TRIGGERcmd
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Search
    • Register
    • Login

    Raspberry Pi setup

    Raspberry Pi
    raspberry pi
    12
    40
    17.7k
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • E
      Erin Leiker @Russ
      last edited by

      @russ whew, i think i figured it out! if i'm right, it all comes down to users.

      the instructions for installing on a raspberry pi are based on running all the commands/installations as a root user. the "chromuim-browser" command does not work when executed as the root user, only the default "pi" user. so i switched the command from "chromium-browser" to "xdg-open", which does essentially the same thing for my purposes, and it worked! well, almost.

      i'm trying to launch an html file, and the mime type is "text/html" which opens with chromium by default for the pi user (yay!), but with the geany text editor for root (boo). i solved this by tweaking the command to run under the pi user, and it works as expected!

      {"trigger":"myTriggerName","command":"su - pi -c 'xdg-open /home/pi/myFile.html'","ground":"foreground","voice":"myTriggerName","allowParams":"false"}

      the only downside is that there is a noticeable delay in triggering this command. and i also have to open a terminal window, switch to the root user, and then run "triggercmdagent" before i can successfully trigger it. with this info, do you happen to know if/how i can:

      1. auto run triggercmdagent on boot? the install instructions seem to state that it will launch in the background on boot, so i changed the command to "background" but no dice. still have to run triggercmdagent from terminal as root.

      2. run/install triggercmdagent under the pi user instead of root? i think that would help speed up the execution of the command significantly.

      thank you so much!

      RussR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • RussR
        Russ @Erin Leiker
        last edited by Russ

        @erin-leiker, please give this a try:

        1. Run this as your pi user to allow root to send stuff to your pi user's Xwindows:
        xhost si:localuser:root
        
        1. Install the background service as root with:
        /usr/share/triggercmdagent/app/src/installdaemon.sh
        
        1. Make sure this variable is set when your command runs as root in the context of your triggercmdagent:
        export DISPLAY=:0.0
        

        Your agent will be running in background mode, so the commands need "ground": "background" to run that way.

        I suggest testing with galculator. It's an xwindows calculator app.

        Russell VanderMey

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • RussR
          Russ
          last edited by Russ

          I created a script to make it easier to install the Raspbian OS and the agent on a new Pi:

          https://www.triggercmd.com/forum/topic/606/windows-script-to-prep-sd-card-for-raspberry-pi-with-triggercmd-agent

          Russell VanderMey

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • A
            avs2020
            last edited by

            @Russ said in Raspberry Pi setup:

            /usr/share/triggercmdagent/app/src/installdaemon.sh

            I followed the steps here, but the list of commands is empty right after install. The command output is:

            pi@raspberrypi:~ $ sudo triggercmdagent
            Run installdaemon.sh to install the triggercmdagent daemon so it runs during boot
            Daemon install: false
            No token exists. Login to request one.
            prompt: token: ey.........
            Token saved for next time.
            Tokenfile: /root/.TRIGGERcmdData/token.tkn
            ComputerIDfile: /root/.TRIGGERcmdData/computerid.cfg
            Logging in with saved token to run foreground tasks.
            Computer ID 5eb384a2ee82630019c61bac saved for next time.
            Write backup completed.
            Initiated command removals
            Initiated command adds

            |> Now connected to https://www.triggercmd.com.
            ___/ For help, see: http://bit.ly/2q0QDpf
            (using sails.io.js node SDK @v1.1.13)
            Connected at: Wed May 06 2020 20:46:43 GMT-0700 (PDT)

