BGLib is a Node library for sending and receiving packets from BlueGiga BLE devices (currently supports ble112 and ble113). It is currently being developed by Technical Machine to support our Tessel BLE module.
npm install bglib
var bg = require('bglib');
var bglib = new bg()
bglib.getPacket(bg.api.systemHello, function(err, packet) {
console.log(packet.getByteArray()); // Returns buf< 0, 0, 0, 1 >
});
// Use Packet Mode if you don't have flow control
// It adds a length byte to the front of every packet
bglib.setPacketMode(true);
bglib.getPacket(bg.api.systemHello, function(err, packet) {
console.log(packet.getByteArray()); // Returns buf< 4, 0, 0, 0, 1 >
});
bglib.getPacket(bg.api.gapDiscover, [1, 0], function(err, response) {
bglib.getPacket(bg.api.systemHello, function(err, packet) {
console.log(packet);
/* Returns { mType: 0,
tType: 0,
payloadHighBits: 0,
payloadLowBits: 0,
cClass: 0,
cID: 1,
payload: <Buffer >,
packetMode: true,
callback: null }
*/
});
var incomingBytes = new Buffer([ 128, 38, 6, 0, 189, 0, 108, 189, 40, 93, 28, 216, 1, 255, 27, 2, 1, 6, 17, 6, 186, 86, 137, 166, 250, 191, 162, 189, 1, 70, 125, 110, 56, 88, 171, 173, 5, 22, 10, 24, 7, 4]);
bglib.parseIncoming(incomingBytes, function(err, parsedPackets) {
console.log("Parsed packets: ", parsedPackets);
// BGLib will automatically parse each packet into the values stated by the datasheet
// depending on what type of event/response it is. Below is an example for the discovered
// peripheral event that was passed in:
console.log(parsedPackets[0].response.packet_type) // 0
console.log(parsedPackets[0].response.sender) // buf< 108, 189, 40, 93, 28, 216>
console.log(parsedPackets[0].response.address_type) // 1
console.log(parsedPackets[0].response.bond) // 255
console.log(parsedPackets[0].response.data) // data object with flag types, raw data, etc
console.log(parsedPackets[0].rssi) // -67
});
The library will hold the current state of the packets so you can pass in pieces of a packet and it will return the entire parsed packet when it has all been passed in.
JRowberg deserves a special shout-out. Some of the code is modeled after his Arduino bglib work.