Skip to content

hutch120/Metwork

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

13 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Metwork

Expressif 32

https://docs.espressif.com/projects/esp-idf/en/latest/esp32/api-reference/

TTGO

https://github.com/Xinyuan-LilyGO/TTGO_TWatch_Library

ESPNow w/ Raspberry Pi

The aim of this integration is to get messages from the T-Watch-2020 to be seen by the Raspberry Pi.

I started with a vanilla Raspberry Pi 3 with latest Raspian installed and all updates applied.

This was very technical, and there were a lot of false starts in getting this working.

The details below are the basics of what I needed to do to get it receiving messages consistantly in Wireshark from the T-Watch-2020 ESPNow signals.

There was a lot of experimentation, so this might not be 100% accurate, but should be the basics.

Run these commands on an existing RPi installation to replace the default wifi firmware driver with one that supports monitor mode. Ref

sudo su
cd /usr/local/src
wget  -O re4son-kernel_current.tar.xz https://re4son-kernel.com/download/re4son-kernel-current/
tar -xJf re4son-kernel_current.tar.xz
cd re4son-kernel_4*
./install.sh

Install airmon-ng

sudo apt-get install airmon-ng

Run these commands to stop conflicting programs and start monitor mode. Note this also kills your wifi internet/AP connection. If you don't kill the conflicting programs there were a lot of missing messages (action frames). Ref

sudo airmon-ng check kill
sudo airmon-ng start wlan0 1

Run ifconfig to check that the new monitor interface is ready... it should be called wlan0mon.

Now you can either run Wireshark (startx -> Under the Internet menu -> change Wireshark shortcut... add sudo), or run sudo airodump-ng from command line. Ref

For Wireshark, pick the wlan0mon interface and set the filter to wlan.fc.type_subtype == 13 (This is a filter for Action Frames or 0x000d)

References: