Raspberry: Difference between revisions
Line 1,142: | Line 1,142: | ||
= Other cool stuff = | = Other cool stuff = | ||
== Home Automation == | |||
* [http://makezine.com/projects/building-a-home-automation-system-with-openhab-to-control-leds-wirelessly/ OpenHAB] | |||
== Track Internet Dropouts == | == Track Internet Dropouts == | ||
* http://makezine.com/projects/send-ticket-isp-when-your-internet-drops/. Keywords: speedtest-cli, cron, IFTTT, google spreadsheet. | * http://makezine.com/projects/send-ticket-isp-when-your-internet-drops/. Keywords: speedtest-cli, cron, IFTTT, google spreadsheet. |
Revision as of 10:56, 12 February 2016
Raspberry Pi
Miscellaneous
- Raspberry pi quick start guide
- Learn and make resources from raspberrypi.org.
- http://elinux.org/RPi_Hub
- http://www.raspberrypi-spy.co.uk/
- wifi setup
# /etc/network/interfaces file auto wlan0 allow-hotplug wlan0 iface wlan0 inet dhcp allow-hotplug wlan0 wpa-ssid "YOURSSID" wpa-psk "YOURPASSWORD
- Berryboot for multiple boots
- video player: omxplayer videofile.mp4. See also the Android app OMX Remote (Raspberry Pi).
- force sound output from analog
- mp3 player: mpg321 "my file.mp3". See https://sites.google.com/site/semilleroadt/home/raspberry-pi about testing sound on Raspberry Pi.
- raspberry pi server
- re-run configuration
- MagPi: The Unofficial Raspberry Pi Magazine—Published around eight times a year, MapPi is a free and polished electronic magazine for Pi hobbyists.
- ODROID Magazine
- HTG guide to getting started with Raspberry Pi
- A month with raspbian and my Beaglebone page about how to fix/change date/time.
- My youtube video demostrating GPIO function.
- N900 as a remote display
- Use Raspberry Pi behind a proxy http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=63&t=13986
- May 2013 issue of Linux Journal
- check current temperatury and cpu freq or this one which contains other RaspPi tricks.
cat /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone0/temp
This is similar but not the same as the Udoo case where it uses cat /sys/devices/virtual/thermal/thermal_zone0/temp
Different generations
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raspberry_Pi
- Raspberry Pi b+
- Raspberry Pi 2 (This has an identical form-factor to the existing Raspberry Pi 1 Model B+)
- Raspberry Pi model B vs B+
Displayport connection
Does not work if I use a hdmi to displayport converter. In general, 'step up' is not working but 'step down' is OK. See discussion.
Under voltage
he red LED going out is an indicator that the supply voltage is too low. You should also see a small coloured square in the top corner of the screen. See the posts
- https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=63&t=102814&p=711578
- https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=63&t=103099&p=713298
Install minimal browser
Note that at the end of sudo make install, it will create an item in the menu -> Internet. From the installation output,
sudo install -g dialout web /usr/bin sudo install -g audio piradio /usr/local/bin sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/piradio sudo cp ./web.desktop /usr/share/applications sudo cp ./minimalwebbrowser.png /usr/share/pixmaps sudo cp ./web.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1 sudo cp ./web-omxplayer.sh /usr/local/bin sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/web-omxplayer.sh
Assign .local domain to Raspberry Pi
Avahi Daemon = Bonjour = Zeroconf = UDP multicast
http://www.howtogeek.com/167190/how-and-why-to-assign-the-.local-domain-to-your-raspberry-pi/
So I can use ssh [email protected] to access RPi.
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install avahi-daemon # No reboot is necessary for raspberry pi # from other machines or even Raspi itself ping raspberrypi.local
The idea was first discovered in Beaglebone.
HDMI screen resolution
If the screen size is small (i.e. you can see black margins on 4 sides), uncomment the line about disable_overscan=1.
# sudo nano /boot/config.txt disable_overscan=1
On my SainSmart 9" monitor, its native resolution 1024x600 is not supported by Raspberry Pi (/boot/config.txt). The resolution becomes 1280x720 if I don't modify anything.
However, there is a workaround on raspberry pi forum. This technique works on Ubuntu-Mate 15 and Raspbian Jessie versions. The two lines (hdmi_group and hdmi_mode) are quite mysterious on Raspbian Jessie but more clear on Ubuntu-Mate.
... #hdmi_ignore_edid=0xa5000080 hdmi_cvt=1024 600 60 3 0 0 0 hdmi_group=2 hdmi_mode=87 disable_overscan=1
HDMI monitor
- It works on my Samsung monitor S22C350 (1920x1080).
- SainSmart 7" LCD Display Touch Screen TFT Monitor from amazon or from sainsmart.com. 800x480. $39.99 no touch screen, or $49.99 w/ touch screen. Good reviews.
- 10.1 inch LCD Display 1366x768 HDMI/VGA/NTSC/PAL there are several issues (poor picture quality, flicker a couple times a second, Overheating, nothing appears on the display) reported in comments.
- 10" inch TFT LCD Display w/ HDMI+VGA+Video Driver Board for Raspberry Pi
- 7" TFT LCD Screen Display Monitor for Raspberry Pi B B+ HDMI Board w/ Clear Case
Audio output
https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/configuration/audio-config.md
Method 1 (works on Raspbian or Ubuntu)
amixer cset numid=3 1
Method 2 (works only on Raspbian)
sudo raspi-config
Select Option 8 Advanced Options and hit Enter, then select Option A6: Audio and hit Enter.
Method 3. Edit /boot/config.txt and setting hdmi_drive variable or hdmi_ignore_edid_audio variable. See the Raspberry Pi config.txt web page.
The official Raspberry Pi DSI touch display
- https://www.raspberrypi.org/blog/the-eagerly-awaited-raspberry-pi-display/. There are two videos demonstrating the (multipoint) touch functionality using Kivy (Python GUI development system) library on the website.
800×480 display @60fps, 24-bit colour, FT5406 10 point capacitive touchscreen, 70 degree viewing angle, Metal-backed display with mounting holes for the Pi
Adafruit touch screen for Raspi
- PiTFT Assembled 320x240 2.8" TFT $35
RCA video output resolution
http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=29&t=47527
Hardware acceleration video player
Use omxplayer not VLC. When I use omxplayer to play mp4 videos, htop shows CPUs are not used and the playback is quite smooth. VLC will have a hard time playing the mp4 videos (black screen) not to say all 4 cores are 100% busy on Raspi2.
- http://elinux.org/Omxplayer
- http://kodi.wiki/view/Raspberry_Pi_FAQ
- Minimal Kiosk Browser: Kweb - Fast Reliable Web Browser for Raspberry Pi PC.
- Linuc command to query video driver
lspci -nnk | grep -i vga -A3 | grep 'in use'
It shows 'nouvea' for my PC Desktop which uses NVIDIA gpu. The command does not work on my Ubuntu-Mate.
pi@pi-ubuntu:~$ lspci -nnk | grep -i vga -A3 | grep 'in use' pcilib: Cannot open /proc/bus/pci lspci: Cannot find any working access method.
