Where I believe the problem can be solved:
- if (header.indexOf("/get?input1=") >= 0) {
- Serial.println(PARAM_INPUT_1);
- }
- if (header.indexOf("&input2=") >= 0) {
- Serial.println(PARAM_INPUT_2);
- }
- #include <Arduino.h>
- #include <WiFi.h>
- #include <DNSServer.h>
- // Replace with your network credentials
- const char* ssid = "dictatorTippens";
- const char* password = "teamomega";
- int max_connection = 4;
- const byte DNS_PORT = 53;
- const char* PARAM_INPUT_1 = "input1"; // copied over
- const char* PARAM_INPUT_2 = "input2"; // copied over
- const char* PARAM_INPUT_3 = "input3"; // copied over
- DNSServer dnsServer;
- // Set web server port number to 80
- WiFiServer server(80);
- // Variable to store the HTTP request
- String header;
- String saveHeader;
- void setup() {
- Serial.begin(9600);
- // Connect to Wi-Fi network with SSID and password
- Serial.print("Setting AP (Access Point)…");
- // Remove the password parameter, if you want the AP (Access Point) to be open
- WiFi.softAP(ssid, password, max_connection);
- IPAddress IP = WiFi.softAPIP();
- Serial.print("AP IP address: ");
- Serial.println(IP);
- // if DNSServer is started with "*" for domain name, it will reply with
- // provided IP to all DNS request
- dnsServer.start(DNS_PORT, "*", IP);
- server.begin();
- }
- void loop(){
- dnsServer.processNextRequest();
- WiFiClient client = server.available(); // Listen for incoming clients
- if (client) { // If a new client connects,
- Serial.println("New Client."); // print a message out in the serial port
- String currentLine = ""; // make a String to hold incoming data from the client
- while (client.connected()) { // loop while the client's connected
- if (client.available()) { // if there's bytes to read from the client,
- char c = client.read(); // read a byte, then
- Serial.write(c); // print it out the serial monitor
- header += c;
- if (c == '\n') { // if the byte is a newline character
- saveHeader = header;
- // if the current line is blank, you got two newline characters in a row.
- // that's the end of the client HTTP request, so send a response:
- if (currentLine.length() == 0) {
- // HTTP headers always start with a response code (e.g. HTTP/1.1 200 OK)
- // and a content-type so the client knows what's coming, then a blank line:
- client.println("HTTP/1.1 200 OK");
- client.println("Content-type:text/html");
- client.println("Connection: close");
- client.println();
- // turns the GPIOs on and off
- if (header.indexOf("/get?input1=") >= 0) {
- Serial.println(PARAM_INPUT_1);
- }
- if (header.indexOf("&input2=") >= 0) {
- Serial.println(PARAM_INPUT_2);
- }
- // HTML web page to handle 2 input fields (input1, input2)
- const char index_html[] PROGMEM = R"rawliteral(
- <!DOCTYPE HTML><html><head>
- <title>ESP Input Form</title>
- <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
- </head><body>
- <form action="/get">
- SSID: <input type="text" name="input1"><br>
- Password: <input type="text" name="input2">
- <input type="submit" value="Submit">
- </form><br>
- </body></html>)rawliteral";
- client.println(index_html);
- // Break out of the while loop
- break;
- } else { // if you got a newline, then clear currentLine
- currentLine = "";
- }
- } else if (c != '\r') { // if you got anything else but a carriage return character,
- currentLine += c; // add it to the end of the currentLine
- }
- }
- }
- // Clear the header variable
- header = "";
- // Close the connection
- client.stop();
- Serial.println("Client disconnected.");
- Serial.println("");
- //saveHeader for testing purposes to find serial output
- Serial.println("this is saveHeader" + saveHeader + "end of saveHeader");
- }
- }
Thank you