SoCo (Sonos Controller) is a Python library that allows you to control Sonos speakers programmatically. It was originally created at Music Hack Day Sydney by Rahim Sonawalla and is now developed by a team of people at its GitHub repository
For more background on the project, please see Rahim's blog post.
Visit the SoCo documentation for a more detailed overview of the functionailty.
Sonos has changed the way music service account information is available. This means that currently a group of music service will give authentication issues and cannot be used at all. Known members of this group are: Google Play Music, Apple Music, Amazon Music, Spotify and Napster.
Issue #557 is a meta issue for this problem and you can use that to track progress on solving the issues, but please refrain from posting "me too" comments in there. Also, there is no need to open any more separate issue about this. If you have another music service that should be on the list, comment in #557
As of v0.26.0, nascent music service support has been reinstated, with some known issues. Testing and issue reporting would be appreciated.
SoCo requires Python 3.6 or newer.
Use pip:
pip install soco
SoCo depends on a number of Python packages. If you use pip to install Soco, the dependencies will be installed automatically for you. If not, you can inspect the requirements in the requirements.txt file.
You can interact with a Sonos Zone Player through a SoCo object. If you know the IP address of a Zone Player, you can create a SoCo object directly:
>>> from soco import SoCo
>>> my_zone = SoCo('192.168.1.101')
>>> my_zone.player_name
Kitchen
>>> my_zone.status_light = True
>>> my_zone.volume = 6
But perhaps the easiest way is to use the module-level discover function. This will find all the Zone Players on your network, and return a python set containing them:
>>> from soco import discover
>>> for zone in discover():
... print(zone.player_name)
Living Room
Kitchen
If you prefer a list to a set:
>>> zone_list = list(discover())
>>> zone_list
[SoCo("192.168.1.101"), SoCo("192.168.1.102")]
>>> zone_list[0].mute = True
Of course, you can also play music!
#!/usr/bin/env python
from soco import SoCo
if __name__ == '__main__':
sonos = SoCo('192.168.1.102') # Pass in the IP of your Sonos speaker
# You could use the discover function instead, if you don't know the IP
# Pass in a URI to a media file to have it streamed through the Sonos
# speaker
sonos.play_uri(
'http://ia801402.us.archive.org/20/items/TenD2005-07-16.flac16/TenD2005-07-16t10Wonderboy.mp3')
track = sonos.get_current_track_info()
print(track['title'])
sonos.pause()
# Play a stopped or paused track
sonos.play()
If you need support for SoCo, feel free to post your question in the SoCo Gitter Room.
To show off what can be made with SoCo, a simple web application is included in
the examples
folder.
SoCo supports the following controls amongst others:
- Play, Pause, Stop
- Next track, Previous track
- Volume get and set
- Mute (or unmute)
- Get current transport information (if speaker is playing, paused or stopped)
- Get information about the currently playing track
- Track title
- Artist
- Album
- Album Art (if available)
- Track length
- Duration played (for example, 30 seconds into a 3 minute song)
- Playlist position (for example, item 5 in the playlist)
- Track URI
- Receive events when the player state changes
- Search for and play music items:
- Local music library
- Webradio via TuneIn and music services (still unstable)
- Saved Sonos favorites, favorite radio stations and shows
- Switch the speaker’s source to line-in or TV input (if the Zone Player supports it)
- Manage the Sonos queue:
- Get the items in the queue
- Add items to the queue
- Clear the queue
- Play a specific song from the queue
- Join or unjoin speakers from a group
- Put all Sonos speakers in a network into “party mode”.
- Get or set alarms
- Get or set sleep timers
- Enable or disable surround speakers or subwoofer
- Get information regarding a home theater setup:
- If surround speakers or a subwoofer are paired
- Which audio channel a given speaker handles
- Get or set the speaker’s bass and treble EQ
- Toggle the speaker’s loudness compensation, night mode and dialog mode
- Toggle the white status light on the unit
- Get the speaker’s information
- Zone Name
- Zone Icon
- UID (usually something like RINCON_XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX)
- Serial Number
- Software version
- Hardware version
- MAC Address
- Set the speaker’s Zone Name
- Start a music library update and determine if one is in progress
SoCo also supports lower level access from Python to all Sonos services (e.g. ContentDirectory or RenderingControl).
Socos is a command line tool for controlling Sonos devices. It is developed in conjunction with Soco, but in a separate repository.
SoCo-CLI (soco-cli) is a powerful and fully-featured command line tool suitable for use in scripts, scheduled tasks, etc. It supports time-based and state-based actions, and repeated commands using loops. Audio files on the local filesystem can be played back directly on Sonos from the command line. Multi-household Sonos systems are supported.
More of a Ruby fan? Not a problem, Sam Soffes is building out an awesome Ruby gem.
Looking for a GUI that’s more than just a sample project? Joel Björkman is building a Sonos Controller GUI–great for folks on Linux where there isn’t an official Sonos Controller application! Find, fork, and contribute to it here: https://github.com/labero/SoCo-Tk.
There is a SoCo Gitter discussion room. Feel free to drop by for support, ideas or casual conversation related to SoCo.
SoCo is released under the MIT license.