Awair <--> PW bridge
This app will read from Awair API and feed data onto Planetwatch (PW). It is designed to run headless.
!!! Before you run the app, make sure you read the configuration section !!!
Then:
a) Simplest is via docker: docker run -it -e awair_token=ey... -e pw_username=blah -e pw_password=bar docker.io/wwadge/awair-bridge
the -e options are overrides to any property in the main config (src/main/resources/application.yml). For example to set awair.fetchrate you can set the environmental property -e awair_fetchrate=900
Any property can be overridden by an environment variable of the same name, with the characters changed to upper case, and the dots changed to underscores. This means that if we want to override any property, you can do it by setting an environment variable.
b) Build/run it (if you prefer building the code from source):
Build the code via ./gradlew build
So later you can run:
java -jar build/libs/awair-bridge-<version>.jar
Build the code and run it right away:
./gradlew bootRun
(or ./gradlew build then run )
There is no need to install gradle or java, it is self-hosting.
If you just blindly run the app right away, you're probably going to see it fail.
That's because you MUST pass in some configuration options by either editing src/main/resources/application.yml or overriding them via env variables (see above)
The key things to configure: 1) awair.token
This is the key that lets us talk to awair. Open your Awair Home Application, click one of your sensors and press Awair+, Awair APIs Beta, Cloud API, Get API Token. Copy that key that looks like "ey...."
If you have more than 1 key, separate them by a comma: -e awair_token=key1,key2,key3
2) pw.username
This is your PW username eg foo@gmail.com
3) pw.password
This is your PW password eg abcdef
It's java so it should run anywhere, but simplest is to use docker:
docker run -d --restart=always -e awair_token=YOUR-AWAIR-TOKEN -e pw_username=foo@gmail.com -e pw_password=bar wwadge/awair-bridge
For raspberry pi v3 please try: wwadge/awair-bridge:armv7
!! Cloudflare might block request for you forcing you to use a VPN. PW configured their service to block potential harmful calls, this implies many cloud providers are banned by their IP address (they also do TLS fingerprinting and user-agent checks but these have been bypassed in the code) !!
Try adding --debug
as a command line argument to see more logs.
Find your container id:
docker ps
Kill it (use your container ID in the example below):
docker kill 12412ca