alanswx / ESPAsyncWiFiManager

Port WiFiManager to ESP Async Server
MIT License
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esp esp8266 wifimanager

AsyncWiFiManager

ESP8266 Async WiFi Connection manager with fallback web configuration portal

Build Status

The configuration portal is of the captive variety, so on various devices it will present the configuration dialogue as soon as you connect to the created access point.

First attempt at a library. Lots more changes and fixes to do. Contributions are welcome.

This works with the ESP8266 Arduino platform with a recent stable release(2.0.0 or newer) https://github.com/esp8266/Arduino

Contents

How It Works

How It Looks

ESP8266 WiFi Captive Portal Homepage ESP8266 WiFi Captive Portal Configuration

Wishlist

Quick Start

Installing

You can either install through the Arduino Library Manager or checkout the latest changes or a release from github

Install through Library Manager

Currently version 0.8+ works with release 2.0.0 or newer of the ESP8266 core for Arduino

Checkout from github

Github version works with release 2.0.0 or newer of the ESP8266 core for Arduino

Using

include //Local WebServer used to serve the configuration portal

include //https://github.com/tzapu/WiFiManager WiFi Configuration Magic


- Initialize library, in your setup function add
```cpp
AsyncWebServer server(80);
DNSServer dns;

wifiManager.autoConnect("AP-NAME", "AP-PASSWORD");

if you just want an unsecured access point
```cpp
wifiManager.autoConnect("AP-NAME");

or if you want to use and auto generated name from 'ESP' and the esp's Chip ID use

wifiManager.autoConnect();

After you write your sketch and start the ESP, it will try to connect to WiFi. If it fails it starts in Access Point mode. While in AP mode, connect to it then open a browser to the gateway IP, default 192.168.4.1, configure wifi, save and it should reboot and connect.

Also see examples.

Documentation

Password protect the configuration Access Point

You can and should password protect the configuration access point. Simply add the password as a second parameter to autoConnect. A short password seems to have unpredictable results so use one that's around 8 characters or more in length. The guidelines are that a wifi password must consist of 8 to 63 ASCII-encoded characters in the range of 32 to 126 (decimal)

wifiManager.autoConnect("AutoConnectAP", "password")

Callbacks

Enter Config mode

Use this if you need to do something when your device enters configuration mode on failed WiFi connection attempt. Before autoConnect()

wifiManager.setAPCallback(configModeCallback);

configModeCallback declaration and example

void configModeCallback (WiFiManager *myWiFiManager) {
  Serial.println("Entered config mode");
  Serial.println(WiFi.softAPIP());

  Serial.println(myWiFiManager->getConfigPortalSSID());
}
Save settings

This gets called when custom parameters have been set AND a connection has been established. Use it to set a flag, so when all the configuration finishes, you can save the extra parameters somewhere.

See AutoConnectWithFSParameters Example.

wifiManager.setSaveConfigCallback(saveConfigCallback);

saveConfigCallback declaration and example

//flag for saving data
bool shouldSaveConfig = false;

//callback notifying us of the need to save config
void saveConfigCallback () {
  Serial.println("Should save config");
  shouldSaveConfig = true;
}

Configuration Portal Timeout

If you need to set a timeout so the ESP doesn't hang waiting to be configured, for instance after a power failure, you can add

wifiManager.setConfigPortalTimeout(180);

which will wait 3 minutes (180 seconds). When the time passes, the autoConnect function will return, no matter the outcome. Check for connection and if it's still not established do whatever is needed (on some modules I restart them to retry, on others I enter deep sleep)

On Demand Configuration Portal

If you would rather start the configuration portal on demand rather than automatically on a failed connection attempt, then this is for you.

Instead of calling autoConnect() which does all the connecting and failover configuration portal setup for you, you need to use startConfigPortal(). Do not use BOTH.

Example usage

void loop() {
  // is configuration portal requested?
  if ( digitalRead(TRIGGER_PIN) == LOW ) {
    WiFiManager wifiManager;
    wifiManager.startConfigPortal("OnDemandAP");
    Serial.println("connected...yeey :)");
  }
}

See example for a more complex version. OnDemandConfigPortal

Custom Parameters

You can use WiFiManager to collect more parameters than just SSID and password. This could be helpful for configuring stuff like MQTT host and port, blynk or emoncms tokens, just to name a few. You are responsible for saving and loading these custom values. The library just collects and displays the data for you as a convenience. Usage scenario would be:

Custom IP Configuration

You can set a custom IP for both AP (access point, config mode) and STA (station mode, client mode, normal project state)

Custom Access Point IP Configuration

This will set your captive portal to a specific IP should you need/want such a feature. Add the following snippet before autoConnect()

//set custom ip for portal
wifiManager.setAPStaticIPConfig(IPAddress(10,0,1,1), IPAddress(10,0,1,1), IPAddress(255,255,255,0));
Custom Station (client) Static IP Configuration

This will make use the specified IP configuration instead of using DHCP in station mode.

wifiManager.setSTAStaticIPConfig(IPAddress(192,168,0,99), IPAddress(192,168,0,1), IPAddress(255,255,255,0));

There are a couple of examples in the examples folder that show you how to set a static IP and even how to configure it through the web configuration portal.

Custom HTML, CSS, Javascript

There are various ways in which you can inject custom HTML, CSS or Javascript into the configuration portal. The options are:

Filter Networks

You can filter networks based on signal quality and show/hide duplicate networks.

Debug

Debug is enabled by default on Serial. To disable add before autoConnect

wifiManager.setDebugOutput(false);