- Important Change from v1.5.0
- Important Note from v1.6.0
- Table of contents
- Why do we need this AsyncWebServer_STM32 library
- Changelog
- Prerequisites
- Installation
- Packages' Patches
- Important things to remember
- Principles of operation
- Request Variables
- Responses
- Redirect to another URL
- Basic response with HTTP Code
- Basic response with HTTP Code and extra headers
- Basic response with string content
- Basic response with string content and extra headers
- Respond with content coming from a Stream
- Respond with content coming from a Stream and extra headers
- Respond with content coming from a Stream containing templates
- Respond with content coming from a Stream containing templates and extra headers
- Respond with content using a callback
- Respond with content using a callback and extra headers
- Respond with content using a callback containing templates
- Respond with content using a callback containing templates and extra headers
- Chunked Response
- Chunked Response containing templates
- Print to response
- ArduinoJson Basic Response
- ArduinoJson Advanced Response
- Param Rewrite With Matching
- Using filters
- Bad Responses
- Async WebSocket Plugin
- Async Event Source Plugin
- Remove handlers and rewrites
- Setting up the server
- HOWTO use STM32F4 with LAN8720
- Examples
- 1. For LAN8742A
- 1. Async_AdvancedWebServer
- 2. AsyncFSBrowser_STM32
- 3. Async_HelloServer
- 4. Async_HelloServer2
- 5. Async_HttpBasicAuth
- 6. AsyncMultiWebServer_STM32
- 7. Async_PostServer
- 8. Async_RegexPatterns_STM32
- 9. Async_SimpleWebServer_STM32
- 10. MQTTClient_Auth
- 11. MQTTClient_Basic
- 12. MQTT_ThingStream
- 13. WebClient
- 14. WebClientRepeating
- 15. Async_AdvancedWebServer_favicon New
- 16. Async_AdvancedWebServer_MemoryIssues_SendArduinoString New
- 17. Async_AdvancedWebServer_MemoryIssues_Send_CString New
- 18. Async_AdvancedWebServer_SendChunked New
- 19. AsyncWebServer_SendChunked New
- 2. For LAN8720
- 1. Async_AdvancedWebServer_LAN8720
- 2. AsyncFSBrowser_STM32_LAN8720
- 3. Async_HelloServer_LAN8720
- 4. Async_HelloServer2_LAN8720
- 5. Async_HttpBasicAuth_LAN8720
- 6. AsyncMultiWebServer_STM32_LAN8720
- 7. Async_PostServer_LAN8720
- 8. Async_RegexPatterns_STM32_LAN8720
- 9. Async_SimpleWebServer_STM32_LAN8720
- 10. MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720
- 11. MQTTClient_Basic_LAN8720
- 12. MQTT_ThingStream_LAN8720
- 13. WebClient_LAN8720
- 14. WebClientRepeating_LAN8720
- 1. For LAN8742A
- Example Async_AdvancedWebServer
- Debug Terminal Output Samples
- 1. AsyncMultiWebServer_STM32 on NUCLEO_F767ZI using Built-in LAN8742A Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library
- 2. WebClient on NUCLEO_F767ZI using Built-in LAN8742A Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library
- 3. MQTTClient_Auth on NUCLEO_F767ZI using Built-in LAN8742A Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library
- 4. MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI using Built-in LAN8742A Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library
- 5. MQTT_ThingStream on NUCLEO_F767ZI using Built-in LAN8742A Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library
- 6. MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE using LAN8720 Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library
- 7. Async_AdvancedWebServer_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE using LAN8720 Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library
- 8. AsyncMultiWebServer_STM32_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE using LAN8720 Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library
- 9. Async_AdvancedWebServer_favicon on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
- 10. Async_AdvancedWebServer_MemoryIssues_Send_CString on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
- 11. Async_AdvancedWebServer_SendChunked on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
- 12. AsyncWebServer_SendChunked on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
- Debug
- Troubleshooting
- Issues
- TO DO
- DONE
- Contributions and Thanks
- Contributing
- License
- Copyright
For Generic STM32F4 series
boards, such as STM32F407VE
, using LAN8720, please use STM32 core v2.2.0 as breaking core v2.3.0 creates the compile error. Will fix in the near future.
The new v1.6.0+
has added a new and powerful feature to permit using CString
to save heap to send very large data
.
