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Design resources

ENG5105 is a design unit at Monash University, where students are required to design and prototype something cool using a Raspberry PI, and additional sensors, microcontrollers and actuatros. This year students are tasked with making wildlife monitors. This repository contains a set of useful jupyter notebooks to get started with the Raspberry PI.

There are also some nice c++ programming resources if you prefer to program using this language.

Setting up your raspberry pi to run these notebooks

If you would like to configure your raspberry pi to use jupyter follow the steps below.

Initial Setup

I'll assume you have an operating system with a terminal, and that can ssh. On windows, check out the windows subsystem for linux, and putty. I will be using Ubuntu, which generally ships with terminal and ssh.

I installed Ubuntu 20.04 server on my raspberry pi, because I wanted a 64 bit operating system for PyTorch (see below). You could follow a similar process for the Raspbian Buster distribution pre-installed on your sd cards, but you won't be able to use PyTorch if you do this.

Let's log into our Ubuntu raspberry pi using ssh

ssh ubuntu@ip_address

Once you're in, it's time to install some useful software. tmux is a terminal multiplexer for running multiple programs in one terminal and remotely executing programs that will continue to run if the network drops. htop is a terminal process viewer that will be useful to monitor processor load/ memory use. vim is a text editor for people who hate emacs. Most of the rest are things we'll use in python.

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get upgrade
sudo apt-get install git python3-scipy jupyter libatlas-base-dev avahi-daemon tmux htop vim python3-pip python3-matplotlib libgl-dev net-tools python3-gpiozero

Since we've installed the avahi-daemon, it's a good idea to change the hostname to something unique, eg. ECE4191GROUPNO. Use the command

hostnamectl set-hostname ECE5105GROUPNO

to do this. You may need to reboot sudo reboot for this to take effect.

Now, assuming you're on the same network, logging in to the pi remotely will be a lot easier going forward, just using:

ssh ubuntu@ECE5105GROUPNO.local

Ok, lets continue to install some more packages on the pi.

pip3 install --upgrade pip
pip3 install --user jupyter opencv-python torch
pip3 install --user numpy --upgrade

Next, we'll clone this repository

git clone https://github.com/MonashRobotics/ECE5105/

Running the notebooks

Now we'll run jupyter notebook in a headless fashion

jupyter notebook --no-browser --port 8888 --ip 0.0.0.0

You can now access the notebook running on the raspberry pi using any other computer on the network, by simply typing

http://raspberry_pi_ip:8888/

into a browser address bar, where raspberry_pi_ip is the ip address of your raspberry pi. Eg. mine is 192.168.20.14.

You can find out your raspberry pi ip address by typing ifconfig in a raspberry pi terminal, or going to your router settings pages and looking at the addresses of connected devices.

Use ctrl-c in the terminal to kill a running process (eg. if you want to close the notebook). Shutdown your pi cleanly with sudo shutdown -h now

Running PyTorch on your raspberry pi

Note that the raspberry pi is really not suited to deep learning (Consider the Nvidia Jetson if you want a better embedded computer for this). You can run models, but I wouldn't try to train bigger models on the pi.

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