python-openzwave is a python wrapper for the openzwave c++ library : https://github.com/OpenZWave/open-zwave
- full manager implementation with options
- an API to map the ZWave network in Python objects
- a command line manager to manage / debug your ZWave network
- a full-event webapp example : flask + socket.io + jquery
- a suite of tests
- many examples
Look at CHANGELOG to see new features and release notes.
Look at INSTALL_REPO to test it now
Look at INSTALL_ARCH to install from archive : no need to install cython anymore
You can ask for support on the google group : http://groups.google.com/d/forum/python-openzwave-discuss.
Please don't ask for support in github issues or by email.
Please read DEVEL documentation before submitting pull request. A lot of project tasks are done automatically or with makefile, so they must be done in a certain place or in a special order.
I need to update source tree of python-openzwave and modules's names because of a bug in setuptools : https://bitbucket.org/pypa/setuptools/issue/230/develop-mode-does-not-respect-src . Sorry for that.
Update your sources:
git pull
Before building python-openzwave 0.3.0, you must uninstall the old version :
sudo make uninstall
About cython : I've made many tests using cython installed via pip : (0.20, 0.21 and 0.22). Compilation is ok but a segfault appears when launching the tests. Please remove it.
sudo pip uninstall Cython
You also need to make some minor updates in you code, look at CHANGELOG
If you have problems, please submit an issue with :
- cython -V
- the content of the directory /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/ (for python2.7)
- the content of /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/easy-install.pth (for python 2.7)
If you're using Ubuntu 64 bits (and mayde others) and keep your distribution up to date, you certainly have the segfault problem : OpenZWave#121
It appears with the last update of python :
$ python
Python 2.7.6 (default, Jun 22 2015, 17:58:13)
[GCC 4.8.2] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
I've open a discussion on cython-users here : https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/cython-users/mRsviGuCFOk
The only way I found to avoid this is to rebuild and reinstall the old release of python :
wget https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+archive/primary/+files/python2.7_2.7.6-8.dsc https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+archive/primary/+files/python2.7_2.7.6.orig.tar.gz https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+archive/primary/+files/python2.7_2.7.6-8.diff.gz
dpkg-source -x python2.7_2.7.6-8.dsc
sudo apt-get build-dep python2.7
cd python2.7-2.7.6
dpkg-buildpackage
Wait, wait and await again :)
cd ..
sudo dpkg -i *.deb
To prevent future updates of python, you could mark its packages. For example, if you use apt to update your distribution, use the following command :
sudo apt-mark hold idle-python2.7 libpython2.7-minimal python2.7-dbg python2.7-minimal libpython2.7 libpython2.7-stdlib python2.7-dev libpython2.7-dbg libpython2.7-testsuite python2.7-doc libpython2.7-dev python2.7 python2.7-examples