Memory
When I use 'free -m' or 'htop' command in Raspbian, I see the total memory size only 373MB (Beaglebone black shows 496MB in htop). The reason is Raspbian reserved 128MB for GPU. See
cat /boot/config.txt
Watch youtube with Raspbian
- http://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=40860
- http://www.raspi.today/5-things-you-need-to-know-about-the-raspberry-pis-epiphany-web-browser/ and an announcement from raspberrypi.org.
- http://www.raspians.com/Knowledgebase/how-to-watch-youtube-on-the-raspberry-pi/
- http://raspberrypi.stackexchange.com/questions/13955/watch-youtube-in-browser-with-raspbian
- http://93.93.128.176/forums/viewtopic.php?t=59384&p=445257
Probably a practical approach is to use 'youtube-dl' program to download the video and then use 'omxplayer' to play it (not streaming anyway).
Startup script
- http://www.stuffaboutcode.com/2012/06/raspberry-pi-run-program-at-start-up.html. The procedure works for tightvncserver and live-streaming examples. Note that running tightvncserver will use a lot of Raspberry Pi CPU (> 80%).
sudo nano /etc/init.d/NameOfYourScript # Create script in /etc/init.d sudo chmod 755 /etc/init.d/NameOfYourScript # Make script executable sudo /etc/init.d/NameOfYourScript start # Test starting the program sudo /etc/init.d/NameOfYourScript stop # Test stopping the program # Register your script to be run at start-up and shutdown, run the following command: sudo update-rc.d NameOfYourScript defaults # If you ever want to remove the script from start-up, run the following command: sudo update-rc.d -f NameOfYourScript remove
Benchmark
- Raspberry Pi 2 runs nbench and sysbench by Adafruit.
- hackday.com. It includes info about OpenGL benchmark.
- http://www.linuxlinks.com/article/20150305172325136/RaspberryPi2-Benchmarks.html
OpenGL
Installation
Make sure to use a class 10 (micro)SD card to avoid a hanging problem. This rule applies to other SoC device like Beaglebone and Udoo.
Download an image
The best way of using Raspberry Pi is being able to run multiboot; that is, we have a list of operating systems we can choose to boot.
- NOOBS
- BerryBoot (just a simple operating system installer, the camera cannot be enabled. The multiple choices of OSs in BerryBoot is now available in NOOBS)
Format a SD card using SD Formatter (Windows & Mac)
Install an image to a SD card
For example, if I want to install coder, I first download/uncompress the file. Then from the linux command line (assume microSD card is on /dev/sdc)
sudo umount /dev/sdc* sudo dd bs=4M if=Downloads/coder_v0.4/raspi.img of=/dev/sdc sudo sync
If I want to watch the progress, I can open another terminal and issue
sudo pkill -USR1 -n -x dd
Monitor the progress using pipe viewer
- http://blog.urfix.com/9-tricks-pv-pipe-viewer/
- http://askubuntu.com/questions/215505/how-do-you-monitor-the-progress-of-dd
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/core_utilities
sudo apt-get install pv dd if=/dev/urandom | pv | dd of=/dev/null
Wifi setup
A new wifi setup is included in the Raspbian. It is called dhcpcd and dhcpcd-ui. The package name is called 'raspberrypi-net-mods'. PS. the old way is called 'wpa_gui'.
See the blog on May 5, 2015.
Remote desktop
Connection to Raspberry Pi with tightvnc
- http://elinux.org/RPi_VNC_Server
- https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Lubuntu/RemoteDesktop (Lubuntu specific)
- http://www.howtogeek.com/141157/how-to-configure-your-raspberry-pi-for-remote-shell-desktop-and-file-transfer/2/
A simple password like 'raspberry' would work. If we need to reset the password, use vncpasswd command.
# Server side sudo apt-get install tightvncserver tightvncserver # You will require a password to access your desktops. # Password: # Warning: password truncated to the length of 8. # Verify: # Would you like to enter a view-only password (y/n)? n # # New 'X' desktop is raspberrypi:1 # # Creating default startup script /home/pi/.vnc/xstartup # Starting applications specified in /home/pi/.vnc/xstartup # Log file is /home/pi/.vnc/raspberrypi:1.log ps -ef | grep tightvnc # pi 3134 1 0 16:59 pts/0 00:00:00 Xtightvnc :1 -desktop X -auth /home/pi/.Xauthority # -geometry 1024x768 -depth 24 -rfbwait 120000 -rfbauth /home/pi/.vnc/passwd -rfbport 5901 -fp # /usr/share/fonts/X11/misc/,/usr/share/fonts/X11/Type1/,/usr/share/fonts/X11/75dpi/,/usr/share/fonts/X# 11/100dpi/ -co /etc/X11/rgb # pi 3217 2666 0 17:01 pts/0 00:00:00 grep --color=auto tightvnc vncserver # This line seems not necessary vncserver –kill :1 # Client side; the most common mistake is to forget to add the port number to the IP address. sudo apt-get install xtightvncviewer xtightvncviewer 10.42.0.37:1 # It does not work if I just use raspberrypi.local:1 as the address
To start the tightvnc automatically when boot up, check out http://www.penguintutor.com/linux/tightvnc or my note on BBB.
Also note if the server uses '/usr/bin/vncserver :0', then the client uses 'xtightvncviewer 10.42.0.37'. But if the server uses '/usr/bin/vncserver :1', the client should uses 'xtightvncviewer 10.42.0.37:1', etc. Got the idea!
Note that to troubleshoot the message "GDBus Error:org freedesktop.PolicyKit1 Error.Failed; An Authentication agent already exixts for the given subject", follow the instruction at this message.
Connection from Raspberry Pi to Ubuntu
Follow the instruction and install xtightvncviewer using sudo apt-get and it works. To run the vnc client, just type 'xtightvncviewer' on the terminal.
Another instruction of using tightvnc is at http://www.penguintutor.com/linux/tightvnc.
I have successfully to follow the instruction at http://www.hiddentao.com/archives/2013/09/17/setting-up-tightvnc-on-ubuntu-12-04/ to connect to Ubuntu 12.04 (Unity desktop) from Xubuntu. After launching the following line in my local machine
ssh -L 5901:localhost:5901 [email protected]
I open another terminal window and type the following in my local machine
xtightvncviewer localhost:5901
the Ubuntu desktop appears on my local machine.
Connection from Raspberry Pi to Windows (RDP) with freerdp or rdesktop
The idea is to use Raspberry Pi as a thin client. For example, I can open two remote desktop connections to two separate Windows VMs and the RPi is still quite free in terms of its resource.
http://blog.pi3g.com/2013/04/use-windows-remote-desktop-on-the-raspberry-pi/
Method 1 Use xfreerdp program. Use Ctrl+Alt+Enter to toggle between full and regular screen. Non-full-screen-mode is useful if we want to monitor the RPi resource usage while we are using the remote desktop connection.
1. Open a root terminal. Run apt-get update apt-get install freerdp 2. Open a regular terminal. Run xfreerdp -u brb -x l -z 192.168.1.4
Method 2 We can also use rdesktop program. rdesktop is a free, open source client for Microsoft's proprietary RDP protocol. See wiki.archlinux.org for more tips and tricks about rdesktop.
