A Node-RED node that represents a virtual device which can be controlled via Amazon Alexa. Requires the 'virtual smart home' skill to be enabled for your Amazon account.
The virtual smart home skill is available in the Amazon skill stores in the following locales:
- English (AU)
- English (CA)
- English (GB)
- English (US)
- French (FR)
- German (DE)
- Italian (IT)
- Spanish (ES)
- supports a growing set of device types
- Blinds
- Color Changing Light Bulb
- Dimmable Light Bulb
- Dimmer Switch
- Fan
- Garage Door Opener
- Plug
- Switch
- Scene
- Temperature Sensor
- Thermostat
- no separate account needed. Just link your existing Amazon account.
- new virtual devices can simply be dragged onto the Node-RED canvas and will proactively be discovered by Alexa. No need to ask Alexa to discover devices.
- devices removed from the Node-RED canvas will also be removed from Alexa. Orphaned devices can also be manually removed from Alexa via the Node-RED editor.
- changes made to virtual device types and names will immediately be picked up by Alexa.
- local state changes of devices get synchronized with Alexa
- secure communication with the IoT cloud through individually provisioned certificates
The node gets invoked through Amazon Alexa (either via a voice command or via
the Alexa app) and outputs a msg
object containing the updated device state as
payload. For example, when you say "Alexa, dim the kitchen light to 50 percent",
the following msg
object will be emitted:
{
"topic": "home/kitchen/lights",
"payload": {
"brightness": 50,
"powerState": "ON",
"source": "alexa",
"directive": "SetBrightness",
"name": "kitchen light",
"type": "DIMMABLE_LIGHT_BULB"
}
}
The node also accepts incoming messages that can be used to inform Alexa about
local device changes, which will then be reflected in the Alexa app. If the
passthrough option is enabled, this will also trigger an outgoing message, just
like when the node gets invoked via Alexa. In this case payload.source
is set
to device
instead of alexa
.
Please ensure that your setup does not send too many messages to Alexa. Othewise you risk getting your account blocked.
- In the Alexa app:
- Search the skill store for the
virtual smart home
skill - Enable the 'virtual smart home' skill
- Complete the account linking process by logging in with your Amazon account credentials.
- Search the skill store for the
- In Node-RED:
- Install the
node-red-contrib-virtual-smart-home
module - Place a
virtual device
node onto the canvas and connect it to a debug node - Double click on the virtual device node to enter a name and select a device type. Once set up you can use this name to control the device via Alexa.
- Configure a new
vsh-connection
by clicking the pen icon. (Only needed once for each Amazon account) - Follow the instructions to complete the account linking process. Make sure you use the same Amazon account credentials as above!
- Deploy your Node-RED flow. This will trigger your virtual device to be discovered by Alexa. You should even get a push notification via the Alexa app (if notifications are enabled).
- You should now be able to control your virtual device with your voice, e.g. by saying "Alexa, turn xxx on". Inspect the output of the connected debug node and consult the docs in order to do something useful.
- Once you remove virtual devices from the canvas (and redeploy your flows), those devices will also be removed from Alexa.
- Install the
Detailed docs are shipped as part of the Node-RED package and available through the 'help' panel.
Example flows that illustrate the payload structure and voice invocation phrases can be imported from the Node-RED import menu (Import > Examples > node-red-contrib-virtual-smart-home). They can also be found in the examples folder.
I dedicated endless hours to this project and really hope it adds value for you! Nothing is more rewarding to me than your feedback. So if you are a happy user, please
- rate the 'virtual smart home' skill on the Alexa skill store
- rate the 'virtual smart home' Node-RED package
- mention this package in your next blog post / podcast / YouTube
- donate a few bucks to help cover the infrastructure costs.
THANK YOU!
-
Q: Which voice commands can I use to control my devices with Alexa?
A: Take a look at the example flows which you can import from the Node-RED import menu (Import > Examples > node-red-contrib-virtual-smart-home).
Here are some of the most often used commands:
- Alexa, switch on / off DEVICE-NAME
- Alexa, set DEVICE-NAME to X percent
- Alexa, set DEVICE-NAME to Warm white / Soft white / Daylight white / Cool white / Red / Crimson / Salmon / Orange / Gold / Yellow / Green / Turquoise / Cyan / Sky blue / Blue / Purple / Magenta / Pink / Lavendar
- Alexa, open / close DEVICE-NAME
-
Q: How can I control devices in a specific room?
A: You can create rooms in the Alexa app and assign your devices to them. Create a room which groups together an Alexa device (e.g. Echo) and some virtual lights. You can then control all those lights simply by speaking "Alexa, switch off the light" into the Alexa device.
-
Q: Why do my devices suddenly fail to connect and show up as 'offline'?
A: If your device was not connected to the VSH backend for more than 30 days its certificate will be revoked. You can fix that by deleting the old connection, creating a new one and linking your virtual devices to the new one. All your devices should then get re-discovered by Alexa.
Another reason could be that you are using an outdated version of VSH. Please update to the latest version (e.g using the Node-RED palette manager).
-
Q: Why do some of my devices show up as duplicates in the Alexa app?
A: Your duplicate devices might belong to a vsh-connection that no longer exists. You can delete them manually on the connection page where they probably show up with a shaded background, indicating they belong to another vsh-connection.
-
Q: I deleted a virtual device but Alexa keeps rediscovering it!
A: You probably deleted the device in the Alexa app instead of Node-RED. Open the connection page which lists all known devices and click the trash icon next to the device you want to delete.
-
Q: Why does VSH not work offline?
A: Alexa lives in the cloud. When you ask Alexa to control one of your devices, your voice is sent to Amazon servers for processing. Amazon's servers then try to make sense of what you said and which skill to invoke. If you said "Alexa, dim the kitchen light to fifty percent!", Alexa will realize that 'kitchen light' belongs to the VSH skill and invoke the VSH backend with a 'directive' containing the command that was understood (e.g. 'SetBrightness'). The VSH skill backend then sends a message to your connected virtual device which triggers an outgoing msg object with the device state for you to make use of. This requires your VSH devices to be online.
-
Q: What do you do with my data?
A: The VSH backend only stores metadata about your configured devices needed for VSH to function and your basic profile information provided by Amazon when you enabled the skill. Neither your Amazon password nor your voice prompts or your location is ever shared with VSH. I also have no interest in analyzing your usage patterns although this would technically be possible.
-
Q: Can you add feature X, please?
A: I'm always eager to hear your ideas! Please file a ticket.
-
Q: Where can I ask a question that hasn't been addressed yet?
A: Check out existing issues on GitHub or file a new ticket.
This package comes without any warranty. Use it, enjoy it, but all at your own risk. If you are satisfied with this project, please contribute your share for the backend infrastructure via donation. Thank you!
NOTE: Devices that have not been online for 30 days will be permanently deleted without prior warning. Their certificates will be invalidated and can no longer be used to connect virtual devices.
Accounts without any activity for 60 days will also be deleted and can no longer be used to control virtual devices.