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ESP8266 Mobile Rick Roll Captive Portal

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ESP8266 Mobile Rick Roll Captive Portal (German)

Fixed Code

The issue when trying to upload the code:

'ConvertFromJson' was not declared in this scope

has been fixed. It was caused by a code breaking change in the AurdinoJSON Library, the code is now not using the newest library (which will break the code) instead it is using 6.11.1

furthermore the fixed USB Port for uploading has been disabled so that the auto detection works when uploading.

Live Chat

Gitter

The purpose of this project was to help me get familiar with programming for the ESP8266 and have a bit of fun.

ESP8266 Mobile-RR

  • User connects to the device broadcasting an SSID of "FREE Highspeed WiFi" (this is configurable of course)
  • The captive portal helper on their phone/tablet/computer kicks in and presents them with a page showing "Terms of Service" and a button labeled "I Accept"
  • When they click the button a full screen animated GIF of Rick Astley dancing appears and an audio clip of "Never Gonna Give You Up" starts playing on loop along with a message in the bottom right letting them know they got rock rolled (Incase they don't understand what's going on)

On bootup, the buzzer plays a little bit of "Never Gonna Give You Up". To access the console, connect to the ESP8266 Access Point and browse to "http://10.10.10.1/console". From here you can monitor all connections and see when someone gets Rick Roll'd by the device. The console also allows you to enter commands to get more info about the status of the device, change the SSID, get the Rick Roll count and even beep the buzzer.

The "debug" setting is on by default and shows you all DNS and HTTP requests made to the device. It's kind of cool to see all the sites that the apps on your phone are trying to access. Check out the screenshots of the console for a glimpse of what it looks like. Some apps are very noisy. You can toggle the "debug" off to not see that stuff.

Parts List

Wiring

Connect the '+' lead of the piezo to GPIO 4 (D2 on WeMos D1 Mini) and '-' lead to Ground. I chose GPIO 4 because I installed the long leads with the headers on the WeMos D1 Mini. The spacing from ground was perfect to just plug the buzzer in direct between G & D2.

Build Firmware

I use PlatformIO to build this. http://platformio.org/

  • Install PlatformIO and let it update itself on first startup
  • Once updated and restarted, clone the "mobile-rr" project to a folder and open the project in PlatformIO
  • Next build the firmware by clicking the checkmark icon on the toolbar
Atom Visual Studio Code
Build Firmware Build Firmware

Upload Firmware and SPIFFS data

After your firmware build is successful you can upload it by clicking the arrow under the checkmark in the PlatformIO toolbar.

Atom Visual Studio Code
Upload Firmware Upload Firmware

You can add/edit the files in the "www" folder to your liking. (Files in the "www" folder will be cloned and gzipped to the "data" folder when building.) Then follow the instructions below to build and upload the SPIFFS file system image to your ESP8266.

Atom Visual Studio Code
Upload SPIFFS 1 Upload SPIFFS 1
Upload SPIFFS 2 Upload SPIFFS 2

Note: Anytime you make changes to the firmware or the data you can rebuild and upload either without the need to install the other again. They reside in different areas of the flash memory.

References

I learned everything I needed to create this from these projects

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