npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

tplink-cloud-api_cross-fetch

v0.0.4

Published

Remotely control TP-Link smartplugs (HS100, HS110, HS300) and smartbulbs (LB100, LB110, LB120, LB130) using their cloud web service (no need to be on the same wifi/lan)

Downloads

39

Readme

tplink-cloud-api using cross-fetch instead of axios.

Introduction

The tplink-cloud-api NPM module allows your to remotely control your TP-Link smartplugs (HS100, HS110, HS300...), smart switches (HS200), and smartbulbs (LB100, LB110, LB120, LB130, KL60, KL110, KL120, KL130, and more) using the TP-Link cloud web service, from anywhere, without the need to be on the same wifi/lan.

It's especially useful in scenarios where you want to control your devices from public web services, like IFTTT, Thinger.io, Webtask.io, Glitch.com, Tasker (Android)...

It's based on my investigation work on the TP-Link API protocol, which I have been sharing in my blog http://itnerd.space.

Installation

You can install this module with npm:

npm install --save tplink-cloud-api

Usage

Authenticate

First instantiate a TP-Link object. TermID (UUIDv4) is generated if not specified:

const { login } = require("tplink-cloud-api");
const tplink = await login("[email protected]", "Password", "TermID");

Retrieve devices

Once authenticated, you can use your tplink instance to retrieve the list of your devices:

let deviceList = await tplink.getDeviceList();

Control your devices

Smartplugs (HS100 & HS110)

Now you can toggle a plug:

await tplink.getHS100("My Smart Plug").toggle();

You can also create an object and use it like this:

let myPlug = tplink.getHS100("My Smart Plug ");
let response = await myPlug.toggle();
console.log(await myPlug.getRelayState());

Replace My Smart Plug with the alias you gave to your plug in the Kasa app (be sure to give a different alias to each device). Alternatively, you can also specify the unique deviceId or each device.

Instead of toggle(), you can use powerOn() or powerOff(). See all available methods below.

If you want to trigger multiple plugs, you can do it like this:

await tplink.getHS100("My Smart Plug").toggle();
await tplink.getHS100("My Smart Plug 2").powerOn();
await tplink.getHS100("My Smart Plug 3").powerOff();
await tplink.getHS100("My Smart Plug 4").powerOff();

To retrieve power consumption data for the HS110:

await tplink.getHS110("My Smart Plug").getPowerUsage();

Smart Switches (HS200, HS300...)

You can toggle smart switches with the same API as the smart plugs.

For an example of how to control a multiplug power outlet like the HS300 series, see examples of code in Issue 27. (Support for multiplug outlet was added after v0.8 of the npm module).

Smartbulbs (LB100/110/120/130, KL110/120/130)

If you have an LB100/110 or KL50/60/110 (dimmable), you can change its state with:

await tplink.getLB100("Bedroom LB120").setState(1, 90);

The two parameters are:

  • on_off: 1 on, 0 off
  • brightness: 0-100

If you have an LB120 or KL120 (tunable white), you can also change color temperature:

await tplink.getLB120("Lamp LB120").setState(1, 90, 2700);

The three parameters for LB120 or KL120 are:

  • on_off: 1 on, 0 off
  • brightness: 0-100
  • color_temp:
    • 2500-6500 (LB120)
    • 2700-5000 (KL120)

If you have an LB130 or KL130 (multicolor), use this:

// to set hue:
await tplink.getLB130("Kitchen LB130").setState(1, 90, 150, 80);
// or to change white color temperature:
await tplink.getLB130("Kitchen LB130").setState(1, 90, 0, 0, 2700);

The five parameters for LB130 or KL130 are:

  • on_off: 1 on, 0 off
  • brightness: 0-100
  • hue: 0-360
  • saturation: 0-100
  • color_temp: 2500-9000

For color bulbs, color_temp overrides hue/saturation. If a bulb is in white mode, color_temp must be set to 0 in order to change colors.

For help to choose the hue/saturation value, you can head to http://colorizer.org/.

Example

const { login } = require("tplink-cloud-api");
const uuidV4 = require("uuid/v4");

const TPLINK_USER = process.env.TPLINK_USER;
const TPLINK_PASS = process.env.TPLINK_PASS;
const TPLINK_TERM = process.env.TPLINK_TERM || uuidV4();

async function main() {
  // log in to cloud, return a connected tplink object
  const tplink = await login(TPLINK_USER, TPLINK_PASS, TPLINK_TERM);
  console.log("current auth token is", tplink.getToken());

  // get a list of raw json objects (must be invoked before .get* works)
  const dl = await tplink.getDeviceList();
  console.log(dl);

  // find a device by alias:
  let myPlug = tplink.getHS100("My Smart Plug");
  // or find by deviceId:
  // let myPlug = tplink.getHS100("558185B7EC793602FB8802A0F002BA80CB96F401");
  console.log("myPlug:", myPlug);

  //let response = await myPlug.powerOn();
  //console.log("response=" + response );

  let response = await myPlug.toggle();
  console.log("response=" + response);

  response = await myPlug.getSysInfo();
  console.log("relay_state=" + response.relay_state);

  console.log(await myPlug.getRelayState());
}

main();

Nodejs App example

You can remix this App on Glitch and call it via webhook using POST to the corresponing URL (given when you create the App):

https://glitch.com/edit/#!/tplink-api-example

Available methods

TPLink class

login()

This constructor method authenticates against the TP-Link cloud API and retrieves a token.

Parameters

| Parameter | Specification | Description | | ---------- | ------------- | ----------------------------------- | | user | String | TP-Link account user name | | password | String | TP-Link account password | | termid | UUIDv4 String | Your client application Terminal ID |

termid is an arbitrary value. The API expects a UUIDv4 string, but at this time it doesn't validate this.

Returns

Returns the TPLink instance that you can later use to retrieve the Device List.

getDeviceList()

This method returns an object that describe all the TP-Link devices registred to this TP-Link account.

You need to call this method once after login() in order to be able to get a particular device. Call this method every time you need to refresh the list of devices.

Parameters

None

Returns

Returns an object that describe all the TP-Link devices registred to this TP-Link account.

Requires

Requires Node.js > v7.7 (async)