Check the marvelleous
PRs of @salasidis in Portenta_H7_AsyncWebServer library
- request->send(200, textPlainStr, jsonChartDataCharStr); - Without using String Class - to save heap #8
- All memmove() removed - string no longer destroyed #11
and these new examples
- Async_AdvancedWebServer_MemoryIssues_Send_CString
- Async_AdvancedWebServer_MemoryIssues_SendArduinoString
If using Arduino String, to send a buffer around 5,5 KBytes, the used Max Heap
is around 48,716 bytes
If using CString in regular memory, with the much larger 31 KBytes, the used Max Heap
is around 42,952 bytes
This is very critical in use-cases where sending very large data
is necessary, without heap-allocation-error
.
- The traditional function used to send
Arduino String
is
void send(int code, const String& contentType = String(), const String& content = String());
such as
request->send(200, textPlainStr, ArduinoStr);
The required additional HEAP is about 2 times of the String size
- To use
CString
with copying while sending. Use function
void send(int code, const String& contentType, const char *content, bool copyingSend = true); // RSMOD
such as
request->send(200, textPlainStr, cStr);
The required additional HEAP is also about 2 times of the CString size because of unnecessary copies
of the CString in HEAP. Avoid this unefficient
way.
- To use
CString
without copying while sending. Use function
void send(int code, const String& contentType, const char *content, bool copyingSend = true); // RSMOD
such as
request->send(200, textPlainStr, cStr, false);
The required additional HEAP is about 1 times of the CString size. This way is the best and most efficient way to use by avoiding of unnecessary copies
of the CString in HEAP
Why do we need this AsyncWebServer_STM32 library
This library is based on, modified from:
to apply the better and faster asynchronous feature of the powerful ESPAsyncWebServer Library into STM32F/L/H/G/WB/MP1 boards using LAN8720 or built-in LAN8742A Ethernet.
- Using asynchronous network means that you can handle more than one connection at the same time
- You are called once the request is ready and parsed
- When you send the response, you are immediately ready to handle other connections while the server is taking care of sending the response in the background
- Speed is OMG
- Easy to use API, HTTP Basic and Digest MD5 Authentication (default), ChunkedResponse
- Easily extensible to handle any type of content
- Supports Continue 100
- Async WebSocket plugin offering different locations without extra servers or ports
- Async EventSource (Server-Sent Events) plugin to send events to the browser
- URL Rewrite plugin for conditional and permanent url rewrites
- ServeStatic plugin that supports cache, Last-Modified, default index and more
- Simple template processing engine to handle templates
- STM32F/L/H/G/WB/MP1 boards with built-in Ethernet LAN8742A such as :
- Nucleo-144 (F429ZI, F767ZI)
- Discovery (STM32F746G-DISCOVERY)
- All STM32 boards (STM32F/L/H/G/WB/MP1) with 32K+ Flash, with Built-in Ethernet
- See EthernetWebServer_STM32 Support and Test Results
- STM32F4/F7 boards using Ethernet LAN8720 such as :
- Nucleo-144 (F429ZI, NUCLEO_F746NG, NUCLEO_F746ZG, NUCLEO_F756ZG)
- Discovery (DISCO_F746NG)
- STM32F4 boards (BLACK_F407VE, BLACK_F407VG, BLACK_F407ZE, BLACK_F407ZG, BLACK_F407VE_Mini, DIYMORE_F407VGT, FK407M1)
Arduino IDE 1.8.19+
for Arduino.Arduino Core for STM32 v2.3.0+
for STM32 boards.STM32Ethernet library v1.3.0+
for built-in LAN8742A Ethernet on (Nucleo-144, Discovery).LwIP library v2.1.2+
for built-in LAN8742A Ethernet on (Nucleo-144, Discovery).STM32AsyncTCP library v1.0.1+
for built-in Ethernet on (Nucleo-144, Discovery). To install manually for Arduino IDE.
The best and easiest way is to use Arduino Library Manager
. Search for AsyncWebServer_STM32
, then select / install the latest version. You can also use this link for more detailed instructions.
- Navigate to AsyncWebServer_STM32 page.
- Download the latest release
AsyncWebServer_STM32-master.zip
. - Extract the zip file to
AsyncWebServer_STM32-master
directory - Copy the whole
AsyncWebServer_STM32-master
folder to Arduino libraries' directory such as~/Arduino/libraries/
.
