Raspberry Pi Setup
This article will introduce to you, how to set up a Raspberry Pi from scratch with all software needed to run the detector hardware.
DISCLAIMER: If not stated otherwise, this tutorial is developed on Raspian 10 Buster.
Contents
Initial Setup
(Requirements: Raspberry Pi version 3 or above (with 40-pin GPIO connector) )
- Create a fresh install of Raspbian Buster operating system e.g. from here on microSD card (with or without desktop)
- Change the default password of the user pi. This is strongly recommended, since connections through ssh will be enabled in the next step which should always have a strong authentication metric. Change the password with sudo raspi-config >> Change User Password or on the command line with
passwd
- Enable I2C Interface: In terminal: sudo raspi-config >> Interfacing Options >> I2C>> Enable: Yes >> Reboot optional
- Enable SSH: The SSH protocol is needed if you want to remotely configure your headless Raspberry Pi. In a terminal: sudo raspi-config >> Interfacing Options >> SSH >> Enable: Yes >> Reboot
- Configure the network connection: By default, the RPi is configured to automatically obtain an IP address when a connection is available and DHCP in your local network is active (this should be the case for most local/home networks).
- If you prefer a fixed IP address in a local network: edit the /etc/dhcpcd.conf. Use the template and uncomment the "Example Static IP Configuration" section with your desired IP address.
- If network access should be established via WiFi, either configure it via the network configuration wizard in the graphical desktop environment (network icon in the system bar), or manually following these steps (either one is fine):
- Make sure that the wpa_supplicant package is installed:
sudo apt install wpasupplicant
- edit the file /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf:
sudo nano /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf
- Make sure that the wpa_supplicant package is installed:
the configuration should look like this (non-relevant lines not shown):
update_config=1 country=DE
network={ ssid="<your network ssid>" psk="<your wifi password>" key_mgmt=WPA-PSK }
Enter your WiFi's SSID and password in the indicated fields. Finally, restart the system that the changes take effect. You should have a fully configured Raspbian system now and are ready-to-go to set up the MuonPi in the next step.
MuonPi Setup
(Requirements: a MuonPi board plugged onto the GPIO connector of the RPi)
- First, add the MuonPi apt repository to your system:
wget -qO - https://archive.muonpi.org/muondetector.public.key | sudo apt-key add - sudo sh -c "echo deb https://archive.muonpi.org/raspbian buster main > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/muondetector.list"
- Update your system:
sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade
- Install the muondetector-daemon package and it's dependencies:
sudo apt install muondetector-daemon
- Optional: install the Graphical User Interface (GUI) program to monitor and control the MuonPi locally
sudo apt install muondetector-gui
- The GUI can connect to the MuonPi over network as well, so it can be installed on other computers in the local network. Currently, binary packages for Raspbian, Ubuntu and Windows are available. The Linux-based versions can be installed from the package repositories (execute steps 1,2 and 4 from this list). The Windows program can be downloaded directly from https://archive.muonpi.org and installed by simply unpacking the zip-archive.
Configuration and Start
Now the installation of the muondetector-daemon should be adapted to your setup:
Configuration
Edit the configuration file /etc/muondetector/muondetector.conf: nano /etc/muondetector/muondetector.conf
.
Change the settings according to your needs or leave them untouched, if unsure. The comments in the config file should guide you through any required modifications. One option, however, describes the placement of your detector. If you like, choose a stationID descriptor, eg.:
(file: /etc/muondetector/muondetector.conf
)
# A unique identifier of the user's station # leave on default when the user operates a single station # all detectors of the user are distinguishable on the basis of this id stationID = "HomeOffice"
(anything which best describes the location of your detector like e.g. "GarageSW", "Bldg16Lab105", "AtticNE"). If you operate only one stationary detector, it may as well be left on the default ID which is "0" (zero).
Important: When operating multiple detectors (under the same user account, see below) the stationID descriptor must be unique for each detector.
Login with your user credentials (only once)
Before taking the MuonPi detector into operation, you have to set your credentials for publishing data messages to the server via MQTT protocol on first start. This can be managed in two ways, one secure and one where your credentials appear as plain text in the config file:
The Secure Method
In a bash shell on the MuonPi, run the command muondetector-login.sh
.
When asked for your user name and password, enter the credentials supplied to you by an MounPi.org official. The credentials are encrypted and stored for all further telemetry connections.
Alternative Method
Uncomment the mqtt_user
and mqtt_password
options in /etc/muondetector/muondetector.conf
and type your personal username and password into these fields inside the quotation marks. Be aware, that these credentials are written in plain text into this file and can be retrieved by malware attacks. However, if you operate a station inside a home network and set up a strong ssh authentication (see above), you should be relatively safe.
Start the Daemon
Before starting the daemon it has to be enabled and registered for autostart with
sudo systemctl enable muondetector-daemon.service
Finally, start the daemon with the systemctl service
sudo systemctl start muondetector-daemon.service
Look, if the daemon started without errors:
sudo systemctl status muondetector-daemon.service