iTunes API is a simple REST server allowing you to query/control a local running iTunes instance. Once you have a way to make RESTful API calls to control iTunes, you can integrate its control into any of your own software.
This is especially convenient for integrating into any sort of Home Automation you might have.
Last confirmed working version of iTunes: 12.2.1
.
- play/stop/pause/playpause/next/previous control over what's playing.
- query to return what's currently playing.
- fetch the art of the currently playing song.
- set a specific playlist to play, by name.
- query to return a list of available AirPlay endpoints.
- set an AirPlay endpoint to be active. (This can be multiple, since iTunes supports it).
script/bootstrap
Get up and running immediatly with script/server
.
iTunes API will run on port 8181
by default. Use the PORT
environment
variable to use your own port.
iTunes API has support for Forever. It uses
launchd
on OS X to kick it off so that it starts on boot. There is no init.d
other Linux support of this type. Pull requests would be welcome for this though.
You can simply run it by calling script/server
. This will run it in development
mode with logging to standard out.
script/install
iTunes API logs all of its requests. In production
, it logs to a file at log/logs.log
.
In development
mode, it just logs to stdout.
Launch the app via script/server
to run it in the development environment.
This is a quick overview of the service. Read app.js if you need more info.
Here's a list of resources that may be returned in a response.
The NowPlaying resource returns all the information about if iTunes is playing and what is playing.
{
"player_state": "playing",
"volume": 60,
"muted": false,
"id": "AC4FFD2271422B47",
"name": "Forever",
"artist": "HAIM",
"album": "Days Are Gone (2013)",
"playlist": "Summer Jams",
"shuffle": "songs",
"repeat": "all"
}
The Playlist resource returns all the information about a playlist in your library.
{
"id": "outkast-the-90s",
"name": "Outkast: The '90s",
"loved": true,
"duration_in_seconds": 4544,
"time": "1:15:44"
},
The AirPlayDevice resource returns all the information about an available AirPlay device on your network.
{
"id": "63-22-fa-1f-f5-d4",
"name": "Living Room",
"kind": "Apple TV",
"active": true,
"selected": true,
"volume": 60,
"supports_video": true,
"supports_audio": true,
"network_address": "63:22:fa:1f:f5:d4"
}
These are the endpoints you can hit to do things.
Use these endpoints to query the current state of iTunes.
GET /now_playing => NowPlayingResource
GET /artwork => JPEG Data (image/jpeg)
Use these endpoints to control what's currently playing.
PUT /playpause => NowPlayingResource
PUT /stop => NowPlayingResource
PUT /previous => NowPlayingResource
PUT /next => NowPlayingResource
PUT /play => NowPlayingResource
PUT /pause => NowPlayingResource
PUT /volume [level=20] => NowPlayingResource
PUT /volume [muted=true] => NowPlayingResource
PUT /shuffle [mode=songs] => NowPlayingResource
PUT /shuffle [mode=off] => NowPlayingResource
PUT /repeat [mode=all] => NowPlayingResource
PUT /repeat [mode=off] => NowPlayingResource
Use this endpoint to start a specific playlist.
GET /playlists => {"playlists": [PlaylistResource, PlaylistResource, ...]}
PUT /playlists/:id/play => NowPlayingResource
Use these endpoints to query and set AirPlay devices. You can set multiple AirPlay devices to be used at the same time.
GET /airplay_devices => {"airplay_devices": [AirPlayDevice, AirPlayDevice, ...]}
GET /airplay_devices/:id => AirPlayDevice
PUT /airplay_devices/:id/on => AirPlayDevice
PUT /airplay_devices/:id/off => AirPlayDevice
PUT /volume [level=20] => AirPlayDevice
- fork
- create a feature branch
- open a Pull Request