sixbacon
Description
The Internet of Things (IOT) revolution has started. The ultra-cheap hardware has arrived arrive with the ESP8266 and the Raspberry Pi. The open source community has responded with well proven, core software modules. Putting it all together in an expandable system is still slightly daunting, especially if you want to keep control of your data by avoiding cloud services.
This project demonstrates transmitting data from a wifi-enabled, microcontroller based on the ESP8266, store it and display it in a web page on a local network. By using well proven core modules, glued together by simple, custom interface scripts, a robust system is produced, which, with straightforward modification, can be adapted to a wide range of applications. The general organisation is shown below –
One Raspberry Pi based, data and local web server can easily handle a number of IOT units supplying other data by just changing or adding a few scripts. My own plan is to extend the system to include temperature, sunshine, lightning activity, background radiation and heating oil level in the near future. These will all be built on ESP8266 devices, most likely the ESP12. All the data will be under local control, securely behind a firewall.
Dual Pulse Count Logger Example
The specific project to demonstrate the approach is to log the electricity generation from a PV system and imported electricity from the grid as measured by two electricity meters.
The hardware for the logger uses phototransistors to sense the led pulses from electricity meters. The electricity meter provides one pulse per Wh passing through the unit. No electrical connection to the meter is required. The pulses are counted in the ESP12 and the count transmitted to the Raspberry Pi server every minute over the wifi.
Scripts
All the scripts sued in the project are to be found on github at https://github.com/sixbacon/ESP-IOT-RPi-server.git
Circuit
The circuit is shown below-
A comparator is used to detect the pulses from the phototransistor in each channel. The collector resistors of the phototransistor, R1 or R6, may need to be varied to suit the pulse from the meter. A higher value makes the unit more sensitive. The second comparator in each TLC272 is used to drive a led to echo the input pulse on the back of the unit, helping with alignment. The output pulses from each channel are connected to an ESP12 GPIO terminal and the GPIO set as an interrupt. The ESP12 is wired in a standard run mode with RST and GPIO0 tied to Vcc. Everything runs at 3.3V.
Implementation
This project involves a number of steps, none of which is particularly difficult to carry out, though each involves different skills or software, which can be daunting at first glance. However once these are mastered it is simple to change the relevant steps to fit another ESP IOT project. The examples given provide a starting point for understanding the skill or software involved. The software examples have lots of comments to aid modification. At each step a ‘Test’ section is included so that you can verify that bit is working, usually independently.
The instructions are brief since, if you are trying this, then you will most likely have played with an ESP8266 based micro-computer with a ubiquitous ‘Hello world’ program and have an idea of what is involved, see http://www.esp8266.com/ and others such as http://randomnerdtutorials.com/category/esp8266/ .
There are other ways to implement this project. I don’t claim this is the best way, but it works and is expandable. It stands on top of the great work done by many others.
Building the hardware
The unit was constructed in three parts, a sensor unit for each electricity meter and a central unit with the ESP and power supply. Putting the phototransistor and its comparator close together reduces the likelihood of electrical interference giving false counts. The sensor modules are double sided with the phototransistor on its own so it can be easily aligned with the meter led.
The sensor board was mounted in a piece of plastic pipe and the reverse sealed to exclude ambient light. With the led echoing pulses, the sensor modules can be tested if they are powered from a 3.3 V supply, without the ESP12 unit attached.
The unit was held in place and light excluded using a ring of flexible, sticky putty, such as Bluetack. Make sure the led on the back of the unit is responding to the pulses from the meter. It should blink off when a pulse is received.
The ESP12 was mounted on perforated sheet with a 5V to 3.3 V regulator, the pullup resistors and connectors for the external 5 V power supply and the sensor heads. A 5 V power supply with a step down regulator was used as this was cheaper than buying a 3.3 V regulated supply.
The ESP12 was programmed on a breadboard before installation, but the RX and TX lines were brought out to a connector for upgrades.
Programming the ESP12 with Arduino IDE
The ESP12 was programmed using the Arduino IDE. To do this an additional module has to be added in to the basic Arduino IDE. This is described in https://github.com/esp8266/Arduino .
In addition to the ESP library, the library simplifying communications with an MQTT broker is needed. This as available from https://github.com/knolleary/pubsubclient/ . Copy the ZIP file to your computer and then use the Arduino IDE to unpack it load it into the correct place as follows https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/in ... no-library .
