RaspAP lets you quickly get a WiFi access point up and running to share the internet connectivity of a Raspberry Pi. Our famous Quick installer creates a known-good default configuration that "just works" on all current Raspberry Pis with onboard wireless. A handsome responsive interface gives you control over the relevant services and networking options. OpenVPN client support, SSL, security audits, themes and multilingual options round out the package.
RaspAP has been featured on sites such as Instructables, Adafruit, Raspberry Pi Weekly and Awesome Raspberry Pi and implemented in countless projects.
We hope you enjoy using RaspAP as much as we do creating it. Tell us how you use this with your own Pi-powered projects!
- Prerequisites
- Quick installer
- Bridged AP
- Simultaneous AP and Wifi client
- Support us
- Manual installation
- 802.11ac 5GHz support
- Multilingual support
- HTTPS support
- OpenVPN support
- How to contribute
- Reporting issues
- License
Start with a clean install of the latest release of Raspbian (currently Buster). Raspbian Buster Lite is recommended.
- Update Raspbian, including the kernel and firmware, followed by a reboot:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get dist-upgrade
sudo reboot
-
Set the WiFi country in raspi-config's Localisation Options:
sudo raspi-config
-
If you have a Raspberry Pi without an onboard WiFi chipset, the Edimax Wireless 802.11b/g/n nano USB adapter is an excellent option – it's small, cheap and has good driver support.
With the prerequisites done, you can proceed with either the Quick installer or Manual installation steps below.
Install RaspAP from your RaspberryPi's shell prompt:
curl -sL https://install.raspap.com | bash
The installer will complete the steps in the manual installation (below) for you.
After the reboot at the end of the installation the wireless network will be configured as an access point as follows:
- IP address: 10.3.141.1
- Username: admin
- Password: secret
- DHCP range: 10.3.141.50 to 10.3.141.255
- SSID:
raspi-webgui
- Password: ChangeMe
Note: As the name suggests, the Quick Installer is a great way to quickly setup a new AP. However, it does not automagically detect the unique configuration of your RPi. Best results are obtained by connecting an RPi to ethernet (eth0
) or as a WiFi client, also known as managed mode, with wlan0
. For the latter, refer to this FAQ. Please read this before reporting an issue.
By default RaspAP configures a routed AP for your clients to connect to. A bridged AP configuration is also possible. Slide the Bridged AP mode toggle under the Advanced tab of Configure hotspot, then save and restart the hotspot.
Note: In bridged mode, all routing capabilities are handled by your upstream router. Because your router assigns IP addresses to your RPi's hotspot and its clients, you might not be able to reach the RaspAP web interface from the default 10.3.141.1
address. Instead use your RPi's hostname followed by .local
to access the RaspAP web interface. With Raspbian default settings, this should look like raspberrypi.local
.
More information on Bridged AP mode is provided on our wiki.
RaspAP lets you easily create an AP with a Wifi client configuration. With your RPi configured in managed mode, enable the AP from the Advanced tab of Configure hotspot by sliding the Wifi client AP mode toggle. Save settings and start the hotspot. The managed mode AP is functional without restart.
Note: This option is disabled until you configure your RPi as a wireless client. For a Raspberry Pi operating in managed mode without an eth0
connection, this configuration must be enabled before a reboot.
RaspAP is free software, but powered by your support. If you find RaspAP useful for your personal or commercial projects, please become a GitHub sponsor, join the project on Open Collective or make a one-time donation with PayPal. Any of these options makes a big difference!
Detailed manual setup instructions are provided on our wiki.
RaspAP provides an 802.11ac wireless mode option for supported hardware (currently the RPi 3B+/4) and wireless regulatory domains. See this FAQ for more information.
RaspAP uses GNU Gettext to manage multilingual messages. In order to use RaspAP with one of our supported translations, you must configure a corresponding language package on your RPi. To list languages currently installed on your system, use locale -a
at the shell prompt. To generate new locales, run sudo dpkg-reconfigure locales
and select any other desired locales. Details are provided on our wiki.
The following translations are currently maintained by the project:
- Deutsch
- Français
- Italiano
- Português
- Svenska
- Nederlands
- 简体中文 (Chinese Simplified)
- Indonesian
- 한국어 (Korean)
- 日本語 (Japanese)
- Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese)
- Čeština
- Русский
- Español
- Finnish
- Sinhala
- Türkçe
- ελληνικό (Greek)
If your language is not in the list above, why not contribute a translation? Contributors will receive credit as the original translators.
The Quick Installer may be used to generate SSL certificates with mkcert
. The installer automates the manual steps described in the wiki, including configuring lighttpd with SSL support.
Simply append the -c
or --cert
option to the Quick Installer, like so:
curl -sL https://install.raspap.com | bash -s -- --cert
Note: this only installs mkcert and generates an SSL certificate with the input you provide. It does not (re)install RaspAP.
More information on SSL certificates and HTTPS support is available on our wiki.
OpenVPN may be optionally installed by the Quick Installer. Once this is done, you can manage client configuration and the openvpn-client
service with RaspAP.
To configure an OpenVPN client, upload a valid .ovpn file and, optionally, specify your login credentials. RaspAP will store your client configuration and add firewall rules to forward traffic from OpenVPN's tun0
interface to your configured wireless interface.
Note: this feature is currently in beta. Please read this before reporting an issue.
- Fork the project in your account and create a new branch:
your-great-feature
. - Open an issue in the repository describing the feature contribution you'd like to make. This will help us get you started on the right foot.
- Commit changes in your feature branch.
- Open a pull request and reference the initial issue in the pull request message.
Find out more about our coding style guidelines and recommended tools.
Please read this before reporting a bug.
This project exists thanks to all the awesome people who contribute their time and expertise.
Become a financial contributor and help us sustain our community.
Support this project with your organization. Your logo will show up here with a link to your website.
See the LICENSE file.