This page is part of archived documentation for openHAB 3.0. Go to the current stable version
# Event Bus
The openHAB framework provides an event bus for inter-component communication. The communication is based on events which can be sent and received through the event bus in an asynchronous way. Examples of openHAB event types are ItemCommandEvent, ItemStateEvent, ItemAddedEvent, ThingStatusInfoEvent, etc.
This section introduces the event API and illustrates how to receive such events. Furthermore, the sending of events and the implementation of new event types will be described.
# API Introduction
# The Interfaces
The EventPublisher
posts Event
s through the openHAB event bus in an asynchronous way.
The EventSubscriber
defines the callback interface to receive events of specific types to which the event subscriber is subscribed.
The EventPublisher and the EventSubscribers are registered as OSGi services.
An event subscriber can provide an EventFilter
in order to filter events based on the topic or the content.
If there is no filter all subscribed event types are received.
The event itself will be subclassed for each event type, which exists in the System (e.g. ItemCommandEvent
, ItemUpdatedEvent
, ThingStatusInfoEvent
).
# The Core Events
This section lists the core events provided by openHAB which can be divided into the categories Item Events, Thing Events and Inbox Events.
An event consists of a topic
, a type
, a payload
and a source
.
The payload can be serialized with any String representation and is determined by its concrete event type implementation (e.g. ItemCommandEvent
, ItemUpdatedEvent
).
The payloads of the openHAB core events are serialized with JSON.
Each event implementation provides the payload as high level methods as well, usually presented by a data transfer object (DTO).
A topic clearly defines the target of the event and its structure is similar to a REST URI, except the last part, the action.
The topics of openHAB events are divided into the following four parts: {namespace}/{entityType}/{entity}/{action}
, e.g. openhab/items/{itemName}/command
.
The type of an event is represented by a string, usually the name of the concrete event implementation class, e.g. ItemCommandEvent
, ItemUpdatedEvent
.
This string type presentation is used by event subscribers for event subscription (see chapter "Receive Events") and by the framework for the creation of concrete event instances.
The event source is optional and represents the name of the source identifying the sender.
# Item Events
Event | Description | Topic |
---|---|---|
ItemAddedEvent | An item has been added to the item registry. | openhab/items/{itemName}/added |
ItemRemovedEvent | An item has been removed from the item registry. | openhab/items/{itemName}/removed |
ItemUpdatedEvent | An item has been updated in the item registry. | openhab/items/{itemName}/updated |
ItemCommandEvent | A command is sent to an item via a channel. | openhab/items/{itemName}/command |
ItemStateEvent | The state of an item is updated. | openhab/items/{itemName}/state |
ItemStatePredictedEvent | The state of an item predicted to be updated. | openhab/items/{itemName}/statepredicted |
ItemStateChangedEvent | The state of an item has changed. | openhab/items/{itemName}/statechanged |
GroupItemStateChangedEvent | The state of a group item has changed through a member. | openhab/items/{itemName}/{memberName}/statechanged |
Note
The ItemStateEvent
is always sent if the state of an item is updated, even if the state did not change.
ItemStateChangedEvent
is sent only if the state of an item was really changed.
It contains the old and the new state of the item.
The GroupItemStateChangedEvent
is sent only if the state of a group item was changed by a member.
It contains the old and the new state of the group item as well as the member.
# Thing Events
Event | Description | Topic |
---|---|---|
ThingAddedEvent | A thing has been added to the thing registry. | openhab/things/{thingUID}/added |
ThingRemovedEvent | A thing has been removed from the thing registry. | openhab/things/{thingUID}/removed |
ThingUpdatedEvent | A thing has been updated in the thing registry. | openhab/things/{thingUID}/updated |
ThingStatusInfoEvent | The status of a thing is updated. | openhab/things/{thingUID}/status |
ThingStatusInfoChangedEvent | The status of a thing changed. | openhab/things/{thingUID}/statuschanged |
Note
The ThingStatusInfoEvent
is always sent if the status info of a thing is updated, even if the status did not change.
ThingStatusInfoChangedEvent
is sent only if the status of a thing was really changed.
It contains the old and the new status of the thing.
# Inbox Events
Event | Description | Topic |
---|---|---|
InboxAddedEvent | A discovery result has been added to the inbox. | openhab/inbox/{thingUID}/added |
InboxRemovedEvent | A discovery result has been removed from the inbox. | openhab/inbox/{thingUID}/removed |
InboxUpdateEvent | A discovery result has been updated in the inbox. | openhab/inbox/{thingUID}/updated |
# Link Events
Event | Description | Topic |
---|---|---|
ItemChannelLinkAddedEvent | An item channel link has been added to the registry. | openhab/links/{itemName}-{channelUID}/added |
ItemChannelLinkRemovedEvent | An item channel link has been removed from the registry. | openhab/links/{itemName}-{channelUID}/removed |
# Channel Events
Event | Description | Topic |
---|---|---|
ChannelTriggeredEvent | A channel has been triggered. | openhab/channels/{channelUID}/triggered |
# Receive Events
This section describes how to receive openHAB events in Java.