1. Open a root terminal and run apt-get update apt-get install rdesktop 2. Open a regular terminal and run (-f means full screen. Or we can use -g 1280x700 to specify the display resolution) rdesktop -f -u brb 192.168.1.4
Method 3 There is also an interesting project called RPi-TC/Raspberry Pi Thin Client project. I have not tried it yet.
Raspbian
Raspbian repository and mirrors
- http://www.raspbian.org/RaspbianRepository
- http://www.raspbian.org/RaspbianMirrors
- UMD mirror (http|rsync)://mirror.umd.edu/raspbian/raspbian
Raspbian package repository URL
http://archive.raspbian.org/raspbian/pool/main/r/r-base/
Create a custom kernel using Vagrant
Emulate Raspbian on Linux/Windows
Browser
GNOME Web/Epiphany browser
This is the default in Raspbian Jessie.
Some annoying thing is the browser is using the DuckDuckGo as the search engine which is not configurable.
Some web pages cannot be shown correctly (see my comment in LuaKit)
LuaKit - an extremely lightweight browser based on webkit and GTK+
This is very cool. It solves the issue of using Web to open http://magazine.odroid.com. It even supports Adobe Flash (eg some videos from Amazon.com)
sudo apt-get install luakit
Mastering keybinds is the key to use it (Even a mouse cannot be used to close a Tab).
- https://linuxgeek1.wordpress.com/2013/07/04/luakit-a-minimalistic-webbrowser/#more-610
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Luakit
- https://github.com/mason-larobina/luakit/wiki/Beginner-Guide
Some examples:
- j/k to scroll down/up
- space or ctrl+d / Ctrl+u to scroll down/up one page
- h/l to scroll left/right
- +/- to zoom in/out.
- ctrl + o to go to the previous page. Ctrl + i to go forward.
- B for bookmark
- gB to show bookmarks
- gH to go to home page
- : command mode
- Esc normal mode
- t open webpage in new tab
- d delete current tab
- :print print page
Iceweasel browser
This browser looks like a clone of Firefox. The version in Raspbian Jessie is 38.4.0.
Firefox browser
See Iceweasel above. Firefox package has been replaced by Iceweasel so it is not available via apt-get install.
Bluetooth keyboard
The GUI program blueman does not work on the pairing step (it does not accept my entered keys) for my bluetooth keyboard (my bluetooth mouse works).
My working example is to use the command line way (bluetoothctl). The bluetoothctl utility is part of the bluez package I think. Raspbian Jessie does not have the bluez-utils package). See https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Bluetooth
# Press the 'connect' button on the bluetooth keyboard first! $ bluetoothctl # no sudo is needed [bluetooth] default-agent [bluetooth] scan on [bluetooth] pair 90:7F:61:8F:D0:38 # it will ask to enter a pin code [bluetooth] connect 90:7F:61:8F:D0:38
It is also interesting to see bluetooth related programs under /usr/bin directory. Those programs shown on my Raspbian are quite different from the ones shown on my Ubuntu 14.04.
OpenElec
I use NOOBS to install OpenElec with Raspbian.
Still there is no a regular web browser. Not a joke. Remember OpenElec is installed in multiboot mode through NOOBS. Probably a better approach is to consider Arch-Linux.
There is a program called 'Web viewer'. Wonder when would it be useful.
Need to change 2 settings in order to get date & time correctly.
Another installation method is to download/install the image directly from the OpenELEC website. See
- http://openelec.tv/get-openelec
- http://wiki.openelec.tv/index.php/HOW-TO:Installing_OpenELEC/Writing_The_Disk_Image
SMS server
Kodi black screen when exit
A temporary solution is use Ctrl + Alt + F2 then Ctrl + Alt + F1. See
- https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=91111&p=637126.
- https://gist.github.com/aperezm-vlex/75d7481afff0db8f5894 A script to fix this problem.
Corebird - twitter client
We also need automake, autoconf, autogen, intltool packages.
Unfortunately running ./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr gets stuck at the error message 'configure error: valac >= 0.28.0 is required'. At this moment, valac has a version 0.26. See https://packages.debian.org/jessie/valac.
Mate Ubuntu
The desktop looks good. But it does not include Mathematica software nor Arduino. It does include Scratch, Sonic Pi (under Programming) and Minecraft Pi (under Games).
After Raspi2 is on for several days with Firefox browser use, the memory is getting lost even Firefox is closed. top command shows /usr/sbin/irqbalance ate 48% memory. It works when I use sudo kill -9 to stop the process. See some discussions at askubuntu.com set ENABLED=0 in /etc/default/irqbalance.
The system looks very stable. See my screenshots below.
Install more screensaver themes
http://greyblake.com/blog/2013/02/02/install-more-screensavers-on-mate-desktop/
Take a look at the .desktop files under /usr/share/applications/screensavers.
Web browser
Ubuntu-Mate includes Firefox. I can feel FF is more slow than the browser in Raspbian.
Printer
When I try to add a new Printer (network printer, Brother HL-5250DN) through automatic detected method, I got an error "server-error-internal-error". When I looked at the /var/log/cups/error_log file, it showed "empty PPD file". The following two pages are helpful.
- https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/system-config-printer/+bug/254202
- http://www.openprinting.org/printer/Brother/Brother-HL-5250DN (PPD file). A copy of the ppd file (a text file) is saved on github.
The manual approach mentioned in bugs.launchpad.net (#6) works.
- System -> Adminstration -> Printers -> Add
- Enter URI and specify ipp://192.168.1.88:631/ipp as the Device URI (the address is obtained through the nmap command and look for port 631)
- Check the 2nd option 'Provide PPD file' instead of the 1st one 'Select printer from database'.
- Browse the location of the PPD file
- Continue the procedure until the end. We can print a test page to make sure the setup is successful.
The printer test page said the driver is BR5250_2.PPD and version 1.03.
PS. About the technology terms
- PPD (PostScript Printer Description)
- URI (Uniform Resource Identifier)
- IPP (Internet Printing Protocol)
Kodi
After I used apt-get to install Kodi, Kodi will not be able to launch:( On Raspbian, the Kodi installed by apt-get works!!!
Arch Linux
Kodi can be installed in ArchLinux by installing the kodi-rbp package. See wiki.archlinux.org.
Android
Assuming you have Raspi 2 B,
- RaspAnd($9), currently it is Android 5.1.
Kodi and OpenElec
- Install Kodi on Raspbian
- For some reason, I did not find 'Display Mode' option in the System > Settings > System > Video Output in the OpenElec. When I install Kodi (14.2 Mar 27 2015) in Ubuntu 14.04, I can see this option.
Then OpenElec from NOOB works fine.
What is OpenElec
Unlike other Kodi solutions, OpenELEC is not based on Ubuntu. In fact, it's not based on any Linux distribution; OpenELEC has been built from scratch specifically to act as a media center. That means it doesn't include drivers for things that just won't be used like 3G cards and graphics tablets, for example.
OpenELEC, however, only includes software required to run Kodi. Because of that it is tiny (roughly 150MB), it installs literally in minutes, and, it can boot extremely quickly in 5-20 seconds, depending on the hardware type used.