Sketch ESP178dualpulse.ino drives the ESP12. The basic operations it performs are
· Timing a 60 second reporting period
· Counting pulses on the input lines using interrupts
· Reconnecting to the wifi with a static IP address, if it is disconnected.
· Reconnecting to the message broker if required
· Sending counts to the message broker.
The sketch has comments which explain what is going on and pointers to which sections are application dependent.
Remember to set up the program for your network by filling in –
- your network ID
- your network password
- the static IP you select for this device
- the static IP of your Raspberry Pi based, data server
Setting up the data server on the Raspberry Pi
A Raspberry Pi was used for this as it is powerful, cheap and low power. It can handle the expansion for more IOT units.
The basic Raspberry Pi setup is described in many places including https://www.raspberrypi.org/help/quick-start-guide/ . Assuming the Raspberry Pi is setup for general use and all up to date, then various programs need to be installed. If you have not installed packages on a Raspberry Pi before the method is that followed in http://elinux.org/Add_software_to_Raspberry_Pi .
Note, on security - to keep this simple and for most uses, it is assumed that the ESP unit, the Raspberry Pi server and the devices going to view the data are on the same local network and that the associated router is firewall protected. Thus the communications from the IOT devices do not implement any additional security. As a minimum change the administration password on the router from the default and use a strong password to allow devices to connect.
Set a Static IP address on the Raspberry Pi
First set up a static IP address on the Raspberry Pi, this makes it simpler to send messages to it and see the data on it. Find the current IP address of the Raspberry Pi by typing at a command line.
ifconfig
The relevant entry is under wlan0, the inet addr – here 192.168.0.150.
Choosing a number >100 in the last block for the static address should avoid the router assigning the IP address to another computer, say 150. Your static address should have the same first three number blocks and 150 at the end.
The way static IP addresses are set on the Raspberry Pi has changed since mid-2015 and most descriptions on the web are wrong, if you are using the latest software.
Check your network and password are set up correctly in the file /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf
sudo nano /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf
It should contain the lines
network ={
ssid=”yournetworkname”
psk=”yourpassword”
}
Now change the interface wlano section in file /etc/dhcpcd.conf using
sudo nano /etc/dhcpcd.conf
to
interface wlan0
static ip_address=192.168.0.150
static routers=192.168.0.1
static domain_name_servers=8.8.8.8 8.8.4.4
Note that you should put in the IP address of your router and that there is a space between the two groups in the last line.
The third file to look at is /etc/network/interfaces
sudo nano /etc/network/interfaces
and set the wlan0 section to
auto wlan0
allow-hotplug wlan0
iface wlan0 inet manual
xpa-conf /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf
To implement these changes reboot with
sudo reboot
Test – as before using
ifconfig
If all is well, your new static IP address should be reported.
Setting up the MQTT broker
Using a dedicated well thought out message broker saves a lot of hassle. The arguments for using MQTT are well rehearsed, see https://www.oasis-open.org/committees/d ... ebinar.pdf . This project just uses a very basic implementation using the simplest elements.
Install Mosquitto, a great open source implementation of MQTT, for Linux. This is slightly more complicates than most package installations as it is not in the standard package stores –
curl -O http://repo.mosquitto.org/debian/mosquitto-repo.gpg.key
sudo apt-key add mosquitto-repo.gpg.key
rm mosquitto-repo.gpg.key
cd /etc/apt/sources.list.d/
sudo curl -O http://repo.mosquitto.org/debian/mosquitto-repo.list
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install mosquitto mosquitto-clients
The last installs the Mosquitto server and a Mosquitto client program which works at the command line as shown below
Test it is running -
sudo /etc/init.d/mosquitto stop
A suitable message should appear. Start it again.
sudo /etc/init.d/mosquitto start
To test the ESP12 dual pulse counter is alive you can watch the messages it is sending by subscribing to the topics the ESP unit is transmitting. Assuming the demo ESP program was used, which sends topics ‘ESP178/PVWh’ and ‘ESP178/gridWh’, then at the command line of the Raspberry Pi, type
mosquitto_sub –v – t ‘ESP178/PVWh’
Mosquitto should then start listing the messages on the screen every minute. CTRL ^C will exit.
