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Building a Home Security System with Raspberry Pi

You're reading from   Building a Home Security System with Raspberry Pi Build your own sophisticated modular home security system using the popular Raspberry Pi board

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782175278
Length 190 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Matthew Poole Matthew Poole
Author Profile Icon Matthew Poole
Matthew Poole
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Setting Up Your Raspberry Pi 2. Connecting Things to Your Pi with GPIO FREE CHAPTER 3. Extending Your Pi to Connect More Things 4. Adding a Magnetic Contact Sensor 5. Adding a Passive Infrared Motion Sensor 6. Adding Cameras to Our Security System 7. Building a Web-Based Control Panel 8. A Miscellany of Things 9. Putting It All Together Index

Monitoring the sensor


Now that we have everything in place and our magnetic sensor is detecting whether the door is closed, we can monitor this sensor with a simple Bash script that uses the I2C tool commands that we installed earlier.

The code listing for poll-magnetic-switch.sh is as follows:

#!/bin/bash
sudo i2cset –y 1 0x20 0x00 0xFF

# loop forever
while true
do
  # read the sensor state
  SWITCH=$(sudo i2cget –y 1 0x20 0x12)

  if [ $SWITCH == "0x01" ]
  then
    #contact closed so wait for a second
    echo "The door is closed!"
    sleep 1
  else
    #contact was opened
    echo "The door is open!"
  fi
done

When you run the script and then push the button, you should see "The door is open!" scrolling up the console screen until you stop pressing it.

By combining this with our elaborate light switch project in chapter 2, we can switch on the LED connected to GPIO17 when the door is opened:

#!/bin/bash

#set up the LED GPIO pin
sudo echo 17 > /sys/class/gpio/export
sudo echo out &gt...
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