- Install VS Code
- Install PlatformIO
- Install AsyncWebServer_STM32 library by using Library Manager. Search for AsyncWebServer_STM32 in Platform.io Author's Libraries
- Use included platformio.ini file from examples to ensure that all dependent libraries will installed automatically. Please visit documentation for the other options and examples at Project Configuration File
To use LAN8720 on some STM32 boards
- Nucleo-144 (F429ZI, NUCLEO_F746NG, NUCLEO_F746ZG, NUCLEO_F756ZG)
- Discovery (DISCO_F746NG)
- STM32F4 boards (BLACK_F407VE, BLACK_F407VG, BLACK_F407ZE, BLACK_F407ZG, BLACK_F407VE_Mini, DIYMORE_F407VGT, FK407M1)
you have to copy the files stm32f4xx_hal_conf_default.h and stm32f7xx_hal_conf_default.h into STM32 stm32 directory (~/.arduino15/packages/STM32/hardware/stm32/2.3.0/system) to overwrite the old files.
Supposing the STM32 stm32 core version is 2.3.0. These files must be copied into the directory:
~/.arduino15/packages/STM32/hardware/stm32/2.3.0/system/STM32F4xx/stm32f4xx_hal_conf_default.h
for STM32F4.~/.arduino15/packages/STM32/hardware/stm32/2.3.0/system/STM32F7xx/stm32f7xx_hal_conf_default.h
for Nucleo-144 STM32F7.
Whenever a new version is installed, remember to copy this file into the new version directory. For example, new version is x.yy.zz, these files must be copied into the corresponding directory:
~/.arduino15/packages/STM32/hardware/stm32/x.yy.zz/system/STM32F4xx/stm32f4xx_hal_conf_default.h
- `~/.arduino15/packages/STM32/hardware/stm32/x.yy.zz/system/STM32F7xx/stm32f7xx_hal_conf_default.h
To use Serial1 on some STM32 boards without Serial1 definition (Nucleo-144 NUCLEO_F767ZI, Nucleo-64 NUCLEO_L053R8, etc.) boards, you have to copy the files STM32 variant.h into STM32 stm32 directory (~/.arduino15/packages/STM32/hardware/stm32/2.3.0). You have to modify the files corresponding to your boards, this is just an illustration how to do.
Supposing the STM32 stm32 core version is 2.3.0. These files must be copied into the directory:
~/.arduino15/packages/STM32/hardware/stm32/2.3.0/variants/NUCLEO_F767ZI/variant.h
for Nucleo-144 NUCLEO_F767ZI.~/.arduino15/packages/STM32/hardware/stm32/2.3.0/variants/NUCLEO_L053R8/variant.h
for Nucleo-64 NUCLEO_L053R8.
Whenever a new version is installed, remember to copy this file into the new version directory. For example, new version is x.yy.zz, these files must be copied into the corresponding directory:
~/.arduino15/packages/STM32/hardware/stm32/x.yy.zz/variants/NUCLEO_F767ZI/variant.h
~/.arduino15/packages/STM32/hardware/stm32/x.yy.zz/variants/NUCLEO_L053R8/variant.h
- This is fully asynchronous server and as such does not run on the loop thread.
- You can not use
yield()
ordelay()
or any function that uses them inside the callbacks - The server is smart enough to know when to close the connection and free resources
- You can not send more than one response to a single request
- Listens for connections
- Wraps the new clients into
Request
- Keeps track of clients and cleans memory
- Manages
Rewrites
and apply them on the request url - Manages
Handlers
and attaches them to Requests
- TCP connection is received by the server
- The connection is wrapped inside
Request
object - When the request head is received (type, url, get params, http version and host),
the server goes through all
Rewrites
(in the order they were added) to rewrite the url and inject query parameters, next, it goes through all attachedHandlers
(in the order they were added) trying to find one thatcanHandle
the given request. If none are found, the default(catch-all) handler is attached. - The rest of the request is received, calling the
handleUpload
orhandleBody
methods of theHandler
if they are needed (POST+File/Body) - When the whole request is parsed, the result is given to the
handleRequest
method of theHandler
and is ready to be responded to - In the
handleRequest
method, to theRequest
is attached aResponse
object (see below) that will serve the response data back to the client - When the
Response
is sent, the client is closed and freed from the memory
- The
Rewrites
are used to rewrite the request url and/or inject get parameters for a specific request url path. - All
Rewrites
are evaluated on the request in the order they have been added to the server. - The
Rewrite
will change the request url only if the request url (excluding get parameters) is fully match the rewrite url, and when the optionalFilter
callback return true. - Setting a
Filter
to theRewrite
enables to control when to apply the rewrite, decision can be based on request url, http version, request host/port/target host, get parameters or the request client's localIP or remoteIP. - The
Rewrite
can specify a target url with optional get parameters, e.g./to-url?with=params
- The
Handlers
are used for executing specific actions to particular requests - One
Handler
instance can be attached to any request and lives together with the server - Setting a
Filter
to theHandler
enables to control when to apply the handler, decision can be based on request url, http version, request host/port/target host, get parameters or the request client's localIP or remoteIP. - The
canHandle
method is used for handler specific control on whether the requests can be handled and for declaring any interesting headers that theRequest
should parse. Decision can be based on request method, request url, http version, request host/port/target host and get parameters - Once a
Handler
is attached to givenRequest
(canHandle
returned true) thatHandler
takes care to receive any file/data upload and attach aResponse
once theRequest
has been fully parsed Handlers
are evaluated in the order they are attached to the server. ThecanHandle
is called only if theFilter
that was set to theHandler
return true.- The first
Handler
that can handle the request is selected, not furtherFilter
andcanHandle
are called.