            { message: 'Subscribed to 5eb384a2ee82630019c61bac!' }
            { message: 'Subscribed to 5eb384a2ee82630019c61bac!' }
            Added Gnome Editor
            ^C
            pi@raspberrypi:~ $ sudo /usr/share/triggercmdagent/app/src/installdaemon.sh
            Daemon install: true
            Logging in with saved token.
            Checking if the 5eb384a2ee82630019c61bac computer exists.
            This computer exists in your account.
            ● triggercmdagent.service - TRIGGERcmd Agent
            Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/triggercmdagent.service; enabled; vendor preset: enabled)
            Active: active (running) since Wed 2020-05-06 20:35:25 PDT; 12min ago
            Main PID: 864 (node)
            CGroup: /system.slice/triggercmdagent.service
            └─864 node /usr/share/triggercmdagent/app/src/daemon.js --run /root/.TRIGGERcmdData

            May 06 20:35:33 raspberrypi env[864]: (using sails.io.js node SDK @v1.1.13)
            May 06 20:35:33 raspberrypi env[864]: Connected at: Wed May 06 2020 20:35:33 GMT-0700 (PDT)
            May 06 20:35:33 raspberrypi env[864]: Initiated command removals
            May 06 20:35:33 raspberrypi env[864]: { message: 'Subscribed to null!' }
            May 06 20:35:33 raspberrypi env[864]: { message: 'Subscribed to null!' }
            May 06 20:35:33 raspberrypi env[864]: Initiated command adds
            May 06 20:35:33 raspberrypi env[864]: Failed while trying add a trigger.
            May 06 20:35:33 raspberrypi env[864]: Failed while trying add a trigger.
            May 06 20:35:33 raspberrypi env[864]: Failed while trying add a trigger.
            May 06 20:35:33 raspberrypi env[864]: Failed while trying add a trigger.

            I have not edited any standard files.

            RussR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • RussR
              Russ @avs2020
              last edited by

              @avs2020, it looks like you figured it out because I see commands associated with your raspberrypi computer now. Please confirm.

              Russell VanderMey

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • George HatzisymeonG
                George Hatzisymeon
                last edited by George Hatzisymeon

                It looks like offCommand is never called using this PI/Debian distribution, do you have an update? Did you forget to include this functionality for Linux, it works fine on Windows.

                RussR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • RussR
                  Russ @George Hatzisymeon
                  last edited by

                  @George-Hatzisymeon, sorry I never responded to this. I just noticed it because someone upvoted it.

                  I just verified that the offCommand commands.json value is supported in the current version of the Raspberry Pi agent. If you were using that version and it didn't work, then maybe you were missing this part:

                  "allowParams":"true"
                  

                  Here's an example entry I just tested. It turns my led strip off if the parameter was off, and if the parameter was on, it turns the strip on and makes the leds green.

                      {
                         "trigger":"Green",
                         "command":"\/root\/killrun.sh leds.py green",
                         "offCommand": "\/root\/killrun.sh leds.py off",
                         "ground":"background",
                         "voice":"green",
                         "allowParams":"true"
                      },
                  

                  Russell VanderMey

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • RussR Russ referenced this topic on
                  • tuicemenT tuicemen moved this topic from Instructions on
                  • tuicemenT tuicemen pinned this topic on
                  • RussR Russ referenced this topic on
                  • Dean McNaughtonD Dean McNaughton referenced this topic on
                  • Dean McNaughtonD Dean McNaughton referenced this topic on
                  • Dean McNaughtonD Dean McNaughton referenced this topic on
                  • A
                    Ar7hur
                    last edited by

                    What I did wrong? It appears:
                    E: Unable to locate package https://agents.triggercmd.com
                    E: Couldn't find any packageb by glob 'https://agents.triggercmd.com'
                    E: Couldn't find any packageb by regex 'https://agents.triggercmd.com'

                    I'm a noob, and sorry for my english.

                    RussR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • RussR
                      Russ @Ar7hur
                      last edited by Russ

                      @Ar7hur, the URL to download the Raspberry Pi installer is this:

                      https://agents.triggercmd.com/triggercmdagent_1.0.1_all.deb

                      Does that answer your question?

