Ever wondered how to control items like your fans, lights, and more using your phone or computer from anywhere?

I was looking to control my Christmas lights using any mobile phone, tablet, laptop... simply by using a Raspberry Pi. Let me show you how to operate relays and control GPIO pins with the Pi using PHP and a temperature sensor. I put them all together using AJAX.

Hardware requirements

Raspberry Pi

SD Card with Raspbian installed (any SD card would work, but I prefer to use a 32GB class 10 card)

Power adapter

Jumper wires (female to female and male to female)

Relay board (I use a 12V relay board with for relays)

DS18B20 temperature probe

Wi-Fi adapter for Raspberry Pi

Router (for Internet access, you need to have a port-forwarding supported router)

10K-ohm resistor

Software requirements

Download and install Raspbian on your SD Card

Working Internet connection

Apache web server

PHP

WiringPi

SSH client on a Mac or Windows client

General configurations and setup

1. Insert the SD card into Raspberry Pi and connect it to the router using an Ethernet cable

2. Connect the Wi-Fi Adapter.

3. Now SSH to Pi and edit the interfaces file using:

sudo nano /etc/network/interfaces

This will open the file in an editor called nano. It is a very simple text editor that is easy to approach and use. If you're not familiar to a Linux-based operating systems, just use the arrow keys.

After opening the file in nano you will see a screen like this:

4. To configure your wireless network, modify the file as follows:

iface lo inet loopback

iface eth0 inet dhcp

allow-hotplug wlan0

auto wlan0

iface wlan0 inet dhcp

wpa-ssid "Your Network SSID"

wpa-psk "Your Password"

5. Press CTRL + O to save it, and then CTRL + X to exit the editor.

At this point, everything is configured and all you need to do is reload the network interfaces by running:

sudo service networking reload

(Warning: if you are connected using a remote connection it will disconnect now.)

Software configurations

Installing Apache Web Server

Apache is a popular web server application you can install on the Raspberry Pi to allow it to serve web pages. On its own, Apache can serve HTML files over HTTP, and with additional modules it can serve dynamic web pages using scripting languages such as PHP.

Install Apache by typing the following command on the command line:

sudo apt-get install apache2 -y

Once the installation is complete, type in the IP Address of your Pi to test the server. If you get the next image, then you have installed and set up your server successfully.

To change this default page and add your own html file, go to var/www/html:

cd /var/www/html

To test this, add any file to this folder.

Installing PHP

PHP is a preprocessor, meaning this is code that runs when the server receives a request for a web page. It runs, works out what needs to be shown on the page, then sends that page to the browser. Unlike static HTML, PHP can show different content under different circumstances. Other languages are capable of this, but since WordPress is written in PHP it's what you need to use this time. PHP is a very popular language on the web, with large projects like Facebook and Wikipedia written in it.

Install the PHP and Apache packages with the following command:

sudo apt-get install php5 libapache2-mod-php5 -y

Testing PHP

Create the file index.php:

sudo nano index.php

Put some PHP content in it:

<?php echo "hello world"; ?>

Save the file. Next, delete "index.html" because it takes precedence over "index.php":

sudo rm index.html

Refresh your browser. You should see “hello world.” This is not dynamic, but it is still served by PHP. If you see the raw PHP above instead of “hello world,” reload and restart Apache with:

sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 reload

sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 restart

Installing WiringPi

WiringPi is maintained under git for ease of change tracking; however, you have a plan B if you’re unable to use git for whatever reason. (Usually your firewall will be blocking you, so do check that first!)

If you do not have git installed, then under any of the Debian releases (e.g., Raspbian), you can install it with:

sudo apt-get install git-core

If you get any errors here, make sure your Pi is up to date with the latest version of Raspbian:

sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get upgrade

To obtain WiringPi using git:

sudo git clone git://git.drogon.net/wiringPi

If you have already used the clone operation for the first time, then:

cd wiringPi git pull origin

It will fetch an updated version, and then you can re-run the build script below.

To build/install there is a new simplified script:

cd wiringPi ./build

The new build script will compile and install it all for you. It does use the sudo command at one point, so you may wish to inspect the script before running it.

Testing WiringPi

Run the gpio command to check the installation:

gpio -v gpio readall

This should give you some confidence that it’s working OK.

Connecting DS18B20 To Raspberry Pi

The Black wire on your probe is for GND

The Red wire is for VCC

The Yellow wire is the GPIO wire

Connect:

VCC to 3V Pin 1

GPIO wire to Pin 7 (GPIO 04)

Ground wire to any GND Pin 9

Software Configuration

For using DS18B20 temperature sensor module with PHP, you need to activate the kernel module for the GPIO pins on the Raspberry Pi and the DS18B20 by executing the commands:

sudo modprobe w1-gpio

sudo modprobe w1-therm

You do not want to do that manually every time the Raspberry reboots, so you want to enable these modules on every boot. This is done by adding the following lines to the file /etc/modules:

sudo nano /etc/modules/

Add the following lines to it:

w1-gpio

w1-therm

To test this, type in:

cd /sys/bus/w1/devices/

Now type ls.

You should see your device information. In the device drivers, your DS18B20 sensor should be listed as a series of numbers and letters. In this case, the device is registered as 28-000005e2fdc3. You then need to access the sensor with the cd command, replacing my serial number with your own: cd 28-000005e2fdc3.

