st-anything/lib/WiFiEsp/examples/UdpNTPClient/UdpNTPClient.ino

155 lines
5.2 KiB
Arduino
Raw Normal View History

2023-03-11 14:11:03 +00:00
/*
WiFiEsp example: UdpNTPClient
Get the time from a Network Time Protocol (NTP) time server.
Demonstrates use of UDP to send and receive data packets
For more on NTP time servers and the messages needed to communicate with them,
see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_Time_Protocol
NOTE: The serial buffer size must be larger than 36 + packet size
In this example we use an UDP packet of 48 bytes so the buffer must be
at least 36+48=84 bytes that exceeds the default buffer size (64).
You must modify the serial buffer size to 128
For HardwareSerial modify _SS_MAX_RX_BUFF in
Arduino\hardware\arduino\avr\cores\arduino\SoftwareSerial.h
For SoftwareSerial modify _SS_MAX_RX_BUFF in
Arduino\hardware\arduino\avr\libraries\SoftwareSerial\SoftwareSerial.h
*/
#include "WiFiEsp.h"
#include "WiFiEspUdp.h"
// Emulate Serial1 on pins 6/7 if not present
#ifndef HAVE_HWSERIAL1
#include "SoftwareSerial.h"
SoftwareSerial Serial1(6, 7); // RX, TX
#endif
char ssid[] = "Twim"; // your network SSID (name)
char pass[] = "12345678"; // your network password
int status = WL_IDLE_STATUS; // the Wifi radio's status
char timeServer[] = "time.nist.gov"; // NTP server
unsigned int localPort = 2390; // local port to listen for UDP packets
const int NTP_PACKET_SIZE = 48; // NTP timestamp is in the first 48 bytes of the message
const int UDP_TIMEOUT = 2000; // timeout in miliseconds to wait for an UDP packet to arrive
byte packetBuffer[NTP_PACKET_SIZE]; // buffer to hold incoming and outgoing packets
// A UDP instance to let us send and receive packets over UDP
WiFiEspUDP Udp;
void setup()
{
// initialize serial for debugging
Serial.begin(115200);
// initialize serial for ESP module
Serial1.begin(9600);
// initialize ESP module
WiFi.init(&Serial1);
// check for the presence of the shield
if (WiFi.status() == WL_NO_SHIELD) {
Serial.println("WiFi shield not present");
// don't continue
while (true);
}
// attempt to connect to WiFi network
while ( status != WL_CONNECTED) {
Serial.print("Attempting to connect to WPA SSID: ");
Serial.println(ssid);
// Connect to WPA/WPA2 network
status = WiFi.begin(ssid, pass);
}
// you're connected now, so print out the data
Serial.println("You're connected to the network");
Udp.begin(localPort);
}
void loop()
{
sendNTPpacket(timeServer); // send an NTP packet to a time server
// wait for a reply for UDP_TIMEOUT miliseconds
unsigned long startMs = millis();
while (!Udp.available() && (millis() - startMs) < UDP_TIMEOUT) {}
Serial.println(Udp.parsePacket());
if (Udp.parsePacket()) {
Serial.println("packet received");
// We've received a packet, read the data from it into the buffer
Udp.read(packetBuffer, NTP_PACKET_SIZE);
// the timestamp starts at byte 40 of the received packet and is four bytes,
// or two words, long. First, esxtract the two words:
unsigned long highWord = word(packetBuffer[40], packetBuffer[41]);
unsigned long lowWord = word(packetBuffer[42], packetBuffer[43]);
// combine the four bytes (two words) into a long integer
// this is NTP time (seconds since Jan 1 1900):
unsigned long secsSince1900 = highWord << 16 | lowWord;
Serial.print("Seconds since Jan 1 1900 = ");
Serial.println(secsSince1900);
// now convert NTP time into everyday time:
Serial.print("Unix time = ");
// Unix time starts on Jan 1 1970. In seconds, that's 2208988800:
const unsigned long seventyYears = 2208988800UL;
// subtract seventy years:
unsigned long epoch = secsSince1900 - seventyYears;
// print Unix time:
Serial.println(epoch);
// print the hour, minute and second:
Serial.print("The UTC time is "); // UTC is the time at Greenwich Meridian (GMT)
Serial.print((epoch % 86400L) / 3600); // print the hour (86400 equals secs per day)
Serial.print(':');
if (((epoch % 3600) / 60) < 10) {
// In the first 10 minutes of each hour, we'll want a leading '0'
Serial.print('0');
}
Serial.print((epoch % 3600) / 60); // print the minute (3600 equals secs per minute)
Serial.print(':');
if ((epoch % 60) < 10) {
// In the first 10 seconds of each minute, we'll want a leading '0'
Serial.print('0');
}
Serial.println(epoch % 60); // print the second
}
// wait ten seconds before asking for the time again
delay(10000);
}
// send an NTP request to the time server at the given address
void sendNTPpacket(char *ntpSrv)
{
// set all bytes in the buffer to 0
memset(packetBuffer, 0, NTP_PACKET_SIZE);
// Initialize values needed to form NTP request
// (see URL above for details on the packets)
packetBuffer[0] = 0b11100011; // LI, Version, Mode
packetBuffer[1] = 0; // Stratum, or type of clock
packetBuffer[2] = 6; // Polling Interval
packetBuffer[3] = 0xEC; // Peer Clock Precision
// 8 bytes of zero for Root Delay & Root Dispersion
packetBuffer[12] = 49;
packetBuffer[13] = 0x4E;
packetBuffer[14] = 49;
packetBuffer[15] = 52;
// all NTP fields have been given values, now
// you can send a packet requesting a timestamp:
Udp.beginPacket(ntpSrv, 123); //NTP requests are to port 123
Udp.write(packetBuffer, NTP_PACKET_SIZE);
Udp.endPacket();
}