                      Russell VanderMey

                      A 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • A
                        Ar7hur @Russ
                        last edited by

                        @Russ I wrote this, but appears what I mentioned

                        RussR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • RussR
                          Russ @Ar7hur
                          last edited by

                          @Ar7hur, how do you get those errors? Can you please give me the command you typed, or paste a screenshot?

                          Russell VanderMey

                          A 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • A
                            Ar7hur @Russ
                            last edited by Ar7hur

                            @Russ It was my mistake. I discovered where was wrong😅 Sorry
                            How to create a trigger to turn off? and is there how to turn on the pi by voice command?

                            RussR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • RussR
                              Russ @Ar7hur
                              last edited by Russ

                              @Ar7hur, no problem. I'm glad you got it working.

                              You could create a trigger that runs shutdown --poweroff but it won't actually power the Raspberry Pi off. Raspberry Pi's also do not support wake-on-lan, so you couldn't power it on from another computer on your network like you could with a PC.

                              The only thing I can think of is you could power the Pi on/off with a relay by connecting/disconnecting the vbus on the 5volt power input with an adapter you could build with something like this, or you could use a smart plug to power it off/on. You could run a command that runs an Alexa routine that powers the smart plug on or off.

                              Russell VanderMey

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • Jorge FuentesJ
                                Jorge Fuentes
                                last edited by

                                Hello, first of all thanks for this amazing integration/work.

                                I've a question:

                                Do you know if there's a way to add a parameter over the "commands.json" file in order to make Alexa speak when you execute the trigger? So she'll reply when you do a query. Would be great so it could be integrated with some bash scripts/ansible playbooks.

                                Thank you,
                                Kind regards.

                                RussR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • RussR
                                  Russ @Jorge Fuentes
                                  last edited by Russ

                                  @Jorge-Fuentes, yes, there is a way.

                                  You can use the Voice Reply field to do that.

                                  This article explains how.

                                  Basically, put "{{result}}" in your voicereply field and run the sendresult script that the TRIGGERcmd agent installs here:

                                  Windows:

                                  %USERPROFILE%\.TRIGGERcmdData\sendresult.bat
                                  

                                  Linux / Mac:

                                  ~/.TRIGGERcmdData/sendresult.sh
                                  

                                  I know you're on a Raspberry Pi, but I'm pasting the Windows GUI editor screenshot just to make sure the concept is clear.

                                  f3d13688-7d34-434a-874d-2168e6ef7daa-image.png

                                  In the runs list you can see what the "sendresult" script is sending back to the server as the "result" of the command you ran. If you include {{result]] in the Voice Reply field, The TC, TRIGGERcmd, or Trigger Command Alexa skills will say that text when you use one of those skills to trigger the command.
                                  eb58845e-a91a-4835-bd03-15f7e9127f74-image.png

                                  Instead of making the command in the commands.json file directly run the sendresult script, normally the commands.json would reference a script that would run the sendresult script last, and send back the value of an environment variable like this:

                                  ~/.TRIGGERcmdData/sendresult.sh ${RESULT}
                                  

                                  The one problem with the above method is it uses one of the non-smart home TRIGGERcmd Alexa skills. Those skills are not as reliable at matching the words in the sentence pattern it uses to run the command. The TRIGGERcmd Smart Home Alexa skill does a much better job.

                                  TC / TRIGGERcmd / Trigger Command Alexa skill pattern:

                                  • Alexa, ask TRIGGERcmd to run Calculator

                                  TRIGGERcmd Smart Home Alexa skill pattern:

                                  • Alexa, turn on Calculator

                                  If you want to use the TRIGGERcmd Smart Home skill to run your command, you use this method.

                                  Russell VanderMey

                                  Jorge FuentesJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • Jorge FuentesJ
                                    Jorge Fuentes @Russ
                                    last edited by

                                    That's brilliant, thank you for the information.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • RussR Russ referenced this topic on
                                    • RussR Russ referenced this topic on
                                    • First post
                                      Last post