Python Ring Door Bell is a library written for Python that exposes the Ring.com devices as Python objects.
There is also a command line interface that is work in progress. Contributors welcome.
Currently Ring.com does not provide an official API. The results of this project are merely from reverse engineering.
Documentation: http://python-ring-doorbell.readthedocs.io/
# Installing from PyPi
$ pip install ring_doorbell
# Installing latest development
$ pip install \
git+https://github.com/python-ring-doorbell/python-ring-doorbell@master
The CLI is work in progress and currently has the following commands:
Show your devices:
$ ring-doorbell
Or:
$ ring-doorbell show
List your device names (with device kind):
$ ring-doorbell list
Either count or download your vidoes or both:
$ ring-doorbell videos --count --download-all
Enable disable motion detection:
$ ring-doorbell motion-detection --device-name "DEVICENAME" --on $ ring-doorbell motion-detection --device-name "DEVICENAME" --off
Listen for push notifications like the ones sent to your phone:
$ ring-doorbell listen
List your ring groups:
$ ring-doorbell groups
Show your ding history:
$ ring-doorbell history --device-name "Front Door"
Show your currently active dings:
$ ring-doorbell dings
See or manage your doorbell in-home chime settings:
$ ring-doorbell in-home-chime --device-name "Front Door" $ ring-doorbell in-home-chime --device-name "Front Door" type Mechanical $ ring-doorbell in-home-chime --device-name "Front Door" enabled True $ ring-doorbell in-home-chime --device-name "Front Door" duration 5
Query a ring api url directly:
$ ring-doorbell raw-query --url /clients_api/dings/active
Run
ring-doorbell --help
orring-doorbell <command> --help
for full options
The API has an async interface and a sync interface. All api calls starting async are asynchronous. This is the preferred method of interacting with the ring api and the sync versions are maintained for backwards compatability.
You cannot call sync api functions from inside a running event loop.
This code example is in the test.py file. For the deprecated sync example see test_sync.py.
import getpass
import asyncio
import json
from pathlib import Path
from ring_doorbell import Auth, AuthenticationError, Requires2FAError, Ring
user_agent = "YourProjectName-1.0" # Change this
cache_file = Path(user_agent + ".token.cache")
def token_updated(token):
cache_file.write_text(json.dumps(token))
def otp_callback():
auth_code = input("2FA code: ")
return auth_code
async def do_auth():
username = input("Username: ")
password = getpass.getpass("Password: ")
auth = Auth(user_agent, None, token_updated)
try:
await auth.async_fetch_token(username, password)
except Requires2FAError:
await auth.async_fetch_token(username, password, otp_callback())
return auth
async def main():
if cache_file.is_file(): # auth token is cached
auth = Auth(user_agent, json.loads(cache_file.read_text()), token_updated)
ring = Ring(auth)
try:
await ring.async_create_session() # auth token still valid
except AuthenticationError: # auth token has expired
auth = await do_auth()
else:
auth = await do_auth() # Get new auth token
ring = Ring(auth)
await ring.async_update_data()
devices = ring.devices()
pprint(devices.devices_combined)
await auth.async_close()
if __name__ == "__main__":
asyncio.run(main())
event_listener = RingEventListener(ring, credentials, credentials_updated_callback)
event_listener.add_notification_callback(_event_handler(ring).on_event)
await event_listener.start()
# All devices
devices = ring.devices()
{'chimes': [<RingChime: Downstairs>],
'doorbots': [<RingDoorBell: Front Door>]}
# All doorbells
doorbells = devices['doorbots']
[<RingDoorBell: Front Door>]
# All chimes
chimes = devices['chimes']
[<RingChime: Downstairs>]
# All stickup cams
stickup_cams = devices['stickup_cams']
[<RingStickUpCam: Driveway>]
devices = ring.devices()
for dev in list(devices['stickup_cams'] + devices['chimes'] + devices['doorbots']):
await dev.async_update_health_data()
print('Address: %s' % dev.address)
print('Family: %s' % dev.family)
print('ID: %s' % dev.id)
print('Name: %s' % dev.name)
print('Timezone: %s' % dev.timezone)
print('Wifi Name: %s' % dev.wifi_name)
print('Wifi RSSI: %s' % dev.wifi_signal_strength)
# setting dev volume
print('Volume: %s' % dev.volume)
await dev.async_set_volume(5)
print('Volume: %s' % dev.volume)
# play dev test shound
if dev.family == 'chimes':
await dev.async_test_sound(kind = 'ding')
await dev.async_test_sound(kind = 'motion')
# turn on lights on floodlight cam
if dev.family == 'stickup_cams' and dev.lights:
await dev.async_lights('on')
devices = ring.devices()
for doorbell in devices['doorbots']:
# listing the last 15 events of any kind
for event in await doorbell.async_history(limit=15):
print('ID: %s' % event['id'])
print('Kind: %s' % event['kind'])
print('Answered: %s' % event['answered'])
print('When: %s' % event['created_at'])
print('--' * 50)
# get a event list only the triggered by motion
events = await doorbell.async_history(kind='motion')
devices = ring.devices()
doorbell = devices['doorbots'][0]
await doorbell.async_recording_download(
await doorbell.async_history(limit=100, kind='ding')[0]['id'],
filename='last_ding.mp4',
override=True)
print(await doorbell.async_recording_url(await doorbell.async_last_recording_id()))
'https://ring-transcoded-videos.s3.amazonaws.com/99999999.mp4?X-Amz-Expires=3600&X-Amz-Date=20170313T232537Z&X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Credential=TOKEN_SECRET/us-east-1/s3/aws4_request&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Signature=secret'
groups = ring.groups()
group = groups['the-group-you-want']
print(group.lights)
# Prints True if lights are on, False if off
# Turn on lights indefinitely
await group.async_set_lights(True)
# Turn off lights
await group.async_set_lights(False)
# Turn on lights for 30 seconds
await group.async_set_lights(True, 30)
See our Contributing Page.
- This project was inspired and based on https://github.com/jeroenmoors/php-ring-api. Many thanks @jeroenmoors.
- A guy named MadBagger at Prism19 for his initial research (http://www.prism19.com/doorbot/second-pass-and-comm-reversing/)
- The creators of mitmproxy (https://mitmproxy.org/) great http and https traffic inspector
- @mfussenegger for his post on mitmproxy and virtualbox https://zignar.net/2015/12/31/sniffing-vbox-traffic-mitmproxy/
- To the project http://www.android-x86.org/ which allowed me to install Android on KVM.
- Many thanks to Carles Pina I Estany <carles@pina.cat> for creating the python-ring-doorbell Debian Package (https://tracker.debian.org/pkg/python-ring-doorbell).