There is a common effort to unify all the AlexaPi forks to create one awesome version that works best and supports all the devices and operating systems.
If you're a developer, or an advanced user, please head over to https://github.com/alexa-pi/AlexaPi and join us there. It is based on @maso27's repo and has voice activation via PocketSphinx apart from other nifty changes. If you don't want voice activation and mind the overhead caused by it, you are safe to stay here until we make it optional over at the new repo.
Please base all your code contributions on that new repository (bugfixes are welcome here though).
If you're not sure whether to switch to that new project, wait for us when we feel confident enough to recommend the new version to everyone.
- Sam Machin
This is the code needed to Turn a Raspberry Pi into a client for Amazon's Alexa service. Feedback welcome.
You will need:
- A Raspberry Pi
- An SD Card with a fresh install of Raspbian (tested against build 2015-11-21 Jessie)
- An External Speaker with 3.5mm Jack
- A USB Sound Dongle and Microphone
- A push to make button connected between GPIO 18 and GND
- (Optionally) A Dual colour LED (or 2 single LEDs) Connected to GPIO 24 & 25
Next you need to obtain a set of credentials from Amazon to use the Alexa Voice service, login at http://developer.amazon.com and Goto Alexa then Alexa Voice Service You need to create a new product type as a Device, for the ID use something like AlexaPi, create a new security profile and under the web settings allowed origins put http://localhost:5000 and as a return URL put http://localhost:5000/code you can also create URLs replacing localhost with the IP of your Pi eg http://192.168.1.123:5000 Make a note of these credentials you will be asked for them during the install process
Boot your fresh Pi and login to a command prompt as root.
Make sure you are in /root
Clone this repo to the Pi
git clone https://github.com/sammachin/AlexaPi.git
Run the setup script
./setup.sh
Follow instructions....
Enjoy :)
If your alexa isn't running on startup you can check /var/log/alexa.log for errors.
If the error is complaining about alsaaudio you may need to check the name of your sound card input device, use
arecord -L
The device name can be set in the settings at the top of main.py
You may need to adjust the volume and/or input gain for the microphone, you can do this with
alsamixer
For those of you that prefer to install the code manually or tweak things here's a few pointers...
The Amazon AVS credentials are stored in a file called creds.py which is used by auth_web.py and main.py, there is an example with blank values.
The auth_web.py is a simple web server to generate the refresh token via oAuth to the amazon users account, it then appends this to creds.py and displays it on the browser.
main.py is the 'main' alexa client it simply runs on a while True loop waiting for the button to be pressed, it then records audio and when the button is released it posts this to the AVS service using the requests library, When the response comes back it is played back using mpg123 via an os system call, The 1sec.mp3 file is a 1second silent MP3) I found that my soundcard/pi was clipping the beginning of audio files and i was missing the first bit of the response so this is there to pad the audio.
The LED's are a visual indicator of status, I used a duel Red/Green LED but you could also use separate LEDS, Red is connected to GPIO 24 and green to GPIO 25, When recording the RED LED will be lit when the file is being posted and waiting for the response both LED's are lit (or in the case of a dual R?G LED it goes Yellow) and when the response is played only the Green LED is lit. If The client gets an error back from AVS then the Red LED will flash 3 times.
The internet_on() routine is testing the connection to the Amazon auth server as I found that running the script on boot it was failing due to the network not being fully established so this will keep it retrying until it can make contact before getting the auth token.
The auth token is generated from the request_token the auth_token is then stored in a local memcache with and expiry of just under an hour to align with the validity at Amazon, if the function fails to get an access_token from memcache it will then request a new one from Amazon using the refresh token.