku.select()
To see a full list of available commands, use the *commands* property.
::
>>> roku.commands
['back', 'backspace', 'down', 'enter', 'forward', 'home', 'info', 'left', 'literal', 'play', 'replay', 'reverse', 'right', 'search', 'select', 'up']
If you are following along on your home network and are connected to your Roku, you should see it doing stuff. *Cool!*
Apps
~~~~
The *apps* property will return a list of the applications on your device.
::
>>> roku.apps
[<Application: [2285] Hulu Plus v2.7.6>, <Application: [13] Amazon Instant Video v5.1.3>, <Application: [20445] VEVO v2.0.12092013>]
Apps have *id*, *name*, and *version* properties.
::
>>> app = roku.apps[0]
>>> print app.id, app.name, app.version
2285 Hulu Plus 2.7.6
You can get an individual app from the Roku object by either its *name* or *id*.
::
>>> roku['Hulu Plus']
<Application: [2285] Hulu Plus v2.7.6>
>>> roku[2285]
<Application: [2285] Hulu Plus v2.7.6>
Seeing the reference to this Hulu Plus app makes me really want to watch the latest episode of `Nashville <http://abc.go.com/shows/nashville>`_. Let's launch it!
::
>>> hulu = roku['Hulu Plus']
>>> hulu.launch()
Again, if you are following along at home, you should see that your Roku has launched the Hulu Plus app. Want to see the app's entry in the Channel Store?
::
>>> hulu.store()
You can also get the app's icon.
::
>>> with open('hulu.png', 'w') as f:
... f.write(hulu.icon)
Entering Text
Okay, I've already seen all of the available episodes of Nashville, so I'm going to search for Stargate. With the search open and waiting for text entry::
>>> roku.literal('stargate')
This will iterate over each character, sending it individually to the Roku.
Discovery
Roku devices can be discovered using `SSDP <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_Service_Discovery_Protocol>`_. A class method is available on the Roku object that will return Roku object instances for each device found on the same network.
::
>>> Roku.discover()
[<Roku: 192.168.10.163:8060>]
It may take a few seconds for a device to be found. You can call discover again or change the *timeout* or *retries* parameters on the discover method. This will take longer, but will find more devices.
::
>>> Roku.discover(timeout=10)
[<Roku: 192.168.10.163:8060>, <Roku: 192.168.10.204:8060>]
Thanks to `Dan Krause <https://github.com/dankrause>`_ for his `SSDP code <https://gist.github.com/dankrause/6000248>`_.
Sensors
~~~~~~~
Newer Roku remotes have extra sensors built into them that measure acceleration, orientation, and other things.You can mimic these sensors using the provided helper methods.
::
>>> roku.orientation(1, 1, 1)
The parameters to all of the sensor methods are x, y, and z values. Available methods include:
* acceleration - in each dimension relative to free fall measured in meters/sec^2
* magnetic - magnetic field strength in microtesla
* orientation - angular displacement from flat/level and north in radians
* rotation - angular rotation rate about each axis using the right hand rule in radians/sec
Touch
~~~~~
Some Roku input devices support touch. The parameters to the *touch* method are the *x* and *y* coordinates of the touch.
::
>>> roku.touch(10, 40)
You can change the event triggered by passing an optional *op* parameter.
::
>>> roku.touch(10, 40, op='up')
Supported events are:
* down
* up
* press (down and up)
* move
* cancel
Multitouch is not yet supported in this package.
Generic Input
Both the sensor and touch methods rely on the generic input method for sending data to a running application. If you refuse to use covenience methods because they make people lazy and weak, you can call the sensor and touch methods directly. ::
>>> params = {'touch.0.x': 10, 'touch.0.y': 20, 'touch.0.op': 'press'}
>>> roku.input(params)
More information about input, touch, and sensors is available in the Roku External Control docs <http://sdkdocs.roku.com/display/sdkdoc/External+Control+Guide#ExternalControlGuide-31ExternalControlInputCommandConventions>
_.
FAQs
Client for the Roku media player
We found that python-roku demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
The Latio podcast explores how static and runtime reachability help teams prioritize exploitable vulnerabilities and streamline AppSec workflows.
Security News
The latest Opengrep releases add Apex scanning, precision rule tuning, and performance gains for open source static code analysis.
Security News
npm now supports Trusted Publishing with OIDC, enabling secure package publishing directly from CI/CD workflows without relying on long-lived tokens.