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sakee

SAKÉ can help you to debug and develop Kodi Python add-ons

  • 0.1.8
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SAKÉ: Simple ASCII Kodi Emulator

License GitHub Workflow Status (branch) Quality Gate Status Python

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SAKÉ: your favourite 'drink' for debugging and developing Kodi Python add-ons

SAKÉ can help you to debug and develop Kodi Python add-ons. It contains a set of libraries that try to mimic the functionality of the corresponding Kodi modules:

ModulePurpose
xbmcGeneral functions on Kodi
xbmcaddonKodi’s addon class
xbmcguiGUI functions on Kodi.
xbmcpluginPlugin functions on Kodi.
xbmcvfsVirtual file system functions on Kodi.

Not all libraries are present and certainly not all methods are implemented. Currently missing are:

ModulePurpose
xbmcdrmKodi’s DRM class.

Feel free to contribute to the completion using Pull Requests for this repository.

Using SAKÉ

SAKÉ can be installed using the pip install command:

$ pip install sakee

This will install SAKÉ in the active Python installation. It will be available directly to all your Python scripts. If you choose to not use pip install and want to run it from a specific (custom) location then you will need to include its path the Python paths. Either via:

sys.path.append('<path to SAKÉ>')

Or by appending the SAKÉ path to the Python path environment variable: PYTHONPATH

Configuration

SAKÉ requires you to run with your add-on as the main working directory. Running it outside of that directory will fail.

If your add-on is in a subfolder of Kodi's addons folder, you are done. SAKÉ will try to find its own way and determine what your Kodi path is and where your profile is stored. However, if you are running it standalone, so without Kodi at all, or if SAKÉ got 'drunk' and lost its way, you can always specify some directions using environment variables as follows:

Environment VariableDescription
KODI_HOMEIf specified, will force SAKÉ to look at that path for Kodi's home path.
KODI_PROFILEIf specified, will force SAKÉ to use this folder as the Kodi 'master' profile (user_data) folder. This will disable the auto detection of the profile folder based on Kodi's home path.
KODI_ACTIVE_PROFILESAKÉ will assume that you don't have any Kodi profiles, but in case you have, you can specify what profile to use for the add-on settings.
KODI_INTERACTIVENormally, SAKÉ will try to interact with you: Whenever there should be a dialog shown within Kodi, SAKÉ will present you with an ASCII version and wait for a response. You can disable this by setting this environment variable to "0". SAKÉ will not disturb you and will continue. However, SAKÉ will answer those dialogs for you and that might result in unwanted actions, but it might come in handy while running unit tests.
KODI_STUB_VERBOSEIf set to "1" will make SAKÉ a bit more verbose.
KODI_STUB_RPC_RESPONSESSpecifies the folder from which to read JSON RPC responses. If you don't set this, you won't be able to use xbmc.executeJSONRPC
KODI_STUB_INPUTSpecify the default input for the keyboard input

JSON RPC responses

In order to respond to the JSON RPC requests, issued via executeJSONRPC, a folder with response files can be configured using the KODI_STUB_RPC_RESPONSES environment variable (see above). This folder should contain response files with the following naming conversions:

<method_name>.json

So, for instance favourites.getfavourites.json. Inside the file there is:

  • A single complete JSON response. In this case, the complete content of the file will be used, as is, as the JSON RPC response.
  • A list of JSON request-response pairs with different input parameters. Using the input parameters of the JSON RPC request, the correct response is determined and returned as the JSON RPC response.

In the latter case, the content of a stub file could look like this:

[
  {
    "request": {
      "params": {
        "setting": "network.usehttpproxy"
      },
      "jsonrpc": "2.0",
      "method": "Settings.GetSettingValue",
      "id": 0
    },
    "response": {
      "id": 5,
      "jsonrpc": "2.0",
      "result": {
        "value": false
      }
    }
  },
  {
    "request": {
      "params": {
        "setting": "network.httpproxyusername"
      },
      "jsonrpc": "2.0",
      "method": "Settings.GetSettingValue",
      "id": 0
    },
    "response": {
      "id": 5,
      "jsonrpc": "2.0",
      "result": {
        "value": true
      }
    }
  }
]

This stub file contains responses for the method Settings.GetSettingValue for the setting network.usehttpproxy and network.httpproxyusername.

If no file with matching method name is found or the file does not contain the correct responses an 'OK' is returned:

{
  "id": 1,
  "jsonrpc": "2.0",
  "result": "OK"
}

Just like most of the Kodi JSON RPC calls do.

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