Move Hub is central controller block of LEGO® Boost Robotics Set.
In fact, Move Hub is just a Bluetooth hardware piece, and all manipulations with it are made by commands passed through Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) wireless protocol. One of the ways to issue these commands is to write Python program using this library.
The best way to start is to look into demo.py
file, and run it (assuming you have installed library).
If you have Vernie assembled, you might run scripts from examples/vernie
directory.
- auto-detect and connect to Move Hub device
- auto-detects peripheral devices connected to Hub
- constant, angled and timed movement for motors, rotation sensor subscription
- vision sensor: several modes to measure distance, color and luminosity
- tilt sensor subscription: 2 axis, 3 axis, bump detect modes
- RGB LED color change
- Headlight brightness change
- push button status subscription
- battery voltage and current subscription available
Please note that this library requires one of Bluetooth backend libraries to be installed, please read section here for details.
Install library like this:
pip install -U pylgbst[bleak]
Then instantiate MoveHub object and start invoking its methods. Following is example to just print peripherals detected on Hub:
from pylgbst.hub import MoveHub
hub = MoveHub()
for device in hub.peripherals:
print(device)
Each peripheral kind has own methods to do actions and/or get sensor data. See features list for individual doc pages.
You have following options to install as Bluetooth backend (some of them might require sudo
on Linux):
pip install bleak
- bleak lib, supports Linux/Windows/MacOS (recommended)pip install pygatt
- pygatt lib, works on both Windows and Linuxpip install gatt
- gatt lib, supports Linux, does not work on Windowspip install gattlib
- gattlib - supports Linux, does not work on Windows, requiressudo
pip install bluepy
- bluepy lib, supports Linux, including Raspbian, which allows connection to the hub from the Raspberry PI
Note that pip install -U pylgbst[bleak]
command indicates which backend to install. So you can install it backend-less, or with some backend from above.
Windows users may first turn to the Bleak backend, which should support any internal or external Bluetooth adapter recognized by the OS. The Windows version of pygatt
backend will only work with a Bluegiga BLED112 Bluetooth Smart Dongle.
Please let author know if you have discovered any compatibility/preprequisite details, so we will update this section to help future users
Depending on backend type, you might need Linux sudo
to be used when running Python.
There is an optional parameter for MoveHub
class constructor, accepting instance of Connection
object. By default, it will try to use whatever get_connection_auto()
returns. You have several options to manually control that:
- use
get_connection_auto()
to attempt backend auto-detection - use
get_connection_bluegiga()
- if you use BlueGiga Adapter (pygatt
library prerequisite) - use
get_connection_gatt()
- if you use Gatt Backend on Linux (gatt
library prerequisite) - use
get_connection_gattool()
- if you use GattTool Backend on Linux (pygatt
library prerequisite) - use
get_connection_gattlib()
- if you use GattLib Backend on Linux (gattlib
library prerequisite) - use
get_connection_bluepy()
- if you use Bluepy backend on Linux/Raspbian (bluepy
library prerequisite) - use
get_connection_bleak()
- if you use Bleak backend (bleak
library prerequisite)
All the functions above have optional arguments to specify adapter name and Hub name (or mac address). Please take a look at functions source code for details.
If you want to specify name for Bluetooth interface to use on local computer, you can pass that to class or function of getting a connection. Then pass connection object to MoveHub
constructor. Like this:
from pylgbst.hub import MoveHub
from pylgbst import get_connection_gatt
conn = get_connection_gatt(hub_mac='AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF')
hub = MoveHub(conn)
- validate operations with other Hub types (train, PUP etc)
- make connections to detect hub by UUID instead of name
- document all API methods
- https://github.com/LEGO/lego-ble-wireless-protocol-docs - true docs for LEGO BLE protocol
- https://github.com/JorgePe/BOOSTreveng - initial source of protocol knowledge
- https://github.com/nathankellenicki/node-poweredup - JavaScript version of library
- https://github.com/spezifisch/sphero-python/blob/master/BB8joyDrive.py - example with another approach to bluetooth libs
- https://github.com/virantha/bricknil - for the lovers of async Python, alternative implementation of library to control PoweredUp Hubs
- https://virantha.github.io/bricknil/lego_api/lego.html - good infor about modes by BrickNil