immersive-home/README.md
2023-11-05 15:28:41 +01:00

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🏠 Introduction

Immersive Home is project to bring Smart Home and Mixed Reality technologies together for an intuitive and immersive experience.

Features

  • Fast and Intuitive control over IoT devices
  • Live overview over your smart home
  • Simple way for creating automations
  • Comfortable way of consuming virtual media unobstructed
  • Advanced automations based on position in room

Supported Devices

Smart Home Platforms

Mixed Reality Headsets

  • Meta Quest 2 / Pro / 3

🛠 Development

In order to contribute to this project, you need the following to be setup before you can start working:

  • Godot 4.1.3 installed

Fundamentals

Communication with the Smart Home Environment is done using the HomeAdapters global. Each environment is made up of devices and entities. A device is a collection of different entities and entities can represent many different things in a smart home. For example, the entity of name lights.smart_lamp_1 would control the kitchen lamps while state.smart_lamp_1_temp would show the current temperature of the lamp.

File Structure

.
├── addons             (All installed Godot Addons are saved here)
├── assets             (Files like logos or assets that are shared across scenes)
├── content/           (Main files of the project)
│   ├── entities       (Entities that can be placed into the room)
│   └── ui             (User Interface Scenes and related files)
└── lib/               (Code that is global or shared across scenes)
    ├── globals        (Globally running scripts)
    └── home_adapters  (Code allowing control smart home entities)

Home Adapters

The HomeAdapters global allows to communicate with different backends and offers a set of fundamental functions allowing communication with the Smart Home.

Device {
	"id": String,
	"name": String,
	"entities": Array[Entity]
}

Entity {
	"state": String
	"attributes": Dictionary
}

# Get a list of all devices
func get_devices() -> Signal[Array[Device]]

# Get a single device by id
func get_device(id: String) -> Signal[Device]

# Returns the current state of an entity.
func get_state(entity: String) -> Signal[Entity]

# Updates the state of the entity and returns the resulting state
func set_state(entity: String, state: String, attributes: Dictionary) -> Signal[Entity]

# Watches the state and each time it changes, calls the callback with the changed state, returns a function to stop watching the state
func watch_state(entity: String, callback: Callable[entity: Entity]) -> Callable

Interaction Events

Each time a button is pressed on the primary controller, a ray-cast is done to be able to interact with devices or the UI.

InteractionEvent {
	"controller": XRController3D, # The controller that triggered the event
	"ray": RayCast3D, # The ray-cast that triggered the event
}
Function called Args Description
_on_click [event: InteractionEvent] The back trigger button has been pressed and released
_on_press_down [event: InteractionEvent] The back trigger button has been pressed down
_on_press_move [event: InteractionEvent] The back trigger button has been moved while pressed down
_on_press_up [event: InteractionEvent] The back trigger button has been released
_on_grab_down [event: InteractionEvent] The side grab button been pressed down
_on_grab_move [event: InteractionEvent] The side grab button been pressed down
_on_grab_up [event: InteractionEvent] The side grab button been released
_on_ray_enter [event: InteractionEvent] The ray-cast enters the the collision body
_on_ray_leave [event: InteractionEvent] The ray-cast leaves the the collision body

Testing without a VR Headset

In order to test without a headset, press the run project (F5) button in Godot and ignore the prompt that OpenXR failed to start. To simulate the headset and controller movement, we're using the XR Input Simulator asset. Click at the link to get a list of the supported controls.