Python module for controlling Kwikset Kevo locks
Kwikset does not provide an official API for their Kevo locks; I reverse engineered this module from the mykevo.com web app.
To use this module you will need to have a Kevo Plus installed and a registered account on mykevo.com. You will need your mykevo.com credentials to use this module.
This module is published to pypi so you can install it simply via pip install pykevoplus
It supports Python 2.7 & 3.x.
The Kevo.GetLocks()
function will attempt to scrape the mykevo.com web
site to find your locks; as of this writing it can find all of your
locks, but scraping the HTML might break at any time if Kwikset changes
the website.
from pykevoplus import Kevo
locks = Kevo.GetLocks("username@email.com", "password123")
for lock in locks:
print(repr(lock))
Output:
KevoLock(name=Front Door, id=cca7cd1d-c1d5-43ce-a087-c73b974b3529, state=Locked) KevoLock(name=Back Door, id=c60130cd-8139-4688-8ba3-199276a65ad6, state=Locked)
A better way is to explicitly instantiate a KevoLock
object using the
UUID of the lock. You can get the lock IDs manually by logging into
mykevo.com, click Details for the lock, click Settings, the lock ID is
on the right.
from pykevoplus import KevoLock
lock = KevoLock.FromLockID("cca7cd1d-c1d5-43ce-a087-c73b974b3529", "username@email.com", "password123")
from pykevoplus import KevoLock
lock = KevoLock.FromLockID(lock_id, username, password)
lock.Unlock()
print lock.GetBoltState()
lock.Lock()
print lock.GetBoltState()
Output:
Unlocked Locked
The KevoLockSession
context manager allows you to perform multiple
operations on a lock with a single auth session
from pykevoplus import KevoLock, KevoLockSession
lock = KevoLock.FromLockID(lock_id, username, password)
with KevoLockSession(lock):
lock.Unlock()
lock.Lock()
- Error handling is extremely basic and needs much more work. Communication errors as well as lock bolt errors need to be addressed
- No unit tests yet