Tag: getting started

  • Raspberry Pi – Part II – Get Up and Going with Java

    In recent weeks, I haven’t revisited the Raspberry Pi – Running, Vacation, Work have conspired to keep me away from hobby project.

    I’ve stared at the parts long enough, and decide to plug the Raspberry Pi base into the wired network. I plugged in the Raspberry Pi into the Power outlet, and I got the Red Light.  I logged into my router to see if the Pi picked up the Raspberry Pi, and I found the IP from my routers IP reservations table.   I was able to SSH into the Pi and quickly check the release version ( cat issue ) – Raspbian GNU/Linux 7 \n \l.

    Headless + SSH + Version

    I turned on the SSH server using sudo raspi-config and the advanced options.

    The first thing I thought – Upgrade / Update to get the latest environment for the Raspberry Pi.  It’s a good start – always good to be up-to-date. Per the documentation, it may be necessary to run – sudo apt-get clean.

    sudo apt-get upgrade
    sudo apt-get update

    The raspi-config is another item that may need to be updated.   The update goes out and queries for the latest raspi-config, installs and relaunches the raspi-config.

    sudo raspi-config
    Select Option 8 - Advanced Options
    Selection Option A0 - Update 
    Select Yes
    raspi-config
    raspi-config

    Next, I looked updated the Java version.  From reading the documentation, the next versions of the Pi are going to automatically include the Java installs.

    sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install oracle-java7-jdk
    Java Installation
    Java Installation

    I grabbed the Pi4J project jar files. The Pi4J is an opensource project which has some great details on PINOUT and boilerplate java code to access the underlying pin readouts.  I ran some quick code to get the latest snapshot installed.

    wget http://get.pi4j.com/download/pi4j-1.1-SNAPSHOT.deb
    sudo dpkg -i pi4j-1.1-SNAPSHOT.deb

    WGET
    WGET

    dpkg
    dpkg

    Pi4J is also installed on the Sonatype repositories and developed on GitHub.  Pi4J includes a script for managing updates.   It’s very convenient with the Apache 2.0 License.

    I was ready run a sample program – Get Sample, Compile and Run.

    wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Pi4J/pi4j/master/pi4j-example/src/main/java/ListenGpioExample.java
    pi4j ListenGpioExample.java
    pi4j -run ListenGpioExample
    First Sample
    First Sample

    Eventually, I am going to get to the point where I use the diagram from Pi4j.  The future efforts are going to take some time to get to – This step was the right step in the direction I want to go.  BBQ Champion.