In addition, OpenELEC is designed to be managed as an appliance: it can automatically update itself and can be managed entirely from within the graphical interface. Even though it runs on Linux, you will never need to see a management console, command terminal or have Linux knowledge to use it.
Default folders for OpenElec
OpenELEC:~ # ls backup emulators music screenshots videos downloads lost+found pictures tvshows OpenELEC:~ # df -h Filesystem Size Used Available Use% Mounted on devtmpfs 165.2M 0 165.2M 0% /dev /dev/mmcblk0p5 159.8M 103.7M 56.1M 65% /flash /dev/mmcblk0p6 13.3G 706.6M 11.9G 5% /storage /dev/loop0 93.9M 93.9M 0 100% / tmpfs 170.2M 0 170.2M 0% /dev/shm tmpfs 170.2M 4.6M 165.6M 3% /run tmpfs 170.2M 0 170.2M 0% /sys/fs/cgroup tmpfs 170.2M 4.0K 170.2M 0% /tmp tmpfs 170.2M 412.0K 169.8M 0% /var /dev/mmcblk0p1 820.2M 744.4M 75.8M 91% /var/media/RECOVERY /dev/mmcblk0p3 27.0M 1.2M 23.5M 5% /var/media/SETTINGS
Fix date/time in OpenElec
http://www.htpcbeginner.com/fix-openelec-incorrect-time-raspberry-pi/
Note the original post does not work on the current Kodi 14.1. The utility /usr/sbin/ntpdate is not found. Search the keyword 'daCaPo says' on the above webpage and following his answer does solve the problem. nano /storage/.config/autostart.sh and add the following
#!/bin/sh (sleep 30; \ /sbin/ntpd -p pool.ntp.org; \ )&
Then chmod +x /storage/.config/autostart.sh. No need to reboot.
UPnP
When I enable the UPnP server function in Kodi, the Kodi can be found in the UPnp client program eg VLC (desktop), BubleUPnP, BSPlayer, Kodi, ....
The Kodi server will be seen to have Music Library and Video Library. The files in Video Library are the same as what I have in the Kodi but the Music Library does not have any songs (it only has Categories like Genres, Artists, Albums, Songs, Years, Top 100, Recently added albums, Recently played albums). According to this Kodi's wiki page: Your audio files MUST have a valid ID tag for them to work properly in the Kodi music library. . Probably it is for this reason, the songs do not appear in the UPnP client software (except the BSPlayer which can find all my songs in the music directory, but BSPlayer does not show my image files in the pictures directory. Such a pity!)
Add-ons
The USTV VoD and Navi-X and USTVNow (require US citizen & registration, free NBC, CBS, ABC, CW, FOX & PBS channels) work well. Just download the zip files in the linux and install them from xbmc -> system -> add ons -> install from local zip files.
- Power Up Your XBMC Installation with These Awesome Add-Ons
- How to Make XBMC Easier to Use (Especially for Non-Geeks)
- Keyboard shortcut. For example, backslash \ for toggle full-screen and windowed mode.
- xbmchub maintenance and fix buffering problem.
- 5 Best Live TV Addons For Kodi
- TVADDONS - A Collection of Unofficial Addons for Kodi.
Take a screenshot
ssh and run
kodi-send --action="TakeScreenshot"
A new file <screenshot000.png> will be saved under screenshots folder.
LXDE (same as Lubuntu) X11 desktop environment used by Raspbian OS
Inside .config/lxpanel is a directory with the name of your current lxsession profile - and inside this is a further subdirectory called panels.Each file in this directory is the definition of a single panel. See Magpi33.pdf.
Screenshots
Quick launch bar
To add lxterminal to quick launch bar,
Right click any empty space on taskbar -> Panel Setting -> Panel Preferences -> Panel Applets -> Application launch bar & Edit -> Accessories & lxterminal
We can use the same procedure to add Midori to the quick launch bar.
Keyboard shortcut
The shortcuts are defined in the file ~/.config/openbox/lxde-rc.xml
For example,
- open the lxpanelctl menu, click Ctrl + ESC.
- open launch an application, click Windows + r.
- Toggle full screen, Alt + F11.
- Launch task manager, Ctrl + Alt + Del.
Get internet by sharing the internet from another machine
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Internet_Share
- static iP. Set up host eth0 IP and then set up RPi IP:
- In Windows, allow Internet sharing. An IP of 192.168.0.2 will be automatically assigned to the Laptop's network card. Make static IP of 192.168.0.2 in Rasp Pi. Enter subnet mask and gateway (192.168.0.1). Also make an entry in /etc/resolv.conf with nameserver=192.168.0.1. Reboot and Rasp Pi will get Net all right.
- In Linux, An IP of 10.42.0.37 will be assigned to eth0 card. Make static IP of 10.42.0.37 in Rasp Pi. Enter subset mask and gateway (10.42.0.1). Also make an entry in /etc/resolv.conf with nameserver=10.42.0.1. Reboot and Rasp Pi will get Net all right.
- Other thoughts:
sudo nano /etc/network/interfaces iface eth0 inet static address 192.168.100.1 netmask 255.255.255.0 network 192.168.100.0 broadcast 192.168.100.255 gateway 192.168.100.254
The gateway is important and in most cases will always point to your firewalls, switch or routers IP address.
In my current setting, the host machine's eth0 has IP 10.42.0.1 (inet addr). The RPi has IP 10.42.0.37 and gateway 10.42.0.1.
$ netstat -rn Kernel IP routing table Destination Gateway Genmask Flags MSS Window irtt Iface 0.0.0.0 192.168.1.1 0.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0 wlan0 10.42.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 eth0 169.254.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.0.0 U 0 0 0 wlan0 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 wlan0
And /etc/resolv.conf may be worth to be changed too. /etc/hostname and /etc/hosts are unnecessary.
An example of /etc/resolv.conf (set up linux DNS) shown from my RPi is
nameserver 10.42.0.1
But maybe another choice is nameserver 8.8.8.8.
Some tools for discovering the IPs in a network include Fing (iOS/Android) or Scapy (python).
Get internet from mobile tethering
https://github.com/InitialState/rpi-gps/wiki/10%20Part%203.%20Mobile%20Data
IP scan tools
- arp (fastest, installed by default)
arp -a arp -a -i eth1 # if eth1 comes from a USB ethernet adapter
sudo fing -n 192.168.1.1/24
where /24 means 'network prefix' size 24 bits. Check wikipedia classless inter domain routing. For example, CIDR notation 192.168.100.0/24 would be equivalent to 192.168.100.0/255.255.255.0.
- Angry ip scanner cross platform. open source. Basic knowledge on internet protocol. However, it is slow and show all instead of found ip's.
- netbios. It does not discover linux boxes, however.
Clustering
with 2 Pis
This Linux Journal article teaches how to run GlusterFS Server on two Raspberry Pis. This is also called redundant filesystem. So if one Pi is down, the other keeps the system up.
4 Pis
http://makezine.com/projects/build-a-compact-4-node-raspberry-pi-cluster/. It also shows how to display IP on 1 4pins 16x2 LCD (worked for Arduino & Raspberry Pi). No fancy software were installed to make the cluster.
