Hello,
I've just come to the world of xAP Flash, and I'm keen to use it on a Joggler to control LightwaveRF devices.
I think I understand that these are not BSC devices? - as they (the ones I use: switches, dimmers) are one-way only, i.e. you can't query them. I want to use xAP Flash to send the raw UDP data for a LightwaveRF command to the LightwaveRF wifi link
- for example, to turn on device 1 in room 4, the LightwaveRF command is 001,!R4D1F1 (where 001 is an incrementing sequence number), and the corresponding hex data is 30 30 31 2c 21 52 34 44 31 46 31 0d.
I've read the livebox:xapflash documentation at dbzoo.com, in particular the section describing the <on> / <off> tags (quoted below), and I assume that I create my target as <vendor>.<device>.<instance>, and include the above hex (with spaces removed) after 'data='. However, I don't know what 'class' to use - I assume not the one shown, as this is for RF commands?
Any help or pointers would be gratefully received!
Thanks,
Mike
I've just come to the world of xAP Flash, and I'm keen to use it on a Joggler to control LightwaveRF devices.
I think I understand that these are not BSC devices? - as they (the ones I use: switches, dimmers) are one-way only, i.e. you can't query them. I want to use xAP Flash to send the raw UDP data for a LightwaveRF command to the LightwaveRF wifi link
- for example, to turn on device 1 in room 4, the LightwaveRF command is 001,!R4D1F1 (where 001 is an incrementing sequence number), and the corresponding hex data is 30 30 31 2c 21 52 34 44 31 46 31 0d.
I've read the livebox:xapflash documentation at dbzoo.com, in particular the section describing the <on> / <off> tags (quoted below), and I assume that I create my target as <vendor>.<device>.<instance>, and include the above hex (with spaces removed) after 'data='. However, I don't know what 'class' to use - I assume not the one shown, as this is for RF commands?
Code:
<on> xap-header { v=12 hop=1 class=rf.xmit target=dbzoo.livebox.Controller source= uid= } rf { data=010201130A7300130113011304C9011300000A0127100A259A71 } </on>
Thanks,
Mike
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