Dweet.io
The dweet
sensor platform allows you to get details from your devices which are publishing their values to Dweet.io.
To use Dweet.io in your installation, add the following to your configuration.yaml
file:
# Example configuration.yaml entry sensor: platform: dweet name: Dweet.io Temperature device: THING_NAME value_template: '' unit_of_measurement: "°C"
Configuration variables:
- device (Required): Identification of the device (also known as
thing
). - name (Optional): Let you overwrite the the name of the device in the frontend.
- value_template (Required): The variable to extract a value from the content.
- unit_of_measurement (Optional): Defines the unit of measurement of the sensor, if any.
Interacting with Dweet.io
You can easily send dweets from the commandline to test your sensor.
$ curl -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d '{"temperature": 40, "humidity": 65}' https://dweet.io/dweet/for/ha-sensor
will give you a response like the one below:
{"this":"succeeded","by":"dweeting","the":"dweet","with":{"thing":"ha-sensor","created":"2015-12-10T09:43:31.133Z","content":{"temperature":40,"humidity":65}}}
The dweepy module gives you another option to work with Dweet.io.
Send a dweet.
$ python3 >>> import dweepy >>> dweepy.dweet_for('ha-sensor', {'temperature': '23', 'humiditiy':'81'}) {'thing': 'ha-sensor', 'created': '2015-12-10T09:46:08.559Z', 'content': {'humiditiy': 81, 'temperature': 23}}
Recieve the latest dweet.
>>> dweepy.get_latest_dweet_for('ha-sensor') [{'thing': 'ha-sensor'', 'created': '2015-12-10T09:43:31.133Z', 'content': {'humidity': 65, 'temperature': 40}}]