- The
Response
objects are used to send the response data back to the client - The
Response
object lives with theRequest
and is freed on end or disconnect - Different techniques are used depending on the response type to send the data in packets returning back almost immediately and sending the next packet when this one is received. Any time in between is spent to run the user loop and handle other network packets
- Responding asynchronously is probably the most difficult thing for most to understand
- Many different options exist for the user to make responding a background task
AsyncWebServer_STM32
contains simple template processing engine.- Template processing can be added to most response types.
- Currently it supports only replacing template placeholders with actual values. No conditional processing, cycles, etc.
- Placeholders are delimited with
%
symbols. Like this:%TEMPLATE_PLACEHOLDER%
. - It works by extracting placeholder name from response text and passing it to user provided function which should return actual value to be used instead of placeholder.
- Since it's user provided function, it is possible for library users to implement conditional processing and cycles themselves.
- Since it's impossible to know the actual response size after template processing step in advance (and, therefore, to include it in response headers), the response becomes chunked.
request->version(); // uint8_t: 0 = HTTP/1.0, 1 = HTTP/1.1
request->method(); // enum: HTTP_GET, HTTP_POST, HTTP_DELETE, HTTP_PUT, HTTP_PATCH, HTTP_HEAD, HTTP_OPTIONS
request->url(); // String: URL of the request (not including host, port or GET parameters)
request->host(); // String: The requested host (can be used for virtual hosting)
request->contentType(); // String: ContentType of the request (not available in Handler::canHandle)
request->contentLength(); // size_t: ContentLength of the request (not available in Handler::canHandle)
request->multipart(); // bool: True if the request has content type "multipart"
//List all collected headers
int headers = request->headers();
int i;
for (i=0;i<headers;i++)
{
AsyncWebHeader* h = request->getHeader(i);
Serial.printf("HEADER[%s]: %s\n", h->name().c_str(), h->value().c_str());
}
//get specific header by name
if (request->hasHeader("MyHeader"))
{
AsyncWebHeader* h = request->getHeader("MyHeader");
Serial.printf("MyHeader: %s\n", h->value().c_str());
}
//List all collected headers (Compatibility)
int headers = request->headers();
int i;
for (i=0;i<headers;i++)
{
Serial.printf("HEADER[%s]: %s\n", request->headerName(i).c_str(), request->header(i).c_str());
}
//get specific header by name (Compatibility)
if (request->hasHeader("MyHeader"))
{
Serial.printf("MyHeader: %s\n", request->header("MyHeader").c_str());
}
//List all parameters
int params = request->params();
for (int i=0;i<params;i++)
{
AsyncWebParameter* p = request->getParam(i);
if (p->isFile())
{
//p->isPost() is also true
Serial.printf("FILE[%s]: %s, size: %u\n", p->name().c_str(), p->value().c_str(), p->size());
}
else if (p->isPost())
{
Serial.printf("POST[%s]: %s\n", p->name().c_str(), p->value().c_str());
}
else
{
Serial.printf("GET[%s]: %s\n", p->name().c_str(), p->value().c_str());
}
}
//Check if GET parameter exists
if (request->hasParam("download"))
AsyncWebParameter* p = request->getParam("download");
//Check if POST (but not File) parameter exists
if (request->hasParam("download", true))
AsyncWebParameter* p = request->getParam("download", true);
//Check if FILE was uploaded
if (request->hasParam("download", true, true))
AsyncWebParameter* p = request->getParam("download", true, true);
//List all parameters (Compatibility)
int args = request->args();
for (int i=0;i<args;i++)
{
Serial.printf("ARG[%s]: %s\n", request->argName(i).c_str(), request->arg(i).c_str());
}
//Check if parameter exists (Compatibility)
if (request->hasArg("download"))
String arg = request->arg("download");
Endpoints which consume JSON can use a special handler to get ready to use JSON data in the request callback:
#include "AsyncJson.h"
#include "ArduinoJson.h"
AsyncCallbackJsonWebHandler* handler = new AsyncCallbackJsonWebHandler("/rest/endpoint", [](AsyncWebServerRequest *request, JsonVariant &json)
{
JsonObject& jsonObj = json.as<JsonObject>();
// ...
