53 lines
1.8 KiB
Markdown
53 lines
1.8 KiB
Markdown
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# ESP32-LCD
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A status LCD for your homelab.
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![ESP32-LCD prototype](../images/esp32-lcd.jpg)
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## BOM
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- Any HD44780-based character LCD display, up to 20x4 characters. The most common are 16x2 characters (16 characters per row, 2 rows).
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- An ESP-32 board
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- A potentiometer, usually a 10 or 100k one, for controlling contrast (a couple of resistances arranged as a voltage divider may also be fine)
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## Assembly
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Connect the LCD to the board:
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LCD Pin ESP32 Pin
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____________________________________
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PIN01-VSS GND
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PIN02-VDD 5V
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PIN03 V0 10K Pot (Middle pin)
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PIN04 RS GPIO19
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PIN05 RW GND
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PIN06 E GPIO23
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PIN07 D0 NOT USED
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PIN08 D1 NOT USED
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PIN09 D2 NOT USED
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PIN10 D3 NOT USED
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PIN11 D4 GPIO18
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PIN12 D5 GPIO17
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PIN13 D6 GPIO16
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PIN14 D7 GPIO15
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PIN15 A 5V
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PIN16 K GND
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Open config.h file and set display size and your wifi data.
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Flash the code to the ESP32. If you use the Arduino ide to do it, just open the esp32-lcd.ino file with the Arduino ide and follow [this instructions](https://randomnerdtutorials.com/getting-started-with-esp32/)
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Restart the ESP32. The display shows "Conn to wifi..." with the WIFI name in the second line (if using a two or more lines display) and then will show the IP address.
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## Use
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- Turn on the circuit, wait for connection and note down the IP address shown on the screen.
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- Make a GET request to the same IP address with a parameter "message" containing some text
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> Example: to make the request using CURL from command line, try something along this lines (replace the IP addr with the one shown in the display):
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> curl -G http://192.168.1.78 --data-urlencode "message=Something interesting happened!"
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## Troubleshooting
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The ESP32 logs are written in the serial monitor at 115200 baud. Just open the Arduino ide Serial Monitor from Tools menu and look at the logs.
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