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A Go (golang) library to interface with the Samsung SmartThings API.

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gosmart

A Go (golang) library to interface with the Samsung SmartThings (IoT) API.

Introduction

GoSmart (or gosmart, lowercase) is a Go Library that allows easy interfacing between a Go program and the SmartThings API. I've written this library out of frustration with the many incomplete examples of how to properly authenticate using Oauth2 in Go, and the inability to read the wealth of data reported by my home sensors without dealing with Groovy and a mobile device.

The library is under heavy development, but can already perform an OAuth login to SmartThings, save and restore the token locally, and fetch device names and sensor values. Looking at the examples directory should provide a good starting point on how to use it.

The library contains two parts: The Go library itself, and a Groovy "handler" app. All calls to the SmartThings API are made with an authenticated HTTP request to the SmartThings API website. The request is then served by the Groovy app and the results converted back from JSON to a native Go structure for regular use.

Installation

Local

We assume a working Go environment. This includes a recent version of Go (currently using 1.7.3, check with go version) and properly set GOPATH/GOROOT environment variables.

First, grab the latest version of gosmart with:

go get -u -v github.com/marcopaganini/gosmart

This will install the package under $GOPATH/src/github.com/marcopaganini/gosmart

Change to that directory and locate the endpoint.groovy file under the apismartapp directory. We'll need this file momentarily.

SmartThings API setup

  • Navigate to the SmartThings API website. Register a new account (or login if you already have an account).

  • Once logged in, click on My SmartApps. This will show a list of the current SmartApps installed (it could be blank for new accounts).

  • Click the New SmartApp button. The "New SmartApp" form page will appear.

  • Enter a name for your SmartApp (suggestion: GoSmart Webservices Handler)

  • Enter your GitHub user Id in the namespace (probably doesn't matter much).

  • Enter the author, name and category.

  • Under "Oauth", click on Enable OAuth in Smart App. More fields will be added to the current form.

  • Take note of the "Client ID" and "Client Secret". These will be used to authenticate and retrieve a token. Once the token is saved locally by the library, authentication can proceed without user intervention.

  • On Redirect URI, enter http://localhost:4567/OAuthCallback. Case is important here

  • The application editor will open with a basic App template. Completely delete the editor contents and replace it with the contents of endpoints.groovy in this package (copy & paste are your friends).

  • Click the Save Button to save your changes.

  • Click the Publish Button and choose the For Me option. A green banner indicating success should appear at the top of the screen.

  • Click the My SmartApps link again (at the top of the screen). Make sure the new App shows with status set to "Published" and OAuth set to "True".

At this point, the smartthings part of the installation should be ready.

Running an example

You can easily run the examples in the examples directory and see some output:

  • Change the current directory (cd) to examples/simple under the installation tree.

  • Type go build to build the simple application. If everything goes right, a binary called simple will be created under the current directory.

  • Now run simple using the "Client ID" and "Client Secret" for our app. Replace client_id and client_secret below with the values obtained at the time we created the App. Type:

    ./simple --client client_id --secret client_secret

  • Since this is the first time we try to authenticate this particular Client ID and Client Secret pair, the authentication process will require user intervention. A message will display on the screen asking the user to visit [http://localhost:4567] to complete the authentication process. Visit this link with your favorite browser. You'll be redirected to the smartthings.com API website. Proceed to log in normally and indicate which devices should be "seen" by this App (normally, all). Confirm your choices.

  • At this point, the simple program will proceed and show a (crude) output showing some information about your sensors.

  • Try running simple again. This time, omit the --secret command line option. Notice how the full login process is bypassed. This happens because the library retrieved the token from local storage. The --client option is only needed because simple uses it to form the name of the file containing the token. You can also specify a --tokenfile option to force saving the token to a specific file.

Important: A third party will have full access to your SmartThings IoT network if they obtain your token. Make sure to save the token file in a safe location. By default the library saves the token file under the current user's directory. You can change this behavior easily by specifying a token filename during authentication time. Look at the examples for more details.

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