DALI ("Digital Addressable Lighting Interface") defines how lighting control gear (eg. fluorescent ballasts, LED dimmers) and input devices (push buttons, motion detectors, etc.) should interoperate. It is standardised in IEC 62386.
IEC 62386 contains several parts. Part 101 contains general requirements for all system components, part 102 covers general requirements for control gear, and part 103 describes general requirements for control devices. Parts 2xx extend part 102 with lamp-specific extensions and parts 3xx extend part 103 with input device specific extensions.
This library has been written with reference to the following documents:
- IEC 62386-101:2014 (general requirements for system components)
- IEC 62386-102:2014 (general requirements for control gear)
- IEC 62386-103:2014 (general requirements for control devices)
- IEC 62386-201:2009 (fluorescent lamps)
- IEC 62386-202:2009 (self-contained emergency lighting)
- IEC 62386-205:2009 (supply voltage controller for incandescent lamps)
- IEC 62386-207:2009 (LED modules)
- IEC 62386-301:2017 (particular requirements for push button input devices)
- IEC 62386-303:2017 (particular requirements for occupancy sensor input devices)
I do not have copies of the other parts of the standard; they are fairly expensive to obtain. The library is designed to be extensible; adding support for the other parts ought to be easy and self-contained.
The dali.memory
module supports the extended memory bank
specifications created and maintained by the Digital Illumination
Interface Alliance:
- DiiA DALI Part 251 — Memory Bank 1 Extension
- DiiA DALI Part 252 — Energy Reporting
- DiiA DALI Part 253 — Diagnostics & Maintenance
This library currently requires Python version 3.7 or later.
Some of the code in this project is experimental and its API is subject to change. Modules with stable APIs are noted below.
dali
address
- Device addressing; stable for gear, not stable for devicescommand
- Command registry, interface to command decoding; stabledevice
- DALI control devices as defined in IEC 62386; not stablegeneral
- Commands and events from part 103helpers
- Useful functions and classes for working with DALI control devicesoccupancy
- Commands from part 303pushbutton
- Commands from part 301sequences
- Packaged sequences for working with DALI control devices
driver
- Objects to communicate with physical DALI gateways or services; not stablebase
- General driver contractshasseb
- Driver for Hasseb DALI Mastertridonic
- Driver for Tridonic DALI USBdaliserver
- Driver for https://github.com/onitake/daliserver (needs to be adopted to dali.driver.base API)hid
- asyncio-based drivers for Tridonic DALI USB and hasseb DALI Masterserial
- asyncio-based driver for Lunatone LUBA RS232 interfaces
exceptions
- DALI related exceptionsframe
- Forward and backward frames; stablegear
- DALI control gear as defined in IEC 62386; stablecolour
- Commands from part 209 (Device Type 8)emergency
- Commands from part 202general
- Commands from part 102incandescent
- Commands from part 205led
- Commands from part 207
memory
- access to memory banks; not stablesequences
- packaged sequences of commands; stable
- Stephen Early (Author)
- Robert Niederreiter
- Diogo Gomes
- Caiwan
- Boldie
- Martijn Hemeryck
- Hans Baumgartner
- Ferdinand Keil
- Sean Lanigan, Wallace Building Systems Pty Ltd
python-dali is Copyright (C) 2013–2022 Stephen Early <steve@assorted.org.uk> and other contributors.
It is distributed under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License and GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see this link.