The DS18B20 sensor periodically writes to the w1_slave file, so you simply use the cat command to read it: cat w1_slave.

This yields the following two lines of text, with the output t= showing the temperature in degrees Celsius. Place a decimal point after the first two digits (e.g., the temperature reading I received is 30.125 degrees Celsius).

Connecting the relay

1. Take two jumper wires and connect one of them to the GPIO 24 (Pin18) on the Pi and the other one to the GND Pin. You may refer the following diagram.

2. Now connect the other ends of the wire to the relay board. Connect the GND to the GND on the relay and GPIO Output wire to the relay channel pin number, which depends on the relay that you are using. Remember the GND goes to GND on the relay and GPIO Output goes to the relay input pin.

Caution! Be very careful with the relay connections with Pi because if it causes a backflow of current, you with have a short circuit.

3. Now connect the power supply to the relay, either using 12V power adapter or by connecting the VCC Pin to 3.3V or 5V on the Pi.

Controlling the relay using PHP

Let's create a PHP script to control the GPIO pins on the Raspberry Pi, with the help of the WiringPi software.

1. Create a file in the Apache server’s root web directory. Navigate using:

cd ../../../

cd var/www/html/

2. Create a new folder called Home:

sudo mkdir Home

3. Create a new PHP file called on.php:

sudo nano on.php

4. Add the following code to it:

<?php



system ( “ gpio - g mode 24 out “ ) ;

system ( “ gpio - g write 24 1 ” ) ;



?> “ gpiog modeout ““ gpiog write

5. Save the file using CTRL + O and exit using CTRL + X

In the code above, in the first line you've set the GPIO Pin 24 to output mode using the command:

system ( “ gpio - g mode 24 out “ ) ;

In the second line, you’ve turned on the GPIO Pin 24, Using “1,” where “1” in binary refers to ON and “0” Means OFF.

6. To turn off the relay, create another file called off.php and replace “1” with “0.”

<?php



system ( “ gpio - g mode 24 out “ ) ;

system ( “ gpio - g write 24 0 ” ) ;



?> “ gpiog modeout ““ gpiog write

7. If you have your relay connected to the Pi, visit your web browser and type in the IP Address of your Pi followed by the directory name and file name:

http://{IPADDRESS}/home/on.php

This will turn ON the relay.

8. To turn it OFF, open the page called off.php,

http://{IPADDRESS}/home/off.php

Now you need to control both these things from a single page without refreshing or visiting the pages individually. For that you'll use AJAX.

9. Create a new HTML file and add this code to it.

[ html + php + ajax codeblock ]



< html >







< script src = "https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.3/jquery.min.js" > </script>



< script type = "text/javascript" > // <![CDATA[



$ ( document ) . ready ( function ( ) {



$ ( '#on' ) . click ( function ( ) {



var a = new XMLHttpRequest ( ) ;



a . open ( "GET" , "on.php" ) ; a . onreadystatechange = function ( ) {



if ( a . readyState == 4 ) { if ( a . status == 200 ) {



} else alert ( "http error" ) ; } }



a . send ( ) ;



} ) ;



} ) ;



$ ( document ) . ready ( function ( )



{ $ ( '#Off' ) . click ( function ( ) {



var a = new XMLHttpRequest ( ) ;



a . open ( "GET" , "off.php" ) ;



a . onreadystatechange = function ( ) {



if ( a . readyState == 4 ) {



if ( a . status == 200 ) {



} else alert ( "http error" ) ; } }



a . send ( ) ;



} ) ;



} ) ;



</script>



< button id = "on" type = "button" > Switch Lights On </ button >



< button id = "off" type = "button" > Switch Lights Off </ button >

10. Save the file, go to your web browser, and open that page. You’ll see two buttons, which will turn lights on and off. Based on the same idea, you can create a beautiful web interface using bootstrap and CSS skills.

Viewing temperature on this web page

1. Create a file called temperature.php:

sudo nano temperature . php

2. Add the following code to it, replace 10-000802292522 with your device ID:

<?php

//File to read

$file = '/sys/devices/w1_bus_master1/10-000802292522/w1_slave' ;

//Read the file line by line

$lines = file ( $file ) ;

//Get the temp from second line

$temp = explode ( '=' , $lines [ 1 ] ) ;

//Setup some nice formatting (i.e., 21,3)

$temp = number_format ( $temp [ 1 ] / 1000 , 1 , ',' , '' ) ;

//And echo that temp

echo $temp . " °C" ;

?>

3. Go to the HTML file that you just created, and create a new <div> with the id “screen”: <div id=“screen”></div>.

4. Add the following code after the <body> tag or at the end of the document:

< script >

$ ( document ) . ready ( function ( ) {

setInterval ( function ( ) {

$ ( "#screen" ) . load ( 'temperature.php' )

} , 1000 ) ;

} ) ;

</ script >

In this, #screen is the id of <div> in which you want to display the temperature. It loads the temperature.php file every 1000 milliseconds.

I have used bootstrap to make a beautiful panel for displaying temperature. You can add multiple icons and glyphicons as well to make it more attractive.

This was just a basic system that controls a relay board and displays the temperature. You can develop it even further by creating event-based triggers based on timings, temperature readings from the thermostat, etc.