Hadoop
Qt on Raspberry Pi
Check out https://qt-project.org/wiki/Qt-RaspberryPi
Native build Qt
http://qt-project.org/wiki/Native_Build_of_Qt5_on_a_Raspberry_Pi
Qt-Creator
http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=31&t=43545
Raspberry Pi 2
Raspberry Pi 2 (Armv7 with quad core cpu and 1GB RAM) brings its hardware to the minimum requirements for several interesting projects. I got one from my local microcenter store ($35 + tax).
One interesting thing is the Raspbian or Docker supports Raspberry Pi 1 and 2 (different ARM architectures).
Ubuntu Snappy
Some more information about ubuntu snappy (username/password is ubuntu/ubuntu):
- http://www.ubuntu.com/cloud/tools/snappy
- http://developer.ubuntu.com/en/snappy/
- http://www.ubuntu.com/things#try-beaglebone
- http://www.viclog.com/entry/snappy-raspberry-pi-2-snap-pi (this matches what I observe)
- https://darrenjw2.wordpress.com/2015/02/07/getting-started-with-snappy-ubuntu-core-on-the-raspberry-pi-2/
Suppose I connect my Raspberry Pi 2 get its internet through my computer's USB-ethernet adapter. Then once RPi 2 is on, I can open my browser on my host PC and go to http://webdm.local:4200/. It shows
Note that the SNAPPY UBUNTU CORE image for RPi seems buggy. For example,
ubuntu@localhost:~$ sudo su root@localhost:/home/ubuntu# dpkg-reconfigure tzdata cp: cannot create regular file '/etc/localtime.dpkg-new': Read-only file system Current default time zone: 'America/New_York' Local time is now: Thu Jan 1 01:01:42 UTC 1970. Universal Time is now: Thu Jan 1 01:01:42 UTC 1970. debconf: DbDriver "config": could not write /var/cache/debconf/config.dat-new: Read-only file system root@localhost:/home/ubuntu# snappy info release: ubuntu-core/devel frameworks: webdm apps: root@localhost:/home/ubuntu# snappy versions Traceback (most recent call last): File "/usr/bin/snappy", line 25, in <module> status = Main().__main__() File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/snappy/main.py", line 195, in __main__ return callback(args) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/snappy/main.py", line 334, in _do_versions click_versions = ClickDataSource().versions(all) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/snappy/click.py", line 189, in versions all_updates_list = repo.get_upgradable() File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/click/repository.py", line 183, in get_upgradable headers={"content-type": "application/json"}) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/click/network.py", line 70, in http_request curl.perform() pycurl.error: (60, 'server certificate verification failed. CAfile: /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt CRLfile: none')
Docker
http://blog.hypriot.com/heavily-armed-after-major-upgrade-raspberry-pi-with-docker-1-dot-5-0
Connect Arduino to Raspberry Pi
- See doctormonk.com where python-serial module is used and /dev/ttyACM0 is the serial port or the name for the USB interface to the Arduino Uno.
- Serial port programming
- https://learn.adafruit.com/arduino-lesson-17-email-sending-movement-detector?view=all (closer to Arduino than Raspi). See this internal link. The idea is 1. use Arduino will use PIR to sense any movement. If it detects motion, it will print a string to the serial port 2. the python program has an infinite loop that reads the serial port. If the serial port contains a string starts with the 'M' letter, it will send out an email. So the communication here is one way.
openFrameworks (oF)
openFrameworks is an open source C++ toolkit designed to assist the creative process by providing a simple and intuitive framework for experimentation.
GPIO experiments
Processing
Power off and on
http://raspi.tv/2012/making-a-reset-switch-for-your-rev-2-raspberry-pi
When we use a diy wire to connect two holes, it will shutdown the RPi immediately. If we disconnect the 2 holes, it will power on the RPi again. I tested it on my Model B running the OpenElec OS. COOL:)
For model B+/Pi 2 model B, see this post. This post also provides another way (GPIO pins 5&6) to shut down RPi.
Connect to console using TTL/Serial cable
I purchased the TTL cable through dealextream.com. The RaspPi is power by the microUSB (Or we can use the 5V pin on TTL module to connect to 5V on RaspPi. If I try to use 3.3V pin on TTL module to connect to either 3.3V or 5V on RaspPi, it does not work). The connection is done by
RaspPi TTL ========= 5V 5V GND GND TX (14) RX RX (15) TX
Note that it takes 45 seconds for the screen to respond when I tested it using Putty. The ACT and PWR lights should be on. The tuturial on adafruit is helpful.
C libraries
- wiringPi and GPIO examples
- http://www.airspayce.com/mikem/bcm2835/
- http://elinux.org/RPi_Low-level_peripherals
- C vs Python
GPIO layout
The following picture was taken from www.raspberrypi-spy.co.uk
The following cheatsheet was taken from http://raspi.tv/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/raspberry-pi-gpio-cheat-sheet.jpg
WebIOPi
WebIOPi is a REST framework and a webapp which allows you to control Raspberry Pi's GPIO. It does not require apache to be installed. So we can use web browser from Android to control the GPIO in Raspbery Pi ... Another choice is Web.py.
Run Python using webiopi module
sudo python -m webiopi 8000
Start/stop the background service
sudo /etc/init.d/webiopi start sudo /etc/init.d/webiopi end
Start webiopi at startup:
sudo update-rc.d webiopi defaults
Note that we shall browse to http://localhost:8000/ instead of http://localhost:8000/webiopi. If something is still wrong, use a different port. The default user is "webiopi" and password is "raspberry".
It seems the code is still not stable. I kept getting a message "Error response" Error code 404. Message: Not Found. Error code explanation: 404 = Nothing matches the given URI.
Web.py
See the article The Python Pit - drive your Raspberry Pi with a mobile phone in http://www.themagpi.com/en/issue/9.
Circuit and Electronics
- http://www.scribd.com/doc/31582947/%E9%9B%BB%E8%B7%AF%E8%88%87%E9%9B%BB%E5%AD%90%E5%AD%B8-Electric-Circuits-and-Electronics
- http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/electrical-engineering-and-computer-science/6-002-circuits-and-electronics-spring-2007/
Blink a single LED
I follow the instruction in https://projects.drogon.net/raspberry-pi/gpio-examples/tux-crossing/gpio-examples-1-a-single-led/ to install gpio program/library in raspberry pi. Here is the result
- without PI cobbler: check out my video
<youtube>xWJZRK4W13Q</youtube>
- with PI cobbler: see the picture below. The soldering part is not easy for a beginner. Be sure to follow some instruction on youtube videos to begin with. Note that the white stripe is on the edge closest to the SD card.
- Another example by using C++ code. No extra library needs to be installed. http://hertaville.com/2012/11/18/introduction-to-accessing-the-raspberry-pis-gpio-in-c/. The site also shows the program to create the diagram is from http://www.fritzing.org.
