Skip to content

Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) library written with pure Node.js (no bindings) - baked by Bluez via DBus

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

ebeling/node-ble

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

92 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

node-ble

Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) library written with pure Node.js (no bindings) - baked by Bluez via DBus

chrvadala Test Coverage Status npm Downloads Donate

Setup

yarn add node-ble

Example

Provide permissions

In order to allow a connection with the DBus daemon, you have to set up right permissions.

Create the file /etc/dbus-1/system.d/node-ble.conf with the following content (customize with userid)

<!DOCTYPE busconfig PUBLIC "-//freedesktop//DTD D-BUS Bus Configuration 1.0//EN"
  "http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/dbus/1.0/busconfig.dtd">
<busconfig>
  <policy user="%userid%">
   <allow own="org.bluez"/>
    <allow send_destination="org.bluez"/>
    <allow send_interface="org.bluez.GattCharacteristic1"/>
    <allow send_interface="org.bluez.GattDescriptor1"/>
    <allow send_interface="org.freedesktop.DBus.ObjectManager"/>
    <allow send_interface="org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties"/>
  </policy>
</busconfig>

STEP 1: Get Adapter

To start a Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) connection you need a Bluetooth adapter.

const {createBluetooth} = require('node-ble')
const {bluetooth, destroy} = createBluetooth()
const adapter = await bluetooth.defaultAdapter()

STEP 2: Start discovering

In order to find a Bluetooth Low Energy device out, you have to start a discovery operation.

if (! await adapter.isDiscovering())
  await adapter.startDiscovery()

STEP 3: Get a device, Connect and Get GATT Server

Use an adapter to get a remote Bluetooth device, then connect to it and bind to the GATT (Generic Attribute Profile) server.

const device = await adapter.waitDevice('00:00:00:00:00:00')
await device.connect()
const gattServer = await device.gatt()

STEP 4a: Read and write a characteristic.

const service1 = await gattServer.getPrimaryService('uuid')
const characteristic1 = await service1.getCharacteristic('uuid')
await characteristic1.writeValue(Buffer.from("Hello world"))
const buffer = await characteristic1.readValue()
console.log(buffer)

STEP 4b: Subscribe to a characteristic.

const service2 = await gattServer.getPrimaryService('uuid')
const characteristic2 = await service2.getCharacteristic('uuid')
await characteristic2.startNotifications()
characteristic2.on('valuechanged', buffer => {
  console.log(buffer)
})
await characteristic2.stopNotifications()

STEP 5: Disconnect

When you have done you can disconnect and destroy the session.

await device.disconnect()
destroy()

Reference

const {createBluetooth} = require('node-ble')
const {bluetooth, destroy} = createBluetooth()
Method Description
Bluetooth bluetooth
void destroy()

Bluetooth

Method Description
Promise<String[]> adapters() List of available adapters
Promise<Adapter> defaultAdapter() Get an available adapter
Promise<Adapter> getAdapter(String adapter) Get a specific adapter (one of available in adapters())

Adapter

Method Description
Promise<String> getAddress() The Bluetooth device address.
Promise<String> getAddressType() The Bluetooth Address Type. One of public or random.
Promise<String> getName() The Bluetooth system name (pretty hostname).
Promise<String> getAlias() The Bluetooth friendly name.
Promise<bool> isPowered() Adapter power status.
Promise<bool> isDiscovering() Indicates that a device discovery procedure is active.
Promise<void> startDiscovery() Starts the device discovery session.
Promise<void> stopDiscovery() Cancel any previous StartDiscovery transaction.
Promise<String[]> devices() List of discovered Bluetooth Low Energy devices
Promise<Device> getDevice(String uuid) Returns an available Bluetooth Low Energy (waitDevice is preferred)
Promise<Device> waitDevice(String uuid) Returns a Bluetooth Low Energy device as soon as it is available
Promise<String> toString() User friendly adapter name

Device extends EventEmitter

Method Description
Promise<String> getName() The Bluetooth remote name.
Promise<String> getAddress() The Bluetooth device address of the remote device.
Promise<String> getAddressType() The Bluetooth Address Type. One of public or random.
Promise<String> getAlias() The name alias for the remote device.
Promise<String> getRSSI() Received Signal Strength Indicator of the remote device.
Promise<String> isPaired() Indicates if the remote device is paired.
Promise<String> isConnected() Indicates if the remote device is currently connected.
Promise<void> pair() Connects to the remote device, initiate pairing and then retrieve GATT primary services (needs a default agent to handle wizard).
Promise<void> cancelPair() This method can be used to cancel a pairing operation initiated by the Pair method.
Promise<void> connect() This is a generic method to connect any profiles the remote device supports that can be connected to and have been flagged as auto-connectable on our side.
Promise<void> disconnect() This method gracefully disconnects all connected profiles and then terminates low-level ACL connection.
Promise<GattServer> gatt() Waits services resolving, then returns a connection to the remote Gatt Server
Promise<String> toString() User friendly device name.
Event Description
connect Connected to device
disconnect Disconnected from device

