Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) peripherals.
This package provides a Haskell API for writing Bluetooth Low Energy peripherals.
ble - Bluetooth Low Energy for Haskell
ble is a Haskell library for writing Bluetooth Low Energy peripherals and centrals.
For usage, see the haddocks. There are also examples in examples
directory.
Example
The code below is a simple example of a complete Bluetooth Low Energy application. The application allows a counter to be read, and adds one to the value of the counter, as well as allowing the counter to be set to any value.
module Main (main) where
import Bluetooth
import Control.Concurrent (threadDelay)
import Control.Concurrent.STM
import Control.Monad.IO.Class
main :: IO ()
main = do
ref <- newTVarIO 0
conn <- connect
x <- runBluetoothM (registerAndAdvertiseApplication $ app ref) conn
case x of
Right _ -> putStrLn "Started BLE counter application!"
Left e -> error $ "Error starting application " ++ show e
threadDelay maxBound
app :: TVar Int -> Application
app ref
= "/com/turingjump/example/counter"
& services .~ [counter ref]
counter :: TVar Int -> Service 'Local
counter ref
= "4f1f704f-0a0b-49e4-bd27-6368f27697a7"
& characteristics .~ [getCounter ref]
getCounter :: TVar Int -> CharacteristicBS 'Local
getCounter ref
= "90874979-563e-4224-9da6-3b1a6c03e97d"
& readValue ?~ encodeRead readV
& writeValue ?~ encodeWrite writeV
& properties .~ [CPRead, CPWrite]
where
readV :: Handler Int
readV = liftIO $ do
v <- atomically $ modifyTVar' ref succ >> readTVar ref
putStrLn $ "Value requested. New value: " ++ show v
return v
writeV :: Int -> Handler Bool
writeV i = liftIO $ do
v <- atomically $ swapTVar ref i
putStrLn $ "Value changed to: " ++ show i
putStrLn $ "Old value: " ++ show v
return True
You can also write centrals (clients). See HeartRateClient
in the examples
directory.
Requirements
ble
currently only supports Linux, and requires Bluez versions 5.41 and up. To see what version you are running, type:
bluetoothd --version
Note that for version 5.41 in particular you'll need to run bluetoothd
with the experimental flag. (You might have to change /lib/systemd/system/bluetooth.service
to add --experimental
to the ExecStart
command, and the restart the bluetoothd service)
Contributing
Note that quite a number of tests are protected by a flag (hasDBus
). This is in part because of extra system dependencies; and in part because the tests require mocking DBus objects, which in turn require changing the dbus configuration files.
If you are contributing to this packages, you should run all tests (and possibly write further ones utilizing the mock infrastructure). You'll need to run:
sudo ./test/Mock/dbus-permissions.sh
And then reboot (yes, terrible, but DBus has trouble reloading its configuration).
You then need the python dependencies. Minimally, this will involve:
pip install -r test/Mock/requirements.txt
stack.yaml
has the hasDBus
flag set, so if you're using stack
you'll by default be running all the tests.