Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
190 lines (145 loc) · 7.75 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

190 lines (145 loc) · 7.75 KB

Magic Mirror Module: Remote Control

This module for the Magic Mirror² allows you to quickly shutdown your mirror through a web browser. The website should work fine on any device (desktop, smart phone, tablet, ...). Since we all want our SD cards to live a long and prosper life we properly shut down before pulling the power plug everytime, am I right? Additionally you can hide and show modules on your mirror and do other cool stuff.

The Main Menu The Power Menu Hide and Show a Module

Installation

Quick install

If you followed the default installation instructions for the Magic Mirror² project, you should be able to use the automatic installer. The following command will download the installer and execute it:

bash -c "$(curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Jopyth/MMM-Remote-Control/master/installer.sh)"

Manual install

  • (1) Clone this repository in your modules folder, and install dependencies:
cd ~/MagicMirror/modules # adapt directory if you are using a different one
git clone https://github.com/Jopyth/MMM-Remote-Control.git
cd MMM-Remote-Control
npm install
  • (2) Add the module to your config/config.js file, if you add a position, it will display the URL to the remote on the mirror.
{
    module: 'MMM-Remote-Control'
    // uncomment the following line to show the URL of the remote control on the mirror
    // , position: 'bottom_left'
    // you can hide this module afterwards from the remote control itself
},
  • (3) Add the IP addresses of devices you want to use to access the Remote Control to the ipWhiteList in your config.js.

  • (4) Restart your Magic Mirror² (i.e. pm2 restart mm).

  • (5) Access the remote interface on http://192.168.xxx.xxx:8080/remote.html (replace with IP address of your RaspberryPi).

Note: If your user does not have sudo rights, the shutdown does not work (it should work for everyone who did not change anything on this matter).

Update

Update this module by navigating into its folder on the command line and using git pull:

cd ~/MagicMirror/modules/MMM-Remote-Control # adapt directory if you are using a different one
git pull
npm install # install (new) dependencies

Alternatively you can run the installer.sh script again:

~/MagicMirror/modules/MMM-Remote-Control/installer.sh

Select version manually

You can check out specific versions in the following way. First look at which versions are available:

cd MagicMirror/modules/MMM-Remote-Control # or wherever you installed the Mirror and the module
git fetch # fetch all tags
git tags # display them

The output should look similar to this:

v1.0.0
v1.1.0
v1.1.1
v1.1.2

Then you can checkout that version with, for example git checkout v1.0.0, or use git checkout master to checkout the most recent version.

Known limitations

Whenever you change the order of modules in config.js or add/remove modules, the indices of the modules change. Therefore the hidden/shown status of modules might not be correctly applied. If this happens, simply reconfigure and save it again.

Call methods from other modules

You can call any of the methods provided in the UI directly through a GET request, or a module notification. For example you can use MMM-ModuleScheduler to automatically shutdown your RasberryPi at a certain time, or integrate it with home automation systems.

Examples

  • Example for a GET request to trigger a RaspberryPi restart:
http://192.168.xxx.xxx:8080/remote?action=RESTART
  • Example for a notification schedule for MMM-ModuleScheduler to automatically switch your monitor on and off with :
notification_schedule: [
    {notification: 'REMOTE_ACTION', schedule: '30 9 * * *', payload: {action: 'MONITOROFF'}},
    {notification: 'REMOTE_ACTION', schedule: '30 18 * * *', payload: {action: 'MONITORON'}}
]
  • Example to trigger a RaspberryPi restart in your module:
this.sendNotification('REMOTE_ACTION', {action: 'RESTART'});

List of actions

action description
SHUTDOWN Shutdown your RaspberryPi
REBOOT Restart your RaspberryPi
RESTART Restart your MagicMirror
MONITORON Switch your display on
MONITOROFF Switch your display off
SAVE Save the current configuration (show and hide status of modules, and brightness), will be applied after the mirror starts
BRIGHTNESS Change mirror brightness, with the new value specified by value. 100 equals the default, possible range is between 10 and 200.
HIDE Hide a module, with the identifier specified by module (see MODULE_DATA action).
SHOW Show a module, with the identifier specified by module (see MODULE_DATA action).
MODULE_DATA Returns a JSON format of the data displayed in the UI, including all valid identifiers for the HIDE and SHOW action.
REFRESH Refresh mirror page
SHOW_ALERT Show Default Alert/Notification
HIDE_ALERT Hide Default Alert/Notification
UPDATE Update MagicMirror and any of it's modules
NOTIFICATION Send a notification to all modules (see Notification Request).

Format of module data response

The response will be in the JSON format, here is an example:

{
"moduleData":[
    {"hidden":false,"name":"alert","identifier":"module_0_alert"},
    {"hidden":true,"name":"clock","identifier":"module_1_clock","position":"bottom_right"},
    {"hidden":false,"name":"currentweather","identifier":"module_2_currentweather","position":"top_right"}
],
"brightness":40,
"settingsVersion":1
}

Notification Request

To send a notification to all modules, send the following GET-parameters.

key value
action NOTIFICATION
Required
notification The notification to send, e.g. ARTICLE_MORE_DETAILS, SHOW_ALERT or HIDE_ALERT.
Required
payload A stringified JSON object with the payload for the notification.
Optional if absent, an empty payload ({}) is assumed.

Examples:

?action=NOTIFICATION&notification=ARTICLE_MORE_DETAILS

?action=NOTIFICATION&notification=SHOW_ALERT&payload={%22title%22:%22Alert%22,%22message%22:%22This%20is%an%20alert.%22}
(Payload is URL-encoded form of {"title":"Alert","message":"This is an alert."})

?action=NOTIFICATION&notification=HIDE_ALERT

License

The MIT License (MIT)

Copyright © 2016 Joseph Bethge

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the “Software”), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

The software is provided “as is”, without warranty of any kind, express or implied, including but not limited to the warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose and noninfringement. In no event shall the authors or copyright holders be liable for any claim, damages or other liability, whether in an action of contract, tort or otherwise, arising from, out of or in connection with the software or the use or other dealings in the software.