});
server.addHandler(handler);
//to local url
request->redirect("/login");
//to external url
request->redirect("http://esp8266.com");
request->send(404); //Sends 404 File Not Found
AsyncWebServerResponse *response = request->beginResponse(404); //Sends 404 File Not Found
response->addHeader("Server","AsyncWebServer_STM32");
request->send(response);
request->send(200, "text/plain", "Hello World!");
AsyncWebServerResponse *response = request->beginResponse(200, "text/plain", "Hello World!");
response->addHeader("Server","AsyncWebServer");
request->send(response);
//read 12 bytes from Serial and send them as Content Type text/plain
request->send(Serial, "text/plain", 12);
//read 12 bytes from Serial and send them as Content Type text/plain
AsyncWebServerResponse *response = request->beginResponse(Serial, "text/plain", 12);
response->addHeader("Server","AsyncWebServer_STM32");
request->send(response);
String processor(const String& var)
{
if (var == "HELLO_FROM_TEMPLATE")
return F("Hello world!");
return String();
}
// ...
//read 12 bytes from Serial and send them as Content Type text/plain
request->send(Serial, "text/plain", 12, processor);
String processor(const String& var)
{
if (var == "HELLO_FROM_TEMPLATE")
return F("Hello world!");
return String();
}
// ...
//read 12 bytes from Serial and send them as Content Type text/plain
AsyncWebServerResponse *response = request->beginResponse(Serial, "text/plain", 12, processor);
response->addHeader("Server","AsyncWebServer_STM32");
request->send(response);
//send 128 bytes as plain text
request->send("text/plain", 128, [](uint8_t *buffer, size_t maxLen, size_t index) -> size_t
{
//Write up to "maxLen" bytes into "buffer" and return the amount written.
//index equals the amount of bytes that have been already sent
//You will not be asked for more bytes once the content length has been reached.
//Keep in mind that you can not delay or yield waiting for more data!
//Send what you currently have and you will be asked for more again
return mySource.read(buffer, maxLen);
});
//send 128 bytes as plain text
AsyncWebServerResponse *response = request->beginResponse("text/plain", 128, [](uint8_t *buffer, size_t maxLen, size_t index) -> size_t
{
//Write up to "maxLen" bytes into "buffer" and return the amount written.
//index equals the amount of bytes that have been already sent
//You will not be asked for more bytes once the content length has been reached.
//Keep in mind that you can not delay or yield waiting for more data!
//Send what you currently have and you will be asked for more again
return mySource.read(buffer, maxLen);
});
response->addHeader("Server","AsyncWebServer_STM32");
request->send(response);
String processor(const String& var)
{
if (var == "HELLO_FROM_TEMPLATE")
return F("Hello world!");
return String();
}
// ...
//send 128 bytes as plain text
request->send("text/plain", 128, [](uint8_t *buffer, size_t maxLen, size_t index) -> size_t
{
//Write up to "maxLen" bytes into "buffer" and return the amount written.
//index equals the amount of bytes that have been already sent
//You will not be asked for more bytes once the content length has been reached.
//Keep in mind that you can not delay or yield waiting for more data!
//Send what you currently have and you will be asked for more again
return mySource.read(buffer, maxLen);
}, processor);
String processor(const String& var)
{
if (var == "HELLO_FROM_TEMPLATE")
return F("Hello world!");
return String();
}
// ...
