JPEWdev / pyhid-usb-relay

Python script for controlling dcttech USB HID relay modules
MIT License
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Python Utility for controlling HID USB Relays

This utility is a Python version of usb-relay-hid

Installation

The latest version can be installed using pip:

python3 -m pip install pyhid-usb-relay

Usage

Standalone app outside of python

pyhid-usb-relay --help

Inside a python app/script

import pyhid_usb_relay

relay = pyhid_usb_relay.find()

print(relay.state)
print("Toggeling relay")

relay.toggle_state(1)

print(relay.serial)
print(relay.state)

Configuration

Relay configuration is read from the file $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/usb-hid-relay/config.yaml (usually ~/.config/usb-hid-relay/config.yaml). This YAML file should contain a top level dictionary key for each relay serial number to be configured, like so:

5291D:
  defaults:
    ...
  aliases:
    ...

The following properties may be defined in the default section and apply to all relays on the board:

Aliases are created by adding a new key under aliases with a relay property indicating which relay number the alias controls. For example the following config creates an alias called foo that may be used in place of relay number 2 in the API:

5219D:
  aliases:
    foo:
      relay: 2

Aliases may also define any of the properties listed in defaults, in which case they only apply when the specific alias is used. Note that these properties apply to the alias not the relay number. Using a relay number in the API will only apply the defaults

An example configuration is show here:

# Define properties for relay board with serial 5291D
5291D:
  defaults:
    invert: true    # Invert all relays by default
    pulse-time: 5.0 # Default pulse time is 5 seconds for this board
  aliases:
    foo:                # Create an alias called "foo"
      relay: 1          # This alias controls relay 1
      invert: false     # Don't invert this alias (overrides the default)
      pulse-time: 1.0   # Override default pulse-time for this alias

Permissions

If you want to access the relay devices as a normal user (which is recommended, since it will respect your local configuration), you will need to modify your udev rules to allow access to the HID device. You can do this by creating a file named /etc/udev/rules.d/90-hidusb-relay.rules with the following contents:

# Give all users access to USB HID Relay
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTRS{idVendor}=="16c0", ATTRS{idProduct}=="05df", MODE:="0660", GROUP="dialout"

You may need to reload your udev rules with sudo udevadm control --reload-rules and unplug and reattach the USB relay board for this to take effect

NOTE This rule allows any user that is part of the dialout group to access the board. If this is not what you want, you should change the udev rules.

Fixing Serial Numbers

The relays that this tool is designed to control have a quirk that they all report the same USB Vendor, Product, and Serial Number (The serial number used by this code is retrieved by the HID API). This can make it hard to distinguish between multiple relays attached to the same device using udev rules.

The pyhid-usb-relay tool can be used to help resolve this by using the get-serial subcommand, which will fetch the HID serial number from the device with a udev rule that looks like:

SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="16c0", ATTR{idProduct}=="05df", ACTION=="add", PROGRAM="/usr/local/bin/pyhid-usb-relay get-serial '%E{BUSNUM}' '%E{DEVNUM}'", ENV{ID_SERIAL}:="%c"

Development

Development of pyhid-usb-relay can be done inside of a virtual environment. To get started, create a virtual environment and then install the project in editable mode:

python3 -m venv .venv
. .venv/bin/activate
pip install -e ".[dev]"