Book Image

Full Stack Web Development with Raspberry Pi 3

By : Soham Kamani
Book Image

Full Stack Web Development with Raspberry Pi 3

By: Soham Kamani

Overview of this book

Modern web technology and portable computing together have enabled huge advances in the Internet of Things (IoT) space,as well as in areas such as machine learning and big data. The Raspberry Pi is a very popular portable computer for running full stack web applications. This book will empower you to master this rapidly evolving technology to develop complex web applications and interfaces. This book starts by familiarizing you with the various components that make up the web development stack and that will integrate into your Raspberry Pi-powered web applications. It also introduces the Raspberry Pi computer and teach you how to get up and running with a brand new one. Next, this book introduces you to the different kinds of sensor you’ll use to make your applications; using these skills, you will be able to create full stack web applications and make them available to users via a web interface. Later, this book will also teach you how to build interactive web applications using JavaScript and HTML5 for the visual representation of sensor data. Finally, this book will teach you how to use a SQLite database to store and retrieve sensor data from multiple Raspberry Pi computers. By the end of this book you will be able to create complex full stack web applications on the Raspberry Pi 3 and will have improved your application’s performance and usability.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
2
Getting Up-and-Running with Web Development on the Raspberry Pi

Summary

This chapter was the glue between the last two chapters. We began the chapter by taking a deep dive into how our node server communicates with native libraries. You learned about the asynchronous model that node uses to make I/O operations more efficient. This model is important to understand because it will also carry forward to the coming chapters.

We proceeded to integrate the sensor API from the previous chapter with our node server, and then we went on to see some of its limitations due to the hardware and sampling rate. Caching turned out to be a convenient and effective way to get around these limitations. The kind of local memory caching used in this chapter, however, would not be effective in a system that has multiple Raspberry Pi systems and sensors working together. In the upcoming chapters, you will learn about a more production-grade model to store and read...