//send 128 bytes as plain text
AsyncWebServerResponse *response = request->beginResponse("text/plain", 128, [](uint8_t *buffer, size_t maxLen, size_t index) -> size_t
{
//Write up to "maxLen" bytes into "buffer" and return the amount written.
//index equals the amount of bytes that have been already sent
//You will not be asked for more bytes once the content length has been reached.
//Keep in mind that you can not delay or yield waiting for more data!
//Send what you currently have and you will be asked for more again
return mySource.read(buffer, maxLen);
}, processor);
response->addHeader("Server","AsyncWebServer_STM32");
request->send(response);
Used when content length is unknown. Works best if the client supports HTTP/1.1
AsyncWebServerResponse *response = request->beginChunkedResponse("text/plain", [](uint8_t *buffer, size_t maxLen, size_t index) -> size_t
{
//Write up to "maxLen" bytes into "buffer" and return the amount written.
//index equals the amount of bytes that have been already sent
//You will be asked for more data until 0 is returned
//Keep in mind that you can not delay or yield waiting for more data!
return mySource.read(buffer, maxLen);
});
response->addHeader("Server","AsyncWebServer_STM32");
request->send(response);
Used when content length is unknown. Works best if the client supports HTTP/1.1
String processor(const String& var)
{
if (var == "HELLO_FROM_TEMPLATE")
return F("Hello world!");
return String();
}
// ...
AsyncWebServerResponse *response = request->beginChunkedResponse("text/plain", [](uint8_t *buffer, size_t maxLen, size_t index) -> size_t
{
//Write up to "maxLen" bytes into "buffer" and return the amount written.
//index equals the amount of bytes that have been already sent
//You will be asked for more data until 0 is returned
//Keep in mind that you can not delay or yield waiting for more data!
return mySource.read(buffer, maxLen);
}, processor);
response->addHeader("Server","AsyncWebServer_STM32");
request->send(response);
AsyncResponseStream *response = request->beginResponseStream("text/html");
response->addHeader("Server","AsyncWebServer_STM32");
response->printf("<!DOCTYPE html><html><head><title>Webpage at %s</title></head><body>", request->url().c_str());
response->print("<h2>Hello ");
response->print(request->client()->remoteIP());
response->print("</h2>");
response->print("<h3>General</h3>");
response->print("<ul>");
response->printf("<li>Version: HTTP/1.%u</li>", request->version());
response->printf("<li>Method: %s</li>", request->methodToString());
response->printf("<li>URL: %s</li>", request->url().c_str());
response->printf("<li>Host: %s</li>", request->host().c_str());
response->printf("<li>ContentType: %s</li>", request->contentType().c_str());
response->printf("<li>ContentLength: %u</li>", request->contentLength());
response->printf("<li>Multipart: %s</li>", request->multipart()?"true":"false");
response->print("</ul>");
response->print("<h3>Headers</h3>");
response->print("<ul>");
int headers = request->headers();
for (int i=0;i<headers;i++)
{
AsyncWebHeader* h = request->getHeader(i);
response->printf("<li>%s: %s</li>", h->name().c_str(), h->value().c_str());
}
response->print("</ul>");
response->print("<h3>Parameters</h3>");
response->print("<ul>");
int params = request->params();
for (int i=0;i<params;i++)
{
AsyncWebParameter* p = request->getParam(i);
if (p->isFile())
{
response->printf("<li>FILE[%s]: %s, size: %u</li>", p->name().c_str(), p->value().c_str(), p->size());
}
else if (p->isPost())
{
response->printf("<li>POST[%s]: %s</li>", p->name().c_str(), p->value().c_str());
}
else
{
response->printf("<li>GET[%s]: %s</li>", p->name().c_str(), p->value().c_str());
}
}
response->print("</ul>");
response->print("</body></html>");
//send the response last
request->send(response);
This way of sending Json is great for when the result is below 4KB
#include "AsyncJson.h"
#include "ArduinoJson.h"
AsyncResponseStream *response = request->beginResponseStream("application/json");
DynamicJsonBuffer jsonBuffer;
JsonObject &root = jsonBuffer.createObject();
root["heap"] = ESP.getFreeHeap();
root["ssid"] = WiFi.SSID();
root.printTo(*response);
request->send(response);
This response can handle really large Json objects (tested to 40KB)