- Python approach. Here it is assumed pin 9 (or 6) is used for GND and pin 11 for GPIO17 (see the GPIO layout above). The LED was connected using a 330 ohm resistor in series with pin 9 (or 6) and 11 to limit the current.
import RPi.GPIO as GPIO import time # blinking function def blink(pin): GPIO.output(pin,GPIO.HIGH) time.sleep(1) GPIO.output(pin,GPIO.LOW) time.sleep(1) return # to use Raspberry Pi board pin numbers GPIO.setmode(GPIO.BOARD) # set up GPIO output channel GPIO.setup(11, GPIO.OUT) # blink GPIO17 50 times for i in range(0,50): blink(11) GPIO.cleanup()
- Google: raspberry pi python led
RGB
http://www.instructables.com/id/Using-a-RPi-to-Control-an-RGB-LED/?ALLSTEPS
16x2 LCD
http://learn.adafruit.com/drive-a-16x2-lcd-directly-with-a-raspberry-pi. The '16x2' LCD means it can show 16 characters per row and there are 2 rows in total. Each character consists of 8x5 (height x width) dots.
http://makezine.com/projects/build-a-compact-4-node-raspberry-pi-cluster/ also tells how to show the IP on the LCD.
8x8 Matrix LED Backpack (I2C)
http://learn.adafruit.com/matrix-7-segment-led-backpack-with-the-raspberry-pi/overview
Another more versatile output from the 8x8 matrix is by using C program. See Mark Williams blog.
I also create a version of launching LED using R. See my youtube video. <youtube>TwoWrPp6_iw</youtube>
IR Remote with XBMC
http://learn.adafruit.com/using-an-ir-remote-with-a-raspberry-pi-media-center
Stepper motor
Tiddlybot
- https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1320310506/tiddlybot-fun-and-simple-raspberry-pi-robot/comments
- https://www.shopstarter.com/s/Tiddlybot/
- http://www.pibot.org/tiddlybot/
- https://github.com/Agilic-Development
- https://github.com/discoverycode/discoverybot_api The Discovery Bot
- http://www.pibot.org/tiddlybot/images/ V1.1 image download link
- http://pibot.org/forum/index.php Forum
- Two recommended wifi adapters: Edimax EW-7811Un, and the TP link TL-WN725N
- http://pibot.org/forum/index.php?topic=45.0 Pin out with a nice graph
- http://pibot.org/forum/index.php?topic=50.0 Raspi A+ is better than V2 in terms of power consumption. See also this post & this new one from raspi.tv.
The battery it includes is Nokia BL-5C 1020mAh 3.7V 3.8Wh ~ $5.35 US. Note that the battery has 3 pins. One of them labelled as T is for temperature.
To turn off the robot, switch the slider to the buzzer.
To run a small dhcp server, it uses udhcpd.
pi@raspberrypi ~ $ sudo service --status-all [ ? ] alsa-utils [ - ] bootlogs [ ? ] bootmisc.sh [ ? ] cgroup-bin [ ? ] checkfs.sh [ ? ] checkroot-bootclean.sh [ - ] checkroot.sh [ - ] console-setup [ + ] cron [ + ] dbus [ ? ] dphys-swapfile [ ? ] fake-hwclock [ + ] hostapd [ - ] hostname.sh [ ? ] hwclock.sh [ + ] ifplugd [ - ] kbd [ - ] keyboard-setup [ ? ] killprocs [ ? ] kmod [ - ] lightdm [ - ] motd [ ? ] mountall-bootclean.sh [ ? ] mountall.sh [ ? ] mountdevsubfs.sh [ ? ] mountkernfs.sh [ ? ] mountnfs-bootclean.sh [ ? ] mountnfs.sh [ ? ] mtab.sh [ ? ] networking [ - ] nfs-common [ + ] ntp [ ? ] plymouth [ ? ] plymouth-log [ - ] procps [ ? ] raspi-config [ ? ] rc.local [ - ] rmnologin [ - ] rpcbind [ - ] rsync [ + ] rsyslog [ ? ] screen-cleanup [ ? ] sendsigs [ + ] ssh [ - ] sudo [ + ] triggerhappy [ + ] udev [ ? ] udev-mtab [ ? ] udhcpd [ ? ] umountfs [ ? ] umountnfs.sh [ ? ] umountroot [ - ] urandom [ - ] x11-common
CamJam Edukit 3 Robotics Kit
Ryanteck Budget Robotics Kit
https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/ryanteck-budget-robotics-kit-for-raspberry-pi
The software control is based on Spacebrew
HummingBird robot
http://www.hummingbirdkit.com/learning/tutorials/raspberry-pi
Power Raspberry Pi by AA batteries
http://www.raspberrypi-spy.co.uk/2013/04/raspberry-pi-aa-battery-shoot-out/
This also teaches to know how long the battery will die by using Putty and linux command
watch -n 60 uptime
Power Raspberry Pi by Lipo batteries
- https://learn.adafruit.com/pocket-pigrrl?view=all
- Building our own backup server using the Raspberry PI & MainWP
Solar power
Add a push button
- https://learn.adafruit.com/playing-sounds-and-using-buttons-with-raspberry-pi?view=all Play sound
- https://sanje2v.wordpress.com/2014/02/16/adding-shutdownrestart-pushbutton-for-raspberry-pi/ shutdown
- https://embeddedcode.wordpress.com/2013/10/18/adding-a-shutdown-button-to-the-raspberry-pi/ shutdown
- http://www.raspberry-pi-geek.com/Archive/2013/01/Adding-an-On-Off-switch-to-your-Raspberry-Pi shutdown switch
- http://www.instructables.com/id/Raspberry-Pi-Internet-Monitor/?ALLSTEPS Internet monitor with a shutdown switch
Speech synthesis and a push button
Festival speech package
sudo apt-get install festival # Add voice file sudo apt-get install festvox-rablpc16k # British English sudo apt-get install festvox-kallpc16k # American English
Speaking
echo "Hello World!" | festival --tts wget http://history.eserver.org/jefferson-inaugural.txt festival --tts jefferson-inaugural.txt
Speak Easier: Flite
sudo apt-get install flite flite -t "All good men come to the aid of the rebellion" flite -f jefferson-inaugural.txt flite -lv flite -voice awb -t "The Raspberry Pi is a great Maker platform!"
Fun Uses for Speech
sudo apt-get install fortune-mod fortune | flite
Wav output
flite -t "Shall we play a game?" -o wargames1.wav aplay wargames1.wav
Reading the Weather
sudo apt-get install weather-util weather washington weather -q fips1600190345 | flite
Playing sounds using push buttons (Python).
Use a Simple Button to Control LED
The following site has some elaboration about 'pull down' of resistors. http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/projects/raspberrypi/tutorials/robot/buttons_and_switches/
Using a servo motor, PWM
http://learn.adafruit.com/adafruits-raspberry-pi-lesson-8-using-a-servo-motor?view=all
LED dimming using software PWM (pulse-width modulation)
http://raspi.tv/2013/how-to-use-soft-pwm-in-rpi-gpio-pt-2-led-dimming-and-motor-speed-control
Reading analog input using external ADC (analog to digital converter) MCP3008
Reading temperature
https://learn.adafruit.com/adafruits-raspberry-pi-lesson-11-ds18b20-temperature-sensing?view=all
Raspberry Pi has no ADC (Analog to Digital Converter), it cannot directly use an analog temperature sensor like the TMP36.