GattServer

Method Description
Promise<String[]> services() List of available services
Promise<GattService> getPrimaryService(String uuid) Returns a specific Primary Service

GattService

Method Description
Promise<bool> isPrimary() Indicates whether or not this GATT service is a primary service.
Promise<String> getUUID() 128-bit service UUID.
Promise<String[]> characteristics() List of available characteristic UUIDs.
Promise<GattCharacteristic> getCharacteristic(String uuid) Returns a specific characteristic.
Promise<String> toString() User friendly service name.

GattCharacteristic extends EventEmitter

Method Description
Promise<String> getUUID() 128-bit characteristic UUID.
Promise<String[]> getFlags() Defines how the characteristic value can be used.
Promise<bool> isNotifying() True, if notifications or indications on this characteristic are currently enabled.
Promise<Buffer> readValue(Number offset = 0) Issues a request to read the value of the characteristic and returns the value if the operation was successful.
`Promise writeValue(Buffer buffer, Number WriteValueOptions options = {})`
Promise<void> startNotifications() Starts a notification session from this characteristic if it supports value notifications or indications.
Promise<void> stopNotifications() This method will cancel any previous StartNotify transaction.
Promise<String> toString() User friendly characteristic name.
Event Description
valuechanged New value is notified. (invoke startNotifications() to enable notifications)

Compatibility

This library works on many architectures supported by Linux. It leverages on Bluez driver, a component supported by the following platforms and distributions https://www.bluez.org/about

Node-ble has been tested on the following environment:

  • Raspbian GNU/Linux 10 (buster)
  • Ubuntu 18.04.4 LTS
  • Ubuntu 20.04 LTS

Changelog

  • 0.x - Beta version
  • 1.0 - First official version
  • 1.1 - Migrates to gh-workflows
  • 1.2 - Upgrades deps
  • 1.3 - Adds typescript definitions #10
  • 1.4 - Upgrades deps
  • 1.5 - Adds write options configuration async writeValue (value, optionsOrOffset = {}) #20; Upgrades deps

Contributors

Run tests

In order to run test suite you have to set up right DBus permissions.

Create the file /etc/dbus-1/system.d/node-ble-test.conf with the following content (customize with userid)

<!DOCTYPE busconfig PUBLIC "-//freedesktop//DTD D-BUS Bus Configuration 1.0//EN"
  "http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/dbus/1.0/busconfig.dtd">
<busconfig>
  <policy user="%userid%">
    <allow own="org.test"/>
    <allow send_destination="org.test"/>
    <allow send_interface="org.test.iface"/>
  </policy>
</busconfig>

Unit tests

yarn test

End to end (e2e) tests

The end to end test will try to connect to a real bluetooth device and read some characteristics. To do that, you need two different devices.

Device 1

wget https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/bluetooth/bluez.git/plain/test/example-advertisement
wget https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/bluetooth/bluez.git/plain/test/example-gatt-server
python example-advertisement
python example-gatt-server
hcitool dev #this command shows bluetooth mac address

Device 2

# .env
TEST_DEVICE=00:00:00:00:00:00
TEST_SERVICE=12345678-1234-5678-1234-56789abcdef0
TEST_CHARACTERISTIC=12345678-1234-5678-1234-56789abcdef1
TEST_NOTIFY_SERVICE=0000180d-0000-1000-8000-00805f9b34fb
TEST_NOTIFY_CHARACTERISTIC=00002a37-0000-1000-8000-00805f9b34fb
yarn test:e2e

References

Similar libraries

Useful commands

Command Description
rm -r /var/lib/bluetooth/* Clean Bluetooth cache
hciconfig -a Adapter info
hcitool dev Adapter info (through Bluez)
d-feet DBus debugging tool
nvram bluetoothHostControllerSwitchBehavior=never Only on Parallels

About

Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) library written with pure Node.js (no bindings) - baked by Bluez via DBus

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 99.4%
  • Shell 0.6%