There isn't any noticeable speed decrease for small results with the method above
Since ArduinoJson does not allow reading parts of the string, the whole Json has to be passed every time a chunks needs to be sent, which shows speed decrease proportional to the resulting json packets
#include "AsyncJson.h"
#include "ArduinoJson.h"
AsyncJsonResponse * response = new AsyncJsonResponse();
response->addHeader("Server","AsyncWebServer");
JsonObject& root = response->getRoot();
root["IP"] = Ethernet.localIP();
response->setLength();
request->send(response);
It is possible to rewrite the request url with parameter matchg. Here is an example with one parameter: Rewrite for example "/radio/{frequence}" -> "/radio?f={frequence}"
class OneParamRewrite : public AsyncWebRewrite
{
protected:
String _urlPrefix;
int _paramIndex;
String _paramsBackup;
public:
OneParamRewrite(const char* from, const char* to)
: AsyncWebRewrite(from, to)
{
_paramIndex = _from.indexOf('{');
if ( _paramIndex >= 0 && _from.endsWith("}"))
{
_urlPrefix = _from.substring(0, _paramIndex);
int index = _params.indexOf('{');
if (index >= 0)
{
_params = _params.substring(0, index);
}
}
else
{
_urlPrefix = _from;
}
_paramsBackup = _params;
}
bool match(AsyncWebServerRequest *request) override
{
if (request->url().startsWith(_urlPrefix))
{
if (_paramIndex >= 0)
{
_params = _paramsBackup + request->url().substring(_paramIndex);
}
else
{
_params = _paramsBackup;
}
return true;
}
else
{
return false;
}
}
};
Usage:
server.addRewrite( new OneParamRewrite("/radio/{frequence}", "/radio?f={frequence}") );
Filters can be set to Rewrite
or Handler
in order to control when to apply the rewrite and consider the handler.
A filter is a callback function that evaluates the request and return a boolean true
to include the item
or false
to exclude it.
Some responses are implemented, but you should not use them, because they do not conform to HTTP. The following example will lead to unclean close of the connection and more time wasted than providing the length of the content
//This is used as fallback for chunked responses to HTTP/1.0 Clients
request->send("text/plain", 0, [](uint8_t *buffer, size_t maxLen, size_t index) -> size_t
{
//Write up to "maxLen" bytes into "buffer" and return the amount written.
//You will be asked for more data until 0 is returned
//Keep in mind that you can not delay or yield waiting for more data!
return mySource.read(buffer, maxLen);
});
The server includes a web socket plugin which lets you define different WebSocket locations to connect to without starting another listening service or using different port
void onEvent(AsyncWebSocket * server, AsyncWebSocketClient * client, AwsEventType type, void * arg, uint8_t *data, size_t len)
{
if (type == WS_EVT_CONNECT)
{
//client connected
Serial.printf("ws[%s][%u] connect\n", server->url(), client->id());
client->printf("Hello Client %u :)", client->id());
client->ping();
}
else if (type == WS_EVT_DISCONNECT)
{
//client disconnected
Serial.printf("ws[%s][%u] disconnect: %u\n", server->url(), client->id());
}
else if (type == WS_EVT_ERROR)
{
//error was received from the other end
Serial.printf("ws[%s][%u] error(%u): %s\n", server->url(), client->id(), *((uint16_t*)arg), (char*)data);
}
else if (type == WS_EVT_PONG)
{
//pong message was received (in response to a ping request maybe)
Serial.printf("ws[%s][%u] pong[%u]: %s\n", server->url(), client->id(), len, (len)?(char*)data:"");
}
else if (type == WS_EVT_DATA)
{
//data packet
AwsFrameInfo * info = (AwsFrameInfo*)arg;
if (info->final && info->index == 0 && info->len == len)
{
//the whole message is in a single frame and we got all of it's data
Serial.printf("ws[%s][%u] %s-message[%llu]: ", server->url(), client->id(), (info->opcode == WS_TEXT)?"text":"binary", info->len);
if (info->opcode == WS_TEXT)
{
data[len] = 0;
Serial.printf("%s\n", (char*)data);
}
else
{
for (size_t i=0; i < info->len; i++)
{
Serial.printf("%02x ", data[i]);
}
Serial.printf("\n");
}
if (info->opcode == WS_TEXT)
client->text("I got your text message");
else
client->binary("I got your binary message");
}
else
{
//message is comprised of multiple frames or the frame is split into multiple packets
if (info->index == 0)
{
if (info->num == 0)