MCP23017 GPIO expander (extra 16 pins)
- http://learn.adafruit.com/mcp230xx-gpio-expander-on-the-raspberry-pi
- http://raspi.tv/2013/using-the-mcp23017-port-expander-with-wiringpi2-to-give-you-16-new-gpio-ports-part-3
Serial Peripheral interface (SPI)
http://www.brianhensley.net/2012/07/getting-spi-working-on-raspberry-pi.html
Camera
raspivid -o myvid.h264 -t 60000 # 60 seconds. Default is 6 seconds which generates 10MB for 1080p, 6.4MB for 720p. raspivid -o myvid.h264 -w 1280 -h 720 # 1280 x 720 instead of 1920 x 1080 raspivid -o myvid.h264 -w 1280 -h 720 -rot 180 # rotation 180 degree raspivid -o myvid.h264 -w 1280 -h 720 -b 8000000 # “8000000” is a bitrate of 8000Kbs (kilo bits per second) or 8Mb (8 mega bits per second). # The default is usually 17000000. # convert h264 to mp4 sudo apt-get install -y gpac MP4Box -fps 30 -add myvid.h264 myvid.mp4 # play the video omxplayer myvid.h264 omxplayer myvid.mp4
- http://elinux.org/Rpi_Camera_Module. There are several Android apps to control the camera (Pi or USB) on Raspberry Pi. For example, RaspiCam Remote.
- NoIR http://www.raspberrypi.org/learning/infrared-bird-box/
- Motion Guide
- Surveillance camera by codeproject.com. The same one is also hosted on instructables.com.
- http://www.home-automation-community.com/surveillance-with-raspberry-pi-noir-camera-howto/ (take care of user 'motion').
sudo usermod -a -G motion pi sudo chown motion:motion /home/pi/images sudo service motion start
To rotate the image, change 'rotate 0' to 'rotate 180' by sudo nano /etc/motion.conf (still not right).
- http://pingbin.com/2012/12/raspberry-pi-web-cam-server-motion/ (regular webcam is used)
- A post from opsactive.com. Similar to the above.
- Turn a Raspberry Pi into a CCTV Security System from averagemanvsraspberrypi.com.
Dash Cam
- http://pidashcam.blogspot.com/ (with mounting pictures) or http://pidashcam.blogspot.nl/
- http://www.raspberrypi-spy.co.uk/2014/11/how-to-create-a-raspberry-pi-video-capture-unit-part-1/ (with mounting pictures)
- https://programmaticponderings.wordpress.com/2013/06/30/low-cost-dashboard-camera-using-motion-ffmpeg-and-the-raspberry-pi/
- http://www.dreamgreenhouse.com/projects/2013/picar/index.php
- http://www.stuffaboutcode.com/2013/10/raspberry-pi-car-cam-gps-data-map.html
- A RASPBERRY PI HELMET CAM WITH GPS LOGGING
- DIY WiFi Raspberry Pi Touchscreen Camera
- http://zachhuff386.github.io/dashcam/
- http://hackaday.com/2014/11/01/delicious-dash-pi-driving-data/
Live streaming
Live streaming and a slightly updated one using MJPG-streamer which I have tested and it works (Jan 25, 2015). At the end, we only need to run ./start_stream.sh script to start it and then I can view the live stream by opening http://raspberrypi.local:9000/stream.html using chrome browser.
A better way to start the script is to integrate it in the boot-up. Combing both the start and stop scripts, we can create a script and save it under /etc/init.d directory. The combined script /etc/init.d/camera_stream.sh is shown below:
#! /bin/sh # If you want a command to always run, put it here # Carry out specific functions when asked to by the system case "$1" in start) if pgrep mjpg_streamer > /dev/null then echo "mjpg_streamer already running" else LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/mjpg-streamer/ /opt/mjpg-streamer/mjpg_streamer -i \ "input_raspicam.so -fps 15 -q 50 -x 640 -y 480" -o \ "output_http.so -p 9000 -w /opt/mjpg-streamer/www" > /dev/null 2>&1& echo "mjpg_streamer started" fi ;; stop) if pgrep mjpg_streamer then kill $(pgrep mjpg_streamer) > /dev/null 2>&1 echo "mjpg_streamer stopped" else echo "mjpg_streamer not running" fi ;; *) echo "Usage: /etc/init.d/camera_stream {start|stop}" exit 1 ;; esac exit 0
Note that the following warning does not affect the streaming:
$ sudo update-rc.d camera_stream.sh defaults update-rc.d: using dependency based boot sequencing insserv: warning: script 'camera_stream.sh' missing LSB tags and overrides
Live stream and Cam Web Interface
http://elinux.org/RPi-Cam-Web-Interface as used in portable streaming camera
Security Camera
- http://pimylifeup.com/raspberry-pi-security-camera/
- http://www.techradar.com/us/news/computing/how-to-guard-your-home-with-the-raspberry-pi-1301336/1
Slow motion
http://www.averagemanvsraspberrypi.com/2015/07/raspberry-pi-camera-module-slow-motion-video.html
Motion triggered infrared wildlife camera
ESP8266
Connect an ESP8266 to your RaspberryPi
IFTTT
See Fridge monitor (p41-45) of TheMagPi September 2015.
Control a 12V lamp with GPIO ZERO
http://raspi.tv/2015/gpio-zero-test-drive-making-light-of-security
Grandpa scarer & Laser cutter
https://www.raspberrypi.org/learning/grandpa-scarer/worksheet/
Other cool stuff
Home Automation
Track Internet Dropouts
- http://makezine.com/projects/send-ticket-isp-when-your-internet-drops/. Keywords: speedtest-cli, cron, IFTTT, google spreadsheet.
- PCWorld
GPS tracker
http://blog.initialstate.com/new-python-gps-tracker/
Retro Game Console/Emulator
- http://makezine.com/projects/build-retro-gaming-console-raspberry-pi/
- http://lifehacker.com/how-to-turn-your-raspberry-pi-into-a-retro-game-console-498561192
- Pixel Vision - a console capable of emulating some of the most classic game systems.
Raspberry Pi Based Wireless FM Microphone
http://www.instructables.com/id/Raspberry-Pi-Based-Wireless-Microphone/?ALLSTEPS
Dashboard/Kiosk by dashing.io
- See the article USE AN ODROID-C1 AS A WALL DASHBOARD on 2015/5 ODROID magazine
- http://www.fusonic.net/en/blog/2013/07/31/diy-info-screen-using-raspberry-pi-dashing/
- Search google: dashing raspberry pi
Go to space
- Raspberry Pi in space (nearly) 35.5 km Pi balloon launch and a GoPro version.
OpenCV
- Face recognition treasure box from adafruit.
Wii Remote, bluetooth
- Wii remote based on CWiid Python library (it works on my UDOObuntu 2). Another very similar example.
- Controlling an i-racer RC car using a Wii Balance Board and Raspberry_Pi
- Wii Nunchuck and C code. This is based on Python.
- WiiChuck Adapter
- CamJam Edukit 3 Robotics Kit no instruction.
Wii balance board
- Smart beer fridge with wii balance board and Raspberry Pi (ARM). The weight scale example works fine when I tested on UDOO. Plus there are only 3 packages to install (python-bluetooth, bluez and python-gobject).
