Skip to content

martinwoodward/PumpkinPi

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

29 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

PumpkinPi

Spooky build status indicator.

Pumpkin Pi

Hardware Requirements:

This project makes use of the following:

  • Pumpkin - Carve a real one or you can always 3D print one
  • Raspberry Pi Zero WH (UK, US)
  • Pimoroni Unicorn pHat (UK, US). Note discountinued now so you might want to try the Unicorn HAT Mini instead
  • Micro SD Card (UK, US)
  • USB power - I used the official Raspberry Pi Charger (UK, US) but you can also power with a USB battery pack.

3d Printed Pumpkin

For the 3d printed pumpkin case, you will need:

  • Glow in the Dark PLA Filament for body (UK, US)
  • Green PLA Filament for top (UK, US)
  • Adafruit Panel Mount Extension USB Cable - Micro B Male to Micro B Female [ADA3258] (UK, US)
  • 4 x M2.5 threaded brass inserts (UK, US)
  • 4 x M2.5 male PCB standoffs & screws - keep a kit of these handy if you don't have some. (UK, US)

When ordering online, while Amazon (US) and Amazon (UK) are always handy places (especially if you are a Prime member) I also highly recommend AdaFruit for electronics purchases in the US and PiHut in the UK. They basically should just park a truck at my house and take all my money.

Pumpkin Pi

Getting Started

Format the micro SD Card and install Raspberry Pi OS Lite. If installing onto a Pi Zero you might not have the keyboard and HDMI adapters lying around so you probably want to do a headless install, configuring SSH and WiFi by dropping an ssh file and a wpa_supplicant.conf file onto the root of the SD card after copying over the Raspbian files.

You'll need to install the Unicorn HAT software but they have a cool one-line installer that takes care of all the dependencies including Python and Git.

\curl -sS https://get.pimoroni.com/unicornhat | bash

In addition, we'll be using the requests module in python so after installing the Unicorn HAT software, install the requests module with the following command

sudo pip install requests

Next you want to clone this git repo. I have it at the root of the standard pi user

git clone https://github.com/martinwoodward/PumpkinPi.git

You need to modify the settings to point at your build badge. First of all copy the sample settings provided in the repo:

cp ~/PumpkinPi/src/local_settings.sample ~/PumpkinPi/src/local_settings.py

Then edit the BADGE_LINK variable and point at the URL of your Build badge.

# Build Badge for the build you want to monitor
BADGE_LINK = "https://github.com/martinwoodward/calculator/workflows/CI/badge.svg?branch=main"
# How often to check (in seconds). Remember - be nice to the server. Once every 5 minutes is plenty.
REFRESH_INTERVAL = 300

Finally you can run the script as root

sudo python ~/PumpkinPi/src/pumpkinpi.py &

Once you are happy everything is running how you want, don't forget you can run the script at boot time. The easiest way to do this is to use crontab. See this cool video from Estefannie over on the Raspberry Pi blog to learn more. But basically do sudo crontab -e then add the following:

@reboot /bin/sleep 10 ; /usr/bin/python /home/pi/PumpkinPi/src/pumpkinpi.py &

Note that we are pausing for 10 seconds before running the python script. This is to allow the network to come up. We could make the python script more resilient to network outages and/or start up the script using systemd.

Pumpkin Pi

About

Spooky build status indicator

Topics

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Security policy

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published