Serial.printf("ws[%s][%u] %s-message start\n", server->url(), client->id(), (info->message_opcode == WS_TEXT)?"text":"binary");
Serial.printf("ws[%s][%u] frame[%u] start[%llu]\n", server->url(), client->id(), info->num, info->len);
}
Serial.printf("ws[%s][%u] frame[%u] %s[%llu - %llu]: ", server->url(), client->id(), info->num, (info->message_opcode == WS_TEXT)?"text":"binary", info->index, info->index + len);
if (info->message_opcode == WS_TEXT)
{
data[len] = 0;
Serial.printf("%s\n", (char*)data);
}
else
{
for (size_t i=0; i < len; i++)
{
Serial.printf("%02x ", data[i]);
}
Serial.printf("\n");
}
if ((info->index + len) == info->len)
{
Serial.printf("ws[%s][%u] frame[%u] end[%llu]\n", server->url(), client->id(), info->num, info->len);
if (info->final)
{
Serial.printf("ws[%s][%u] %s-message end\n", server->url(), client->id(), (info->message_opcode == WS_TEXT)?"text":"binary");
if (info->message_opcode == WS_TEXT)
client->text("I got your text message");
else
client->binary("I got your binary message");
}
}
}
}
}
//Server methods
AsyncWebSocket ws("/ws");
//printf to a client
ws.printf((uint32_t)client_id, arguments...);
//printf to all clients
ws.printfAll(arguments...);
//send text to a client
ws.text((uint32_t)client_id, (char*)text);
ws.text((uint32_t)client_id, (uint8_t*)text, (size_t)len);
//send text to all clients
ws.textAll((char*)text);
ws.textAll((uint8_t*)text, (size_t)len);
//send binary to a client
ws.binary((uint32_t)client_id, (char*)binary);
ws.binary((uint32_t)client_id, (uint8_t*)binary, (size_t)len);
ws.binary((uint32_t)client_id, flash_binary, 4);
//send binary to all clients
ws.binaryAll((char*)binary);
ws.binaryAll((uint8_t*)binary, (size_t)len);
//HTTP Authenticate before switch to Websocket protocol
ws.setAuthentication("user", "pass");
//client methods
AsyncWebSocketClient * client;
//printf
client->printf(arguments...);
//send text
client->text((char*)text);
client->text((uint8_t*)text, (size_t)len);
//send binary
client->binary((char*)binary);
client->binary((uint8_t*)binary, (size_t)len);
When sending a web socket message using the above methods a buffer is created. Under certain circumstances you might want to manipulate or populate this buffer directly from your application, for example to prevent unnecessary duplications of the data. This example below shows how to create a buffer and print data to it from an ArduinoJson object then send it.
void sendDataWs(AsyncWebSocketClient * client)
{
DynamicJsonBuffer jsonBuffer;
JsonObject& root = jsonBuffer.createObject();
root["a"] = "abc";
root["b"] = "abcd";
root["c"] = "abcde";
root["d"] = "abcdef";
root["e"] = "abcdefg";
size_t len = root.measureLength();
AsyncWebSocketMessageBuffer * buffer = ws.makeBuffer(len); // creates a buffer (len + 1) for you.
if (buffer)
{
root.printTo((char *)buffer->get(), len + 1);
if (client)
{
client->text(buffer);
}
else
{
ws.textAll(buffer);
}
}
}
Browsers sometimes do not correctly close the websocket connection, even when the close()
function is called in javascript.
This will eventually exhaust the web server's resources and will cause the server to crash. Periodically calling the cleanClients()
function from the main loop()
function limits the number of clients by closing the oldest client when the maximum number of clients has been exceeded. This can called be every cycle, however, if you wish to use less power, then calling as infrequently as once per second is sufficient.
void loop()
{
ws.cleanupClients();
}
The server includes EventSource
(Server-Sent Events) plugin which can be used to send short text events to the browser.
Difference between EventSource
and WebSockets
is that EventSource
is single direction, text-only protocol.
AsyncWebServer server(80);
AsyncEventSource events("/events");
void setup()
{
// setup ......
events.onConnect([](AsyncEventSourceClient *client)
{
if (client->lastId())
{
Serial.printf("Client reconnected! Last message ID that it got is: %u\n", client->lastId());
}
//send event with message "hello!", id current millis
// and set reconnect delay to 1 second
client->send("hello!",NULL,millis(),1000);
});
//HTTP Basic authentication
events.setAuthentication("user", "pass");
server.addHandler(&events);
// setup ......
}
void loