Ryan Malloy e560d98f87 programs: add multi-record decoder properties (firmware >=3.0 records)
The 6 multi-record ProgType values (WHEN/AT/EVERY/AND/OR/THEN) now have
typed accessors on the Program dataclass:

  is_multi_record()  - classifier for ProgTypes 5-10
  event_id           - WHEN trigger event-id (same property as EVENT, no
                       Mon/Day swap, BE wire form)
  and_family         - AND record byte-1 family + operand bits (mirrors
                       compact-form cond's high byte: ZONE=0x04, CTRL+ON=0x0A,
                       OTHER=0x00, etc.)
  and_instance       - AND record bytes 3-4 BE u16 (zone#, unit#,
                       MiscConditional value, ...)
  every_interval     - EVERY record bytes 3-4 BE u16 (recurrence interval)

AT records reuse the existing month/day/days/hour/minute fields (same
byte layout as compact-form TIMED, just with cmd/par/pr2 zero).
OR records carry no payload — only the ProgType byte distinguishes
them. THEN records reuse cmd/par/pr2 (same layout and LE byte order
as compact-form action fields).

10 new tests cover the empirical captures from pca-re/clausal-re:

  - is_multi_record() classifier
  - WHEN event_id for Zone 5 Secure and Zone 1 Secure
  - EVERY 5 SECONDS interval decoding
  - AND IF UNIT 1 ON, AND IF ZONE 5 SECURE, AND IF NEVER family+instance
  - AT record month/day/days/hour/minute
  - OR record all-zero invariants
  - THEN record cmd/par/pr2 (UNIT 1 ON)

All byte vectors in the tests come from real PC Access captures in
pca-re/clausal-re/06-10.pca with firmware override at 3.0+.

The and_family and and_instance properties derive from the existing
cond and cond2 fields via byte-swap — disk bytes 1-4 of AND records
use BE u16 order, but Program's cond/cond2 fields are LE-decoded
(per compact-form convention). The byte-swap formula
((cond2 & 0xFF) << 8) | ((cond2 >> 8) & 0xFF) yields the BE
interpretation without re-reading raw bytes.

473 tests passing (up from 463).
2026-05-12 04:57:48 -06:00
2026-05-10 12:46:26 -06:00

omni-pca

Async Python client for HAI/Leviton Omni-Link II home automation panels — Omni Pro II, Omni IIe, Omni LTe, Lumina.

Includes a Home Assistant custom component (custom_components/omni_pca/).

Project home: https://git.supported.systems/warehack.ing/omni-pca Documentation: https://hai-omni-pro-ii.warehack.ing/

Status

Alpha. Built from a full reverse-engineering of HAI's PC Access 3.17 (the Windows installer/programmer app). The protocol layer captures two non-public quirks that public Omni-Link clients miss:

  1. Session key is not the ControllerKey. Last 5 bytes are XORed with a controller-supplied SessionID nonce.
  2. Per-block XOR pre-whitening before AES. First two bytes of every 16-byte block are XORed with the packet's sequence number.

The full byte-level protocol spec lives at https://hai-omni-pro-ii.warehack.ing/reference/protocol/.

Install

The library isn't on PyPI yet (pending), so install directly from the Gitea release:

# Pinned to a specific release (recommended)
pip install "omni-pca @ git+https://git.supported.systems/warehack.ing/omni-pca.git@v2026.5.10"

# Or the wheel from the release page
pip install https://git.supported.systems/warehack.ing/omni-pca/releases/download/v2026.5.10/omni_pca-2026.5.10-py3-none-any.whl

# Or with uv
uv add "omni-pca @ git+https://git.supported.systems/warehack.ing/omni-pca.git@v2026.5.10"

Once published to PyPI, the canonical install will be pip install omni-pca.

