A package for interacting with Subaru Starlink Remote Services API.
Project description
subarulink
A python package for interacting with the Subaru Starlink remote vehicle services API. The API is useful to obtain information about a vehicle as well as actuate exposed features such as locks, horn, lights and remote start.
This package was developed primarily for enabling Home-Assistant integration, however it may also be used for standalone applications. A basic python console application is included as an example.
This package only supports Subaru Starlink equipped vehicles with active Starlink subscriptions. New PHEV Crosstreks include a 10 year subscription. Your MySubaru account must be setup prior to using this package.
NOTE: The functionality of this package has only been tested on a 2019 Subaru Crosstrek PHEV. Newer (g2 API) vehicles should also work. Older (g1 API) vehicles have not been tested. Subaru has no official API; therefore, this library may stop working at any time without warning. Use at your own risk.
Credits
Based upon the teslajsonpy package developed by @zabuldon, licensed under Apache 2.0.
Home Assistant Integration
Development of a Home Assistant integration is in progress (using the Tesla integration as a template, credit to @zabuldon). A PR has been submitted and is pending review/approval. Until then, it is available here.
Installation
Once Home Assistant integration is complete, this package will be automatically installed as a dependency. For those that would like to try the console application or use the package in their own application, install from PyPI:
$ pip install subarulink
Usage
The PyPI installation includes a basic interactive console application. The console can be either run interactively or used to issue a single command. The single command function requires a working config file to function properly (config file is automatically created during the first interactive run). Note that not all exposed functions are supported by all vehicles. Consult your Starlink subscription details to determine which commands apply to your vehicle.
usage: subarulink [-h] [-i] [-c CONFIG_FILE] [-v {0,1,2}]
{status,lock,unlock,lights,horn,locate,remote_start,remote_stop,charge}
...
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-i, --interactive interactive mode
-c CONFIG_FILE, --config CONFIG_FILE
specify config file (default is ~/.subarulink.cfg
-v {0,1,2}, --verbosity {0,1,2}
verbosity level: 0=error[default] 1=info 2=debug
command:
execute single command and exit
{status,lock,unlock,lights,horn,locate,remote_start,remote_stop,charge}
status get vehicle status information
lock lock doors
unlock unlock doors
lights turn on lights
horn sound horn
locate locate vehicle
remote_start remote engine start
remote_stop remote engine stop
charge start PHEV charging
Starlink accounts with multiple vehicles will need to specify the VIN for single commands. This can be done in two ways:
- Set a default VIN while in interactive mode, which will be saved to the configuration file and used for all single commands
- Specify a VIN from the command line with --vin. This will override the default VIN in the configuration file Accounts with only one vehicle do not need to specify a VIN
Known Issues
Battery Discharge
Aggressively polling the vehicle location with subarulink.Controller.update(vin) may discharge the auxiliary battery (in a PHEV). Intermittent (every 2 hours) use isn't a problem, but polling at 5 minute intervals will drain the auxiliary battery fully after a few consecutive non-driving days. The vehicle does report the auxiliary battery voltage with every update, so this can be avoided.
Effects of aggressive polling on the battery of a gasoline-only vehicle are unknown.
Erroneous data
The data returned by the Subaru API is sometimes invalid.
- Tire Pressure returns invalid values unless queried immediately after vehicle is turned off.
- EV Range is invalid immediately after vehicle is driven and turned off (vehicle seems to report a value that is near the hybrid drive range).
- Data fields are sometimes omitted. The returned data is checked for erroneous values. If they are invalid, the local cache will retain the last sane value.
Incomplete data
Some of the fields that would be useful are always reported back as "UNKNOWN". Examples include door lock state, window state, etc.
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
Built Distribution
Hashes for subarulink-0.3.3-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | 541c5deda75b702b05b83086e42f3f5a3c84c24b09d88dc975c9b3624dab66e8 |
|
MD5 | 8e98acbcf04f8301c1a33d323a4aa16a |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | 24d00e4b06e5555cfc647c5671e070a2b0988e2bf254887e39b8241543a06808 |