Installation
Recommended: Use of preconfigured microSD Card image
1. Download the file image here, unzip it and use Etcher to copy it to your microSD card.
2. After the process is complete, a new drive is visible in Windows Explorer or Mac OS Finder called /boot. Here you find wpa_supplicant.conf - open that file with any notepad application and change the WiFi credentials to your needs. Dont use Word or Office since they might change the quotation marks. Enable plain text mode in OSX Text Edit (SHIFT+COMMAND+T).
If it is refused to save the wpa_supplicant directly by the text editor, copy the file over to your PC, edit it there and copy back.
3. Eject the microSD card and put it into the raspberry pi and boot it up. After 1-2 Minutes it should be logged into the WiFi with hostname bcMeter or bcMeter.local
Advanced: Manual headless Set Up the microSD Card
Only continue if you really need and want to setup the system manually! === Download Image ===
Use the Raspberry Imager tool to write Raspberry OS LITE (very important - not Desktop!) to your card. Configure the tool to work with username pi and choose any password.
Enable SSH and WiFi in the tool.
After finishing, eject the microSD Card from the PC and put it into the Raspberry Pi.
Configuring the Raspberry Pi to be a bcMeter via SSH remote access and WiFi
Put microSD-Card in Raspberry and boot it up (takes up to a minute)
Log into the raspberry via terminal on Linux/OSX
ssh pi@raspberrypi
or alternatively if connection is refused
ssh pi@raspberrypi.local
Or any terminal client on Windows (for example Putty) with the following default credentials
address: raspberrypi
login name: pi
login passwort: raspberry
(For some mobile hotspots it is required to add .local to the hostname (e.g. raspberryp.local). Try this first if no connection is possible.)
5. Being logged in, enter
wget -N https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bcmeter/bcmeter/main/install.sh && sudo bash install.sh