This is a project to provide users an interface (read_waveplus.py
) to read current sensor values from the
Airthings Wave Plus devices using a Raspberry Pi 3
Model B over Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE).
Airthings Wave Plus is a smart IAQ monitor with Radon detection, including sensors for temperature, air pressure, humidity, TVOCs and CO2.
Table of contents
- Airthings Wave Plus Sensor Reader
- Requirements
- Usage
- Sensor data description
- Contribution
- Release notes
The following tables shows a compact overview of dependencies for this project.
List of OS dependencies
OS | Device/model/version | Comments |
---|---|---|
Raspbian | Raspberry Pi 3 Model B | Used in this project. |
Linux | x86 Debian | Should work according to bluepy |
List of linux/raspberry dependencies
package | version | Comments |
---|---|---|
python | 2.7 | Tested with python 2.7.13 |
python-pip | pip for python2.7 | |
git | To download this project | |
libglib2.0-dev | For bluepy module |
List of Python dependencies
module | version | Comments |
---|---|---|
bluepy | 1.2.0 | Newer versions have not been tested. |
tableprint | 0.8.0 | Newer versions have not been tested. |
The first step is to setup the Raspberry Pi with Raspbian. An installation guide for Raspbian can be found on the Raspberry Pi website. In short: download the Raspbian image and write it to a micro SD card.
To continue, you need access to the Raspberry Pi using either a monitor and keyboard, or by connecting through WiFi or ethernet from another computer. The latter option does not require an external screen or keyboard and is called “headless” setup. To access a headless setup, you must first activate SSH on the Pi. This can be done by creating a file named ssh in the boot partition of the SD card. Connect to the Pi using SSH from a command line interface (terminal):
$ ssh [email protected]
The default password for the “pi” user is “raspberry”.
In the terminal window on your Raspberry Pi:
pi@raspberrypi:~$ bluetoothctl
[bluetooth]# power on
[bluetooth]# show
After issuing the command show
, a list of bluetooth settings will be printed
to the Raspberry Pi terminal window. Look for Powered: yes
.
Note: The
read_waveplus.py
script is only compatible with Python2.7.
The next step is to install the bluepy Python library for talking to the BLE stack. For the current released version for Python 2.7:
pi@raspberrypi:~$ sudo apt-get install python-pip libglib2.0-dev
pi@raspberrypi:~$ sudo pip2 install bluepy==1.2.0
Make sure your Raspberry Pi has git installed
pi@raspberrypi:~$ git --version
or install git to be able to clone this repo.
pi@raspberrypi:~$ sudo apt-get install git
Additionally, the read_waveplus.py
script depends on the tableprint
module
to print nicely formated sensor data to the Raspberry Pi terminal at run-time.
pi@raspberrypi:~$ sudo pip2 install tableprint==0.8.0
Note: The
read_waveplus.py
script has been tested with bluepy==1.2.0 and tableprint==0.8.0. You may download the latest versions at your own risk.
Downloading using git:
pi@raspberrypi:~$ sudo git clone https://github.com/Airthings/waveplus-reader.git
Downloading using wget:
pi@raspberrypi:~$ wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Airthings/waveplus-reader/master/read_waveplus.py
To read the sensor data from the Airthings Wave Plus using the read_waveplus.py
script,
you need the 10-digit serial number of the device. This can be found under the magnetic backplate
of your Airthings Wave Plus.
If your device is paired and connected to e.g. a phone, you may need to turn off bluetooth on your phone while using this script.
cd
into the directory where the read_waveplus.py
script is located if you cloned the repo.
The general format for calling the read_waveplus.py
script is as follows:
read_waveplus.py SN SAMPLE-PERIOD [pipe > yourfilename.txt]
where the input arguments are:
input argument | example | Comments |
---|---|---|
SN | 0123456789 | 10-digit number. Can be found under the magnetic backplate of your Airthings Wave Plus. |
SAMPLE-PERIOD | 60 | Read sensor values every 60 seconds. Must be larger than zero. |
pipe | pipe > yourfilename.txt | Optional. Since tableprint is incompatible with piping, we use a third optional input argument "pipe". |
Note on choosing a sample period: Except for the radon measurements, the Wave Plus updates its current sensor values once every 5 minutes. Radon measurements are updated once every hour.
By default, the read_waveplus.py
script will print the current sensor values to the Rasberry Pi terminal.
Run the Python script in the following way:
pi@raspberrypi:~/waveplus-reader $ sudo python2 read_waveplus.py SN SAMPLE-PERIOD
where you change SN
with the 10-digit serial number, and change SAMPLE-PERIOD
to a numerical value of your choice.
After a short delay, the script will print the current sensor values to the
Raspberry Pi terminal window. Exit the script using Ctrl+C
.
If you want to pipe the results to a text-file, you can run the script in the following way:
pi@raspberrypi:~/waveplus-reader $ sudo python2 read_waveplus.py SN SAMPLE-PERIOD pipe > yourfilename.txt
where you change SN
with the 10-digit serial number, and change SAMPLE-PERIOD
to a numerical value of your choice.
Exit the script using Ctrl+C
.
sensor | units | Comments |
---|---|---|
Humidity | %rH | |
Temperature | °C | |
Radon short term average | Bq/m3 | First measurement available 1 hour after inserting batteries |
Radon long term average | Bq/m3 | First measurement available 1 hour after inserting batteries |
Relative atmospheric pressure | hPa | |
CO2 level | ppm | |
TVOC level | ppb | Total volatile organic compounds level |
Let us know how it went! If you want contribute, you can do so by posting issues or suggest enhancement here, or you can open a pull request for review here.
Release dated 04-Dec-2020
- [bug] Fixed missing little-endian specifier.
Release dated 14-Jan-2019
- [bug] Fixed issue (#4)
Release dated 14-Dec-2018
- Added SAMPLE-PERIOD as an input argument.
Initial release 12-Dec-2018