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96 lines
4.1 KiB
96 lines
4.1 KiB
# esp-httpd README #
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This is the demonstration project for the small but powerful libesphttpd webserver
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for ESP8266(EX) chips. It is an example of how to make a module that can have
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the AP it connects to configured over a webbrowser. It also illustrates multiple
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flash layouts and some OTA update functionality.
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## ABOUT THE WEBSERVER ##
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The Good (aka: what's awesome)
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- Supports multiple connections, for eg simultaneous html/css/js/images downloading
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- Static files stored in flash, in an (optionally compressed) RO filesystem
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- Pluggable using external cgi routines
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- Simple template engine for mixed c and html things
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- Usable as an embedded library - should be easy to drop into your existing projects
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- Includes websocket support
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The Bad (aka: what can be improved)
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- Not built for speediness, although it's reasonable fast.
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- Built according to what I remember of the HTTP protocol, not according to the
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RFCs. Should work with most modern browsers, though.
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- No support for https.
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The Ugly (aka: bugs, misbehaviour)
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- Possible buffer overflows (usually not remotely exploitable) due to no os_snprintf
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This can be theoretically remedied by either Espressif including an os_snprintf in
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their libs or by using some alternate printf lib, like elm-chans xprintf
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## SOURCE OF THIS CODE ##
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The official esphttpd repo lives at http://git.spritesserver.nl/esphttpd.git/ and
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http://git.spritesserver.nl/libesphttpd.git/ . If you're a fan of Github, you can also
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peruse the official mirror at https://github.com/Spritetm/esphttpd and https://github.com/Spritetm/libesphttpd . If
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you want to discuss this code, there is a subforum at esp8266.com: http://www.esp8266.com/viewforum.php?f=34 .
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## ABOUT THE EXAMPLE ##
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When you flash the example into an ESP8266(EX) module, you get a small webserver with a few example
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pages. If you've already connected your module to your WLAN before, it'll keep those settings. When
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you haven't or the settings are wrong, keep GPIO0 for >5 seconds. The module will reboot into
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its STA+AP mode. Connect a computer to the newly formed access point and browse to
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http://192.168.4.1/wifi in order to connect the module to your WiFi network. The example also
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allows you to control a LED that's connected to GPIO2.
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## BUILDING EVERYTHING ##
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For this, you need an environment that can compile ESP8266 firmware. Environments for this still
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are in flux at the moment, but I'm using esp-open-sdk: https://github.com/pfalcon/esp-open-sdk .
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You probably also need an UNIX-like system; I'm working on Debian Linux myself.
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To manage the paths to all this, you can source a small shell fragment into your current session. For
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example, I source a file with these contents:
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export PATH=${PWD}/esp-open-sdk/xtensa-lx106-elf/bin:$PATH
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export SDK_BASE=${PWD}/esp-open-sdk/sdk
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export ESPTOOL=${PWD}/esptool/esptool.py
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export ESPPORT=/dev/ttyUSB0
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export ESPBAUD=460800
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Actual setup of the SDK and toolchain is out of the scope of this document, so I hope this helps you
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enough to set up your own if you haven't already.
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If you have that, you can clone out the source code:
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git clone http://git.spritesserver.nl/esphttpd.git/
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This project makes use of heatshrink, which is a git submodule. To fetch the code:
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cd esphttpd
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git submodule init
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git submodule update
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Now, build the code:
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make
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Depending on the way you built it, esp-open-sdk sometimes patches Espressifs SDK, needing a slightly different
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compiling process. If this is needed, you will get errors during compiling complaining about uint8_t being
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undeclared. If this happens, try building like this:
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make USE_OPENSDK=yes
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You can also edit the Makefile to change this more permanently.
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After the compile process, flash the code happens in 2 steps. First the code itself gets flashed. Reset the module into bootloader
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mode and enter 'make flash'.
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The 2nd step is to pack the static files the webserver will serve and flash that. Reset the module into
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bootloader mode again and enter `make htmlflash`.
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You should have a working webserver now.
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## WRITING CODE FOR THE WEBSERVER ##
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Please see the README.md of the libesphttpd project for the programming manual.
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