Control Sonos speakers with Ruby.
Huge thanks to Rahim Sonawalla for making SoCo. This gem would not be possible without his work.
Note: Currently discovery is broken in Ruby 2.1
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'sonos'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install sonos
I'm working on a CLI client. For now, we'll use IRB.
$ gem install sonos
$ irb
require 'rubygems'
require 'sonos'
system = Sonos::System.new # Auto-discovers your system
speaker = system.speakers.first
Now that we have a reference to the speaker, we can do all kinds of stuff.
speaker.pause # Pause whatever is playing
speaker.play # Resumes the playlist
speaker.play 'http://assets.samsoff.es/music/Airports.mp3' # Stream!
speaker.now_playing
speaker.volume
speaker.volume = 70
speaker.volume -= 10
speaker.queue
speaker.add_to_queue 'http://assets.samsoff.es/music/Airports.mp3'
speaker.remove_from_queue(speaker.queue[:items].last[:queue_id])
speaker.save_queue 'Jams'
speaker.clear_queue
speaker.set_sleep_timer '00:13:00'
Or go into what the official control from Sonos, Inc. calls "Party Mode": put all speakers into a single group
system.party_mode
system.party_over
Sonos.discover
finds the first speaker it can. We can get all of the Sonos devices (including Bridges, etc) by calling Sonos.system.devices
. To get the groups, call Sonos.system.groups
.
All of this is based off of the raw Sonos.system.topology
.
Currently there is support to queue items from the following services, provided the service accounts are set up:
- Spotify
- tracks
- albums
- playlists
- top lists
- starred
- Rdio
- tracks
- albums
The way to add items differs per service at moment:
For Spotify only the 'Spotify URI' is required:
speaker.add_spotify_to_queue('2CwulIyrmEYwbUWzcEVIhR')
Whereas for Rdio more information needs to be provided:
speaker.add_rdio_to_queue({
:track => '42083055',
:album => '3944937',
:username => 'RDIO_USERNAME_HERE' })
There is a very limited CLI right now. You can run sonos devices
to get the IP of all of your devices.
You can also run sonos pause_all
to pause all your Sonos groups.
- Handle errors better
- Handle line-in in
now_playing
- Detect fixed volume
- Detect stereo pair
- CLI client for everything
- Nonblocking calls with Celluloid::IO
- Unified method of adding items from music services
- Manipulating groups doesn't update
System#groups
- Pause all (there is no play all in the controller, we could loop through and do it though)
- Party Mode
- Line-in
- Search music library
- Browse music library
- Skip to song in queue
- Alarm clock
- Pandora doesn't use the Queue. I bet things are all jacked up.
- CONNECT (and possibly PLAY:5) line in settings
- Source name
- Level
- Autoplay room
- Autoplay include grouped rooms
If we are implementing everything the official Sonos Controller does, here's some more stuff:
- Set zone name and icon
- Support for SUB
- Support for DOCK
- Support for CONNECT:AMP (not sure if this is any different from CONNECT)
- Manage services
- Date and time
- Wireless channel
- Audio compression
- Automatically check for updates (not sure if this is a controller only preference)
- Local music servers
- Add component
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request