An event subscriber defines the callback interface for receiving events from the openHAB event bus.
The following Java snippet shows how to receive ItemStateEvent
s and ItemCommandEvent
s from the event bus.
Therefore, the EventSubscriber
interface must be implemented.
public class SomeItemEventSubscriber implements EventSubscriber {
private final Set<String> subscribedEventTypes = ImmutableSet.of(ItemStateEvent.TYPE, ItemCommandEvent.TYPE);
private final EventFilter eventFiter = new TopicEventFilter("openhab/items/ItemX/.*");
@Override
public Set<String> getSubscribedEventTypes() {
return subscribedEventTypes;
}
@Override
public EventFilter getEventFilter() {
return eventFilter;
}
@Override
public void receive(Event event) {
String topic = event.getTopic();
String type = event.getType();
String payload = event.getPayload();
if (event instanceof ItemCommandEvent) {
ItemCommandEvent itemCommandEvent = (ItemCommandEvent) event;
String itemName = itemCommandEvent.getItemName();
Command command = itemCommandEvent.getItemCommand();
// ...
} else if (event instanceof ItemStateEvent) {
ItemStateEvent itemStateEvent = (ItemStateEvent) event;
// ...
}
}
}
The SomeItemEventSubscriber
is subscribed to the event types ItemStateEvent
and ItemCommandEvent
, provided by the method getSubscribedEventTypes()
.
A string representation of an event type can be found by a public member TYPE
which usually presents the name of the class.
To subscribe to all available event types, use the public member ALL_EVENT_TYPES
of the event subscriber interface.
The event subscriber provides a TopicEventFilter
which is a default openHAB EventFilter
implementation that ensures filtering of events based on a topic.
The argument of the filter is a Java regular expression (opens new window).
The filter method EventFilter.apply()
will be called for each event on the event bus to which the event subscriber is subscribed (in the example above ItemStateEvent
and ItemCommandEvent
).
If the filter applies (in the given example for all item events with the item name "ItemX"), the event will be received by the EventSubscriber.receive()
method.
Received events can be cast to the event implementation class for further processing.
Each event subscriber must be registered via OSGi Declarative Services (DS) under the org.openhab.core.event.EventSubscriber
interface.
<scr:component xmlns:scr="https://www.osgi.org/xmlns/scr/v1.1.0" immediate="true" name="SomeItemEventSubscriber">
<implementation class="org.openhab.core.items.events.SomeItemEventSubscriber"/>
<service>
<provide interface="org.openhab.core.events.EventSubscriber"/>
</service>
</scr:component>
The listing below summarizes some best practices in order to implement event subscribers:
- To subscribe to only one event type openHAB provides the
org.openhab.core.events.AbstractTypedEventSubscriber
implementation. To receive an already cast event thereceiveTypedEvent(T)
method must be implemented. To provide an event filter the methodgetEventFilter()
can be overridden. - openHAB provides an
AbstractItemEventSubscriber
class in order to receiveItemStateEvents
andItemCommandEvents
(more information can be obtained in the next chapter). - To filter events based on a topic the
org.openhab.core.events.TopicEventFilter
implementation from the openHAB core bundle can be used. The filtering is based on Java regular expression (opens new window). - The subscribed event types and the filter should be stored as class members (see example above) due to performance reasons.
- If the subscribed event types are sufficient in order to receive all interested events, do not return any filter (in that case the method getFilter() returns null) due to performance reasons.
- Avoid the creation of too many event subscribers. Similar event types can be received in one event subscriber.
- Handle exceptions in event subscriber implementation and throw only serious exceptions. Thrown exceptions will be handled in the framework by logging an error message with the cause.
- The receive method should terminate quickly, since it blocks other event subscribers. Create a thread for long running operations.
# Receive ItemStateEvents and ItemCommandEvents
Due to the fact that receiving ItemStateEvents
and ItemCommandEvents
is a common use case, openHAB provides an abstract event subscriber implementation via the core bundle.
The class org.openhab.core.items.events.AbstractItemEventSubscriber
provides two methods receiveUpdate(ItemStateEvent)
and receiveCommand(ItemCommandEvent)
which can be implemented in order to receive and handle such events.
public class SomeItemEventSubscriber extends AbstractItemEventSubscriber {
private final EventFilter eventFiter = new TopicEventFilter("openhab/items/ItemX/.*");
@Override
public EventFilter getEventFilter() {
return eventFilter;
}
@Override
protected void receiveCommand(ItemCommandEvent commandEvent) {
// do something
}
@Override
protected void receiveUpdate(ItemStateEvent stateEvent) {
// do something
}
}
# Send Events
Usually the core events are only sent by the openHAB framework.
