Book Image

Raspberry Pi By Example

By : Arush Kakkar
Book Image

Raspberry Pi By Example

By: Arush Kakkar

Overview of this book

Want to put your Raspberry Pi through its paces right out of the box? This tutorial guide is designed to get you learning all the tricks of the Raspberry Pi through building complete, hands-on hardware projects. Speed through the basics and then dive right in to development! Discover that you can do almost anything with your Raspberry Pi with a taste of almost everything. Get started with Pi Gaming as you learn how to set up Minecraft, and then program your own game with the help of Pygame. Turn the Pi into your own home security system with complete guidance on setting up a webcam spy camera and OpenCV computer vision for image recognition capabilities. Get to grips with GPIO programming to make a Pi-based glowing LED system, build a complete functioning motion tracker, and more. Finally, get ready to tackle projects that push your Pi to its limits. Construct a complete Internet of Things home automation system with the Raspberry Pi to control your house via Twitter; turn your Pi into a super-computer through linking multiple boards into a cluster and then add in advanced network capabilities for super speedy processing!
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Raspberry Pi By Example
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Setting up the Raspberry Pi cluster


Now that we have a running Raspbian distribution in all the Raspberry Pi devices that we wish to use, we will now connect them to create a cluster. We would need a networking hub that has at least the same number of LAN ports as the size of your cluster should be. For the purposes of this chapter, we will use three Raspberry Pis, so we would need a hub that has at least three LAN ports.

If you have a Wi-Fi router, then it should already have some ports at the back, as shown in the following image:

We also need three networking cables, such as those with an Ethernet connector, where one port goes into the Raspberry Pi and the other goes into the networking hub. They will look like the ones shown in the following image:

Connect one end of the Ethernet cable to the Raspberry Pi and the other end to the router for all the devices. Once we complete this networking setup, we can move on to connecting the Raspberry Pi devices with software.