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July 9, 2018 at 3:15 pm in reply to: Using the OpenSprinkler API to schedule an ad-hoc program #51052
timcharperParticipantIt looks like an API endpoint was added to manually trigger a program. That would work sufficiently, although it is a bit less natural to use from the Home app.
July 9, 2018 at 3:09 pm in reply to: Using the OpenSprinkler API to schedule an ad-hoc program #51050
timcharperParticipantAfter updating the firmware, I’m still seeing them turn on in parallel:
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July 9, 2018 at 1:11 pm in reply to: Using the OpenSprinkler API to schedule an ad-hoc program #51045
timcharperParticipant@Ray – This is not what I’m seeing. All valves are turning on simultaneously. I’m running firmware 2.1.6 with hardware version 2.3.
Maybe I’m not using “manual program API call”? The URI I am using is “/cm?sid={n}&en=1&t={t}”.
timcharperParticipantLOL um I’m the worst at Copy Paasta and I just got caught red handed. Homebridge-tplink-smarthome was somehow on my clipboard and made its way in to the README. Fixed it. Thanks!
timcharperParticipantHave a look at this homebridge plugin:
June 15, 2018 at 5:09 pm in reply to: Idea: HomeKit Client "Hey Siri, turn off the sprinkler today." #50704
timcharperParticipantI have created an integration for Homebridge: https://github.com/timcharper/homebridge-opensprinkler
“Hey Siri, turn off my sprinklers” works, plus some other niceties.
There’s not a really good way to manipulate run-once programs with a valve-by-valve basis, so I haven’t implemented anything on that front yet. Would welcome input from the community / OpenSprinkler creator on how to best go about this.
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