To see both message streams, open another command line window and type
mosquitto_sub –v – t ‘ESP178/gridWh’
Setting up MYSQL
This is a database server, which will organise the storage of the received data and supply answers to queries about stored data.
sudo apt-get install mysql-server python-mysqldb
You will be asked for a password; this is the one for access as a root user in Mysql. This also installs the Python library to access Mysql databases, needed later.
Test – open it up with.
sudo mysql -h localhost –u root –p
type in the password and you should see the Mysql ‘>’ prompt. If you are not continuing immediately and want to exit type -
quit;
Setting up the Mysql database
The Mysql reference site is http://dev.mysql.com/doc/
Now create a database for the recordings, describe a data record, set up a user for normal access, and let the user have control of the database. Note almost all command lines in Mysql end in ‘;’ .
Open Mysql, as before,
mysql –h localhost –u root –p
Enter the password.
Create a database
> CREATE DATABASE PVgriddb;
Test –
> SHOW DATABASES;
Tell Mysql to work on this database
> USE PVgriddb;
Detail the records to be stored
> CREATE TABLE data (timestamp DATETIME, source VARCHAR(20), count INT);
Test –
> SHOW TABLES
You should see ‘data’ listed and then
> DESCRIBE data;
To see the details of ‘data’.
Create a user called ‘bill’, for example
> CREATE USER ‘bill’@‘localhost’ ;
Create a password for the user
> SET PASSWORD FOR ‘bill’@‘localhost’=PASSWORD(‘password’)
Give the user permission to work on the database files
> GRANT ALL ON PVgriddb.* TO ‘bill’@‘localhost’;
Test –
> SELECT user from mysql.user;
This will list all the users.
So now there is somewhere to store the data and users who can access it.
For other projects you can other databases and associated tables, similarly and give the user the access rights.
Installing the Python Libraries
To take the correct data from the message server and put it in the appropriate database, a project specific Python script is used. The demo script is written in Python 2.7. To access the MQTT server from Python use the Paho library, downloaded using pip, to load pip type -
sudo apt-get install python-pip
then
pip install paho-mqtt
To access the Mysql database, use the Python library downloaded when Mosquito was downloaded above, python-mysql. (Nothing extra to do.)
Python script
A very basic knowledge of Python will allow you to follow this section. The script MQTT2mysql.py takes messages from the MQTT broker, timestamps them and stores them in the appropriate Mysql database.
A large apart of this to do with making it run as a daemon is taken from this excellent explanation <http://blog.scphillips.com/posts/2013/07/getting-a-python-script-to-run-in-the-background-as-a-service-on-boot/>. This part will also create a log file in /tmp/myservice.log as a daemon does not have a screen to write to.
Assume the Python script MQTT2mysql.py is stored in /home/pi/myprogs , create a new directory called myservice,
cd /usr/local/bin
sudo mkdir myservice
Copy the file over
sudo cp ~/myprogs/MQTT2mysql.py myservice/
Make it executable
sudo chmod 755 MQTT2mysql.py
Test it runs
sudo ./MQTT2mysql.sh
Test - open Python, load the program, run it and check the log file in /tmp/myservice.log.
sudo nano /tmp/myservice.log
This should contain some information appropriate to what else is running.
As stated above, to be of use this program should run in the background, as a daemon- background process, and should be started like Mysql and Mosquitto are automatically at start-up. To do this needs a special script file so that it behaves correctly, MQTT2mysql.sh . This looks complicated, but to use it for another project only a few obvious lines need modified. Note this type of file has to have the correct end of line codes, do not edit it on a windows computer unless you know what this involves, use the Raspberry Pi. Assuming it is in /home/pi/myprogs, copy it to the appropriate system directory
sudo cd ~/myprogs
sudo cp MQTT2mysql.sh /etc/init.d
Make it executable,
cd /etc/init.d
sudo chmod 755 MQTT2mysql.sh
Test it by typing
sudo ./MQTT2mysql.sh start
sudo ./MQTT2mysql.sh stop
sudo ./MQTT2mysql.sh status
These should start the program, stop it and give its status.
This script needs to be registered with the system so it will start automatically, so type
sudo update-rc.d MQTT2mysql.sh defaults
Reboot and test it is running with
sudo ./MQTT2mysql.sh status
So now there is a program to continually put received messages in a database.