Quick start (library)

import asyncio
from omni_pca import OmniClient

async def main():
    async with OmniClient(
        host="192.168.1.9",
        port=4369,
        controller_key=bytes.fromhex("6ba7b4e9b4656de3cd7edd4c650cdb09"),
    ) as panel:
        info = await panel.get_system_information()
        print(info.model_name, info.firmware_version)

asyncio.run(main())

For the panel walkthrough — connect, list zones, react to push events — see the tutorial.

Two wire dialects — TCP/v2 vs UDP/v1

The Omni network module is configurable at the panel keypad to listen on TCP, UDP, or both. Each transport speaks a different wire dialect — OmniClient above handles the TCP path (OmniLink2, the modern wire format used by PC Access ≥ 3); panels configured UDP-only fall back to the legacy v1 protocol with typed RequestZoneStatus / RequestUnitStatus opcodes, no RequestProperties, and streaming name downloads. For those, use OmniClientV1 from the omni_pca.v1 subpackage:

from omni_pca.v1 import OmniClientV1

async with OmniClientV1(
    host="192.168.1.9",
    controller_key=bytes.fromhex("..."),
) as panel:
    info = await panel.get_system_information()      # same dataclass as v2
    names = await panel.list_all_names()             # streaming UploadNames
    zones = await panel.get_zone_status(1, 16)       # typed status by range
    await panel.execute_security_command(area=1, mode=SecurityMode.AWAY, code=1234)

The HA integration picks the right client automatically based on the Transport dropdown in the config flow (TCP vs UDP). See zone & unit numbering for why v1 panels need the long-form RequestUnitStatus for unit indices > 255.

Quick start (Home Assistant)

# Manual install — works on every HA flavour
cd /path/to/your/homeassistant/config/
mkdir -p custom_components
cd custom_components
git clone https://git.supported.systems/warehack.ing/omni-pca tmp-omni
cp -r tmp-omni/custom_components/omni_pca .
rm -rf tmp-omni

Restart HA, then add the integration via Settings → Devices & Services. You'll need:

  • Panel IP / hostname
  • TCP port (default 4369)
  • ControllerKey as 32 hex chars

Get the ControllerKey from your .pca file using the bundled CLI:

omni-pca decode-pca '/path/to/Your.pca' --field controller_key

The integration creates one HA device per panel plus typed entities for every named object on the controller: alarm_control_panel for areas, light for units, binary_sensor + switch for zones (state + bypass), climate for thermostats, sensor for analog zones and panel telemetry, button for panel macros, and event for the typed push-notification stream. See custom_components/omni_pca/README.md for the full entity + service catalog, or the HA install how-to for the step-by-step.

Without a panel — mock controller

The library ships a stateful MockPanel that emulates the controller side of the protocol over real TCP. Useful for offline development, integration tests, and demos:

from omni_pca.mock_panel import MockPanel

async with MockPanel(controller_key=...).serve(port=14369):
    # Connect a real OmniClient to localhost:14369 — full handshake + AES
    ...

The local dev stack (dev/docker-compose.yml) packages a real Home Assistant container and the mock panel side-by-side so you can click through the integration without touching real hardware. See the dev-stack tutorial.

Tests

uv sync --group ha
uv run pytest -q

351 tests across the protocol primitives, the mock panel, the OmniClient ↔ MockPanel end-to-end roundtrip, and an in-process Home Assistant harness driving the integration via the real config flow + service calls.

Versioning

Date-based (CalVer): YYYY.M.D. Bumped on backwards-incompatible changes. See CHANGELOG.md.

License

MIT. See LICENSE.

Acknowledgments

This client is independent and not affiliated with Leviton or HAI. Protocol details derived from clean-room analysis of the publicly-distributed PC Access installer. The reverse-engineering arc is documented at https://hai-omni-pro-ii.warehack.ing/journey/.

Description
Async Python library and Home Assistant integration for HAI/Leviton Omni Pro II / Omni IIe / Omni LTe / Lumina panels. Reverse-engineered from PC Access 3.17.
Readme MIT 10 MiB
2026-05-11 19:40:34 +00:00
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