However, it is possible to sent events explicitly, e.g. ItemCommandEvent
s and ItemStateEvent
s.
The Java snippet below illustrates how to send events via the EventPublisher
.
The openHAB core events can only be created via the corresponding event factory.
public class SomeComponentWantsToPost {
private EventPublisher eventPublisher;
public void postSomething() {
ItemCommandEvent itemCommandEvent = ItemEventFactory.createCommandEvent("ItemX", OnOffType.ON);
eventPublisher.post(itemCommandEvent);
}
@Reference
public void setEventPublisher(EventPublisher eventPublisher) {
this.eventPublisher = eventPublisher;
}
public void unsetEventPublisher(EventPublisher eventPublisher) {
this.eventPublisher = null;
}
}
The EventPublisher
will be injected via OSGi Declarative Services.
# Define new Event Types
openHAB provides the possibility to easily implement new event types and event factories.
Events can be added by implementing the Event
interface or extending the AbstractEvent
class which offers a default implementation.
Both classes are located in the openHAB core bundle.
The following Java snippet shows a new event type extending the class AbstractEvent
.
public class SunriseEvent extends AbstractEvent {
public static final String TYPE = SunriseEvent.class.getSimpleName();
private final SunriseDTO sunriseDTO;
SunriseEvent(String topic, String payload, SunriseDTO sunriseDTO) {
super(topic, payload, null);
this.sunriseDTO = sunriseDTO;
}
@Override
public String getType() {
return TYPE;
}
public SunriseDTO getSunriseDTO() {
return sunriseDTO;
}
@Override
public String toString() {
return "Sunrise at '" + getSunriseDTO.getTime() + "'.";
}
}
The listing below summarizes some coding guidelines as illustrated in the example above:
- Events should only be created by event factories. Constructors do not have any access specifier in order to make the class package private.
- The serialization of the payload into a data transfer object (e.g.
SunriseDTO
) should be part of the event factory and will be assigned to a class member via the constructor. - A public member
TYPE
represents the event type as string representation and is usually the name of the class. - The
toString()
method should deliver a meaningful string since it is used for event logging. - The source of an event can be
null
if not required.
For more information about implementing an event, please refer to the Java documentation.
# Define new Event Factory
Event factories can be added by implementing the EventFactory
interface or extending the AbstractEventFactory
class.
The AbstractEventFactory
provides some useful utility for parameter validation and payload serialization & deserialization with JSON.
The classes are located in the openHAB core bundle.
public class SunEventFactory extends AbstractEventFactory {
private static final String SUNRISE_EVENT_TOPIC = "openhab/sun/{time}/sunrise";
public SunEventFactory() {
super(Sets.newHashSet(SunriseEvent.TYPE);
}
@Override
protected Event createEventByType(String eventType, String topic, String payload, String source) throws Exception {
if (SunriseEvent.TYPE.equals(eventType)) {
return createSunriseEvent(topic, payload);
}
return null;
}
private Event createSunriseEvent(String topic, String payload) {
SunriseDTO sunriseDTO = deserializePayload(payload, SunriseDTO.class);
return new SunriseEvent(topic, payload, sunriseDTO);
}
public static SunriseEvent createSunriseEvent(Sunrise sunrise) {
String topic = buildTopic(SUNRISE_EVENT_TOPIC, sunrise.getTime());
SunriseDTO sunriseDTO = map(sunrise);
String payload = serializePayload(sunriseDTO);
return new SunriseEvent(topic, payload, sunriseDTO);
}
}
The listing below summarizes some guidelines as illustrated in the example above:
- Provide the supported event types (
SunriseEvent.TYPE
) via anAbstractEventFactory
constructor call. The supported event types will be returned by theAbstractEventFactory.getSupportedEventTypes()
method. - The event factory defines the topic (
SUNRISE_EVENT_TOPIC
) of the supported event types. Please ensure that the topic format follows the topic structure of the openHAB core events, similar to a REST URI ({namespace}/{entityType}/{entity}/{sub-entity-1}/.../{sub-entity-n}/{action}
). The namespace must beopenhab
. - Implement the method
createEventByType(String eventType, String topic, String payload, String source)
to create a new event based on the topic and the payload, determined by the event type. This method will be called by the framework in order to dispatch received events to the corresponding event subscribers. If the payload is serialized with JSON, the methoddeserializePayload(String payload, Class<T> classOfPayload)
can be used to deserialize the payload into a data transfer object. - Provide a static method to create event instances based on a domain object (Item, Thing, or in the example above
Sunrise
). This method can be used by components in order to create events based on domain objects which should be sent by the EventPublisher. If the data transfer object should be serialized into a JSON payload, the methodserializePayload(Object payloadObject)
can be used. Custom event factories must be registered as an OSGi Service (eg. by using the @Component annotation) in order to receive the custom events.