- Wii balance board with GUI (tested it on UDOObuntu 2 beta2 based on Ubuntu 14.04.3 LTS, Nov 2015).
sudo apt-get install autoconf autogen automake gcc bluetooth libbluetooth3-dev \ libgtk2.0-dev pkg-config python2.7-dev flex bison git-core \ libbluetooth-dev python-pygame python-tk # NOTE: libbluetooth2-dev becomes libbluetooth3-dev now # python2.5-dev becomes python2.7-dev now sudo apt-get install bluez # no need to create wiibalance directory git clone https://github.com/abstrakraft/cwiid.git # the svn method does not work # 131 commits. Last commit is Feb 21, 2010. cd cwiid autoconf # if something messed up, run 'autoreconf' # Follow http://wiki.labomedia.org/index.php/Blender:Wiimote_:_Compilation_de_cwiid_sur_Linux_Mint_12 # to fix an error "wmdemo undefined reference to symbol str2ba" when running 'make' # That is, edit wmdemo/Makefile.in line 11 # LDLIBS += -lcwiid -lbluetooth # make clean ./configure # no need of '--libdir=/usr/lib' make sudo make install # Test Wii remote with GUI sudo wmgui/wmgui cd python sudo python setup.py install # install the Wii balance board software: git clone git://github.com/videntity/python-omhe.git cd python-omhe sudo python setup.py install # Install pycurl; see https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=32&t=103188 sudo apt-get install python-pycurl sudo python ./omhe/hardware/wiibalance/wiibal-weighdemo.py # Strangely, the code is for bal board but the instruction is for Wiimote # Just ignore this test and/or its result wget http://abstrakraft.org/cwiid/raw-attachment/ticket/63/scalesgui.py wget http://abstrakraft.org/cwiid/raw-attachment/ticket/63/system.ini chmod a+x scalesgui.py sudo python ./scalesgui.py # no need to change the code # <system.ini> and <scalesgui.py> are in the same dir # On my 800x480 display, I change <system.ini> file # width=1200 -> 800, height=960 -> 420, size=300 -> 50 # to exit the program you should press the “F12” key.
Robot control
- http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/projects/raspberrypi/tutorials/robot/robot_control/
- Linux User & Developer 132
Compile R from source
Tested on R 3.0.1
- cd R-3.0.1
- ./configure --with-recommended-packages=no
- sudo apt-get install openjdk-7-jdk
- nano src/library/tools/R/install.R and pass "perl = TRUE" to sub()
SHLIB_EXT <- sub(".*= ", "", grep("^SHLIB_EXT", mconf, value = TRUE), perl = TRUE) SHLIB_LIBADD <- sub(".*= ", "", grep("^SHLIB_LIBADD", mconf, value = TRUE), perl = TRUE)
to get rid of the error gcc: error: SHLIB_LIBADD: No such file or directory.
- make
Google Coder
PS. Code is based on node.js (shiny-server also depends on node.js).
http://pi.gadgetoid.com teaches us how to install Coder on a Raspberry Pi running on Raspbian. Note that Coder can turn Raspberry Pi into a web server. We can develop the code on a remote computer.
In fact, it is possible to run Code for Raspberry Pi on your own PC. Just run 7 lines of script at here. Note: My experience shows it is safe to use the version on Sep-17-2013; otherwise you'll get the following error when using 'nodejs server.js'
$ nodejs server.js no certificate found. generating self signed cert. module.js:337 throw new Error("Cannot find module '" + request + "'"); ^ Error: Cannot find module '/home/pi/coder/coder-base/apps/auth/app'
So the successful steps to install coder on Ubuntu is
- download zip file from Sep-17-2013 tree
- cd coder-base; npm install
- modify 'config.js'
- launch it by 'node server.js'.
I don't have to use sudo when I use 'npm install' and 'node server.js'.
The password requirement for coder is at least 6 characters, at least one lower case and at least 2 upper cases or numbers.
Also, on Ubuntu it will complain the user 'pi' does not exist. So we shall do this 'sudo adduser pi' too. Pick the same password as we use in coder (eg Raspberry99).
Update: After I played with it, I found Coder does not let us work on more than one HTML, CSS or Javscript file. This makes the development more difficult.
Another choice is to run Cloud9 IDE on RPi. The Cloud 9 IDE was preinstalled on Beaglebone black/
Wolframe Mathematica
- http://www.wolfram.com/raspberry-pi/
- http://www.wolfram.com/broadcast/video.php?channel=105/?fp=left&video=1571 (Video)
- http://www.raspberrypi.org/archives/5282
- http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?t=61746&p=459159 (Download locally first)
For some reason, the Mathematica is not shown on the menu (it only happened on self-installed version). We can start Mathematica from the command line
/usr/bin/mathematica
We can try a 3D plot like seen in youtube
Plot3D[Sin[x*y], {x,0,Pi}, {y,0,Pi}]
The following screenshot shows how to calculate the derivative of f(x)=sin(x)*exp(2x) using Wolfram.
- Note that the language is case-sensitive. For example, sin[x] is not recognized and it should be Sin[x].
- Wolfram language uses square brackets instead of parentheses for function's arguments.
- See this page for Wolfram language & system documentation.
- Another way is to type D[Sin[x] * Exp[2x], x]
Note that Mathematica is a GUI program so it is kind of slow when it is running on Raspberry Pi. The Wolfram program is a command line interface program so it is much faster although we can not do any plotting there.
Use RaspPi as Media Center
http://www.packtpub.com/raspberry-pi-media-center/book
Record TV
- http://www.redrobe.com/mike/record-tv-on-raspberry-pi-with-tvheadend/. This is from the same author of Raspicam Remote for Android.
Bitcoin Miner
- http://www.linuxuser.co.uk/tutorials/mine-bitcoins-with-raspberry-pi
- https://learn.adafruit.com/piminer-raspberry-pi-bitcoin-miner/initial-setup-and-assembly
Turn Raspi into a hotspot / access point
- http://elinux.org/RPI-Wireless-Hotspot (This instruction works!) See also some of my notes on Beaglebone page.
- Setting up a Raspberry Pi as a WiFi access point by installing hostapd and isc-dhcp-server packages. You can setup wlan0 in standalone mode or bridge it with eth0.
- http://raspberry-at-home.com/hotspot-wifi-access-point/
- Turn Your Raspberry Pi Into a WiFi Hotspot with Edimax Nano USB EW-7811Un. This instruction is using bridge-utils and hostapd packages.
- Setup Wireless Access Point (WAP) with Hostapd for Debian/Ubuntu by installing hostapd & bridge-utils packages.
- This is a similar post using hostapd and isc-dhcp-server packages.
Midi keyboard
Bike computer
https://www.raspberrypi.org/blog/bike-computer-for-the-myopic/ This build uses the Kindle as a display
OctoPrint
The snappy web interface for your 3D printer.
Connect your printer to a small embedded and WiFi enabled device such as the popular Raspberry Pi, install OctoPrint on it and you have an instant wireless printer.
Alternatives
- BeagleBone Black (no built-in wifi or bluetooth)
- UDOO with built-in wifi. Bluetooth relies on USB.
- ODROID (no built-in wifi or bluetooth)