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Ambiligth

Ambiligth is a highly optimized, cross-platform Rust application that captures your screen's dominant color in real-time and synchronizes it with your smart lights via Home Assistant. It acts as a software-based "Ambilight" for your monitor, creating an immersive viewing experience.

Features

  • Cross-Platform Screen Capture:
    • Linux (via grim-rs)
    • macOS (via CoreGraphics)
    • Windows (via GDI / BitBlt)
  • Advanced Color Processing: Uses okmain (Oklab color space) to accurately and efficiently extract the perceptual dominant color of the screen.
  • Smart Image Diffing: Uses image-compare (MSSIM simple algorithm) to perceptually compare screen frames. It only sends updates to Home Assistant if the screen content has changed significantly, preventing API spam and light flickering.
  • RGBW/RGBWW Support: Intelligently preserves brightness and white channels for advanced smart lights, updating only the color values.
  • Smooth Transitions & Filtering: Built-in exponential smoothing and configurable Home Assistant transition times.
  • Auto-Restore: Optionally takes a snapshot of your lights' state on startup and restores them to their original colors when you exit the program.

Prerequisites

  • Rust (cargo)
  • A running Home Assistant instance with a Long-Lived Access Token.
  • Color-capable smart lights integrated into Home Assistant.
  • Optional: nix (if you are using the provided Nix flake environment).

Configuration

Ambiligth is configured via a config.toml file in the root of the project, or via environment variables (e.g., HA_URL, HA_TOKEN).

Create a config.toml file with the following options:

# Your Home Assistant URL (default: "http://localhost:8123")
ha_url = "http://192.168.1.100:8123"

# Your Long-Lived Access Token (Required)
ha_token = "ey..."

# Target Frames Per Second to process (default: 1)
target_fps = 1

# Color smoothing factor from 0.0 to 1.0 (default: 0.0)
# Higher values mean slower, smoother color transitions.
smoothing = 0.5

# Time in seconds for the lights to transition to the new color (default: 0.5)
transition = 0.5

# Minimum perceptual difference percentage to trigger an update (default: 1.0)
# Increase this if lights are flickering on mostly static screens.
min_diff_percent = 2.0

# Restore lights to their original state on exit (default: true)
restore_on_exit = true

# List of specific light entity IDs to control. 
# If left empty, it will auto-detect all color-capable lights.
lights = [
    "light.monitor_backlight",
    "light.desk_strip"
]

Running the Application

Because screen capture and image processing are highly CPU-intensive, you must run this application in release mode to achieve real-time performance and avoid high CPU usage.

# Standard cargo run
cargo run --release

# If you are using the Nix dev shell
nix develop -c cargo run --release

How It Works

  1. Capture: Takes a fast, SIMD-optimized screenshot using platform-native APIs.
  2. Diff: Compares the new screenshot against the previous one using Structural Similarity (MSSIM). If the difference is below min_diff_percent, it skips the update.
  3. Analyze: Calculates the dominant color of the current frame using the Oklab color space.
  4. Smooth: Blends the new dominant color with the previous one based on the smoothing factor.
  5. Update: Constructs a highly specific JSON payload for Home Assistant, ensuring white channels and brightness are preserved, and sends it asynchronously via reqwest.
Description
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Readme 1.3 MiB
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Rust 95.6%
Nix 4.4%