|
You are here |
huebnerob.com | ||
| | | | |
cowlark.com
|
|
| | | | | ||
| | | | |
www.losant.com
|
|
| | | | | Step-by-step instructions for how to get up and running with a Raspberry Pi 3. | |
| | | | |
willhaley.com
|
|
| | | | | These instructions apply not just to a Raspberry Pi, but many Linux distributions.If you forgot the password to your Pi, worry not, it's possible to reset it without re-installing. Take the SD card out of your Pi and plug it into another computer with an SD card reader. Open the SDCARD/etc/shadow file on your Raspberry Pi Look down the list for your user name.It should look like this. | |
| | | | |
willhaley.com
|
|
| | | The goal is to connect a non-WiFi computer to a WiFi network using a Raspberry Pi. We will use a Raspberry Pi 4 Model B as a bridge between the non-WiFi computer and the WiFi network. The Raspberry Pi connects to WiFi and shares its connection with other computers over Ethernet. These instructions were only tested and verified using: Fresh install of Raspberry Pi OS Lite (bookworm, 64-bit, from November 19th 2024) Raspberry Pi 4 Model B Typical home WiFi network using WPA2 This Stack Overflow answer and accompanying script as well as this proxy arp approach and Debian's Bridging Network Connections with Proxy ARP are the primary sources for how I got this working and are the inspiration for this guide. | ||