How can I listen for 'usb device inserted' events in Linux, in Python?

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再見小時候
再見小時候 2020-11-27 09:48

I\'d like to write a Python script for Amarok in Linux to automatically copy the stackoverflow podcast to my player. When I plug in the player, it would mount the drive, cop

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  • 2020-11-27 10:36

    Update: As said in comments, Hal is not supported in recent distributions, the standard now is udev, Here is a small example that makes use of glib loop and udev, I keep the Hal version for historical reasons.

    This is basically the example in the pyudev documentation, adapted to work with older versions, and with the glib loop, notice that the filter should be customized for your specific needing:

    import glib
    
    from pyudev import Context, Monitor
    
    try:
        from pyudev.glib import MonitorObserver
    
        def device_event(observer, device):
            print 'event {0} on device {1}'.format(device.action, device)
    except:
        from pyudev.glib import GUDevMonitorObserver as MonitorObserver
    
        def device_event(observer, action, device):
            print 'event {0} on device {1}'.format(action, device)
    
    context = Context()
    monitor = Monitor.from_netlink(context)
    
    monitor.filter_by(subsystem='usb')
    observer = MonitorObserver(monitor)
    
    observer.connect('device-event', device_event)
    monitor.start()
    
    glib.MainLoop().run()
    

    Old version with Hal and d-bus:

    You can use D-Bus bindings and listen to DeviceAdded and DeviceRemoved signals. You will have to check the capabilities of the Added device in order to select the storage devices only.

    Here is a small example, you can remove the comments and try it.

    import dbus
    import gobject
    
    class DeviceAddedListener:
        def __init__(self):
    

    You need to connect to Hal Manager using the System Bus.

            self.bus = dbus.SystemBus()
            self.hal_manager_obj = self.bus.get_object(
                                                  "org.freedesktop.Hal", 
                                                  "/org/freedesktop/Hal/Manager")
            self.hal_manager = dbus.Interface(self.hal_manager_obj,
                                              "org.freedesktop.Hal.Manager")
    

    And you need to connect a listener to the signals you are interested on, in this case DeviceAdded.

            self.hal_manager.connect_to_signal("DeviceAdded", self._filter)
    

    I'm using a filter based on capabilities. It will accept any volume and will call do_something with if, you can read Hal documentation to find the more suitable queries for your needs, or more information about the properties of the Hal devices.

        def _filter(self, udi):
            device_obj = self.bus.get_object ("org.freedesktop.Hal", udi)
            device = dbus.Interface(device_obj, "org.freedesktop.Hal.Device")
    
            if device.QueryCapability("volume"):
                return self.do_something(device)
    

    Example function that shows some information about the volume:

         def do_something(self, volume):
            device_file = volume.GetProperty("block.device")
            label = volume.GetProperty("volume.label")
            fstype = volume.GetProperty("volume.fstype")
            mounted = volume.GetProperty("volume.is_mounted")
            mount_point = volume.GetProperty("volume.mount_point")
            try:
                size = volume.GetProperty("volume.size")
            except:
                size = 0
    
            print "New storage device detectec:"
            print "  device_file: %s" % device_file
            print "  label: %s" % label
            print "  fstype: %s" % fstype
            if mounted:
                print "  mount_point: %s" % mount_point
            else:
                print "  not mounted"
            print "  size: %s (%.2fGB)" % (size, float(size) / 1024**3)
    
    if __name__ == '__main__':
        from dbus.mainloop.glib import DBusGMainLoop
        DBusGMainLoop(set_as_default=True)
        loop = gobject.MainLoop()
        DeviceAddedListener()
        loop.run()
    
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  • 2020-11-27 10:37

    I think D-Bus would work as Chris mentioned, but if you're using KDE4, you might use the Solid framework in a manner similar to the KDE4 "New Device Notifier" applet.

    The C++ source for that applet is here, which shows how to use Solid to detect new devices. Use PyKDE4 for Python bindings to these libraries, as shown here.

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  • 2020-11-27 10:40

    Here is a solution in 5 lines.

    import pyudev
    
    context = pyudev.Context()
    monitor = pyudev.Monitor.from_netlink(context)
    monitor.filter_by(subsystem='usb')
    
    for device in iter(monitor.poll, None):
        if device.action == 'add':
            print('{} connected'.format(device))
            # do something very interesting here.
    

    Save this to a file say usb_monitor.py, run python monitor.py. Plug any usb and it will print device details

    → python usb_monitor.py 
    Device('/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:14.0/usb1/1-6/1-6:1.0') connected
    Device('/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:14.0/usb1/1-1/1-1:1.0') connected
    

    Tested on Python 3.5 with pyudev==0.21.0.

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  • 2020-11-27 10:45

    I haven't tried writing such a program myself, however I've just looked at the following two links (thanks Google!), which I think will be of help:

    • dbus-python tutorial (which talks about how to use Python to access D-Bus)
    • HAL 0.5.10 Specification (which talks about how HAL publishes events to D-Bus)

    In particular, read about the org.freedesktop.Hal.Manager interface, and its DeviceAdded and DeviceRemoved events. :-)

    Hope this helps!

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