Book Image

Building a Home Security System with Raspberry Pi

By : Matthew Poole
Book Image

Building a Home Security System with Raspberry Pi

By: Matthew Poole

Overview of this book

The Raspberry Pi is a powerful low-cost credit-card-sized computer, which lends itself perfectly as the controller for a sophisticated home security system. Using the on-board interfaces available, the Raspberry Pi can be expanded to allow the connection of a virtually infinite number of security sensors and devices. The Raspberry Pi has the processing power and interfaces available to build a sophisticated home security system but at a fraction of the cost of commercially available systems. Building a Home Security System with Raspberry Pi starts off by showing you the Raspberry Pi and how to set up the Linux-based operating system. It then guides you through connecting switch sensors and LEDs to the native GPIO connector safely, and how to access them using simple Bash scripts. As you dive further in, you’ll learn how to build an input/output expansion board using the I2C interface and power supply, allowing the connection of the large number of sensors needed for a typical home security setup. In the later chapters of the book, we'll look at more sophisticated topics such as adding cameras, remotely accessing the system using your mobile phone, receiving intrusion alerts and images by e-mail, and more. By the end of the book, you will be well-versed with the use of Raspberry Pi to power a home-based security system that sends message alerts whenever it is triggered and will be able to build a truly sophisticated and modular home security system. You will also gain a good understanding of Raspberry Pi's ecosystem and be able to write the functions required for a security system.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Building a Home Security System with Raspberry Pi
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Creating the web page


Our Web-based control panel is going to be a single PHP-driven HTML5 web page which will be mobile optimized. HTML5 is the latest mark-up standard for web pages and is supported by most modern smartphones and browsers. We will also create a cascading style-sheet (CSS) that will make our page look half reasonable on mobile devices.

To create the web files, I recommend that you use something like the excellent Notepad++ on your desktop computer, rather than doing it directly on the Raspberry Pi. Alternatively, if you are a seasoned web developer, you may already have your IDE of choice.

The control panel HTML template

The first thing we'll do is create an HTML file that we can use to test our layout before we put the HTML into a PHP file to make it interact with our system. This makes it easier to tweak the way we want it to look beforehand, without the PHP scripts getting in the way.

Note

This is not a tutorial on Web development—there is a plethora of books out there on...