Setting up the local web server
Apache is a webserver which is used here to allow devices on the local network to look at the collected data. (Apache can be used to display pages over the world wide web, if required , see https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentati ... /apache.md )
Install Apache on the raspberry Pi by typing -
sudo apt-get install apache-2 –y
Test – using another device, open a browser and in the address line, type in the static address of your Raspberry Pi. The default Apache screen should appear -
The files Apache will use to produce the web pages in a specific directory by default in the Raspberry Pi, /var/www in Raspbian Wheezy and in /var/www/html in Raspbian Jessie. In what follows Wheezy is assumed, it Jessie is running use the appropriate directory instead. The owner of this directory is root by default so the normal ‘pi’ user needs to be allowed too. Carry out these instructions before copying in the project specific files.
Create a “www-data” user and group the owner of the /var/www directory.
sudo chown www-data:www-data /var/www
Grant the ‘www-data’ group permission to write to this directory.
sudo chmod 775 /var/www
Then add the ‘pi’ user to the ‘www-data’ group.
sudo usermod -a -G www-data pi
Reboot the Raspberry Pi
sudo reboot
Test – create a test file in the web directory
cd /var/www
Delete the existing index page
rm index.html
Create a new blank one
touch index.html
If all this works without having to invoke ‘sudo’, ‘pi’ has the appropriate permissions.
To create web scripts like the following example, PHP is required and links for Apache and Mysql. Graphing results is carried out by another great open source program, Gnuplot. There are reference sites for these programs at http://php.net/ and http://gnuplot.info/ respectively.
To install them type
sudo apt-get install php5 libapache2-mod-php5 -y
sudo apt-get install php5-mysql
sudo apt-get install gnuplot -x11
Test PHP with
nano index.php
Add PHP code
<?php echo "Hello world"; ?>
Exit and save with CTRL^X.
Open a browser and point it at the Raspberry Pi static IP address and “Hello world“ should appear.
Installing the web server files
Everything is now in place for the web server project specific files.
Copy these files into /var/www on Wheezy or /var/www/html on Jessie
Index.php – the file that builds the web page
datapv.plt – the script to use with gnuplot to plot the PV pulse count data
datagrid.plt -the script to use with gnuplot to plot the grid pulse count data
The web page is built up by
· extracting the current day’s data from the Mysql database
· store this data in a temporary fie
· calling Gnuplot to take the data and produce a temporary graphic image file according to the instructions in the .plt file
· loading these graphics files into the web page
For this to work there needs to be some data in the database, so have the IOT unit running and the Python script MQTT2mysql.py running for a few minutes first.
Final test – in a browser go to the Raspberry Pi page, type 192.168.0.150 , or the static IP address you have set on the Raspberry Pi into a browser. It may be a little slow depending on the vintage of the Raspberry Pi. But you should see something like this.
Implementing other IOT projects
To implement other IOT projects, the ESP units need to publish topics to the MQTT server. A suitable database needs to be created with its associated tables and the normal ‘pi’ user granted permissions over these. The Python script needs to be modified to subscribe to the required topics and to put the data in the correct database. The PHP and Gnuplot scripts need to be changed to pick up the correct data. The tediously slow process of installing and testing all the various servers on the Raspberry Pi does not need to repeated, so additional projects can be up and running quite quickly. The next time most of the effort goes on the fun ESP part of the project.
Future Development
Clearly a lot more can be done with the data than just graphing it. I am interested in using the PV data and weather forecasts to predict the solar output for the next hour or so to allow me to switch on and off loads in the house maximising my use of the PV energy. I plan to use ESP IOT controllers to adjust the loads around the house. The ESP01 is great for this. There are many good such projects out there e.g. http://telecnatron.com/articles/ESP8266 ... index.html . I cooked my own as my first ESP8266 project.
Note the IOT device can also receive messages from the MQTT broker, to carry out instructions or receive time signals. The system described is not restricted to information flow in one direction.
The Python script can be tidied up so that the topics and database can be passed as command line parameters to save rewriting this script for each project. Given the length of the project, some links may have changed and you may hit problems I didn’t. http://www.esp8266.com/ is great for queries on everything ESP related. Numerous sites deal with the Raspberry Pi, the official forum is a good place to start https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/ . I will try to answer questions, but I am by no way an expert on the ESP8266, in Linux or the packages used above.
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