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Grizzly Logo

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An Elixir library for Z-Wave

Installation

def deps do
  [
    {:grizzly, "~> 0.6"}
  ]
end

Requirements

See instructions for compiling the zipgateway binary.

Usage

Adding Z-Wave Devices

When adding Z-Wave devices you will have to know what security group the device is using. There are 3 groups: none, S0, and S2. For none and S0 you don't have to do anything special during the inclusion process:

iex> Grizzly.add_node()
iex> flush
{:node_added, %Grizzly.Node{...}}

After calling Grizzly.add_node/0 you will then trigger the pairing process on the device, the instructions for that process can be found in the device's user manual.

However, if your device is using S2 security you will need to use Grizzly.add_node/1.

If you are using s2_unauthenticated this is call you will want to make:

iex> Grizzly.add_node(s2_keys: [:s2_unauthenticated])
iex> flush

If you are using s2_authenticated you will need to provide a pin that is located on the device:

iex> Grizzly.add_node(s2_keys: [:s2_authenticated], pin: 1111)
iex> flush

You will see some additional messages when flushing when using S2 security but you will not need to do anything with them. When using a GenServer to manage inclusion you can handle messages via handle_info/2

See Grizzly.Inclusion module for more information about adding Z-Wave devices to the network.

Removing a Z-Wave Device

Removing a Z-Wave device looks like:

iex> Grizzly.remove_node()
iex> flush
{:node_removed, 12}

Where 12 is the id of the node you removed.

When you use a GenServer to manage exclusion you can handle messages via handle_info/2

See Grizzly.Inclusion module for more information about removing Z-Wave devices from the network.

Additional Z-Wave docs can be found at Silicon Labs.

Controlling a Z-Wave Device

Say you have added a door lock to your Z-Wave controller that has the id of 12, now you want to unlock it. There are three steps to this process: get the node from the Z-Wave network, connect to the node, and then send Z-Wave commands to it.

iex> {:ok, lock} = Grizzly.get_node(12)
iex> {:ok, lock} = Grizzly.Node.connect(lock)
iex> Grizzly.send_command(lock, Grizzly.CommandClass.DoorLock.OperationSet, mode: :unsecured)
:ok

If you are just trying things out in an iex session can you use send_command with the node id:

iex> Grizzly.send_command(12, Grizzly.CommandClass.DoorLock.OperationSet, mode: :unsecured)

However, this is slower in general and is only recommended for quick one off command sending. If you're building a long running application the first example is recommend along with storing the connected device to keep the connection alive for faster response times.

see the Grizzly module docs for more details about Grizzly.send_command

Configuration

Different systems will use different serial ports to talk to the Z-Wave controller. In order to configure this, there is a serial_port option. Below is an example for the Raspberry PI 3:

config :grizzly,
  serial_port: "/dev/ttyACM0"

If you are using a base nerves system please see the documentation for your particular system at the Nerves Project github page.

If you want to run tests without running the zipgateway binary provided by Silicon Labs you can configure run_zipgateway_bin to be false:

config :grizzly,
  run_zipgateway_bin: false

Compiling zipgateway

First download the Z/IP GW SDK from Silicon Labs.

For this you will need to make a free account with Silicon Labs. The default binaries that come with the download will not work by default in Nerves system, so you will need to compile the source for your target. The source code can be found in the Source directory.

This can be tricky and the instructions are a work in progress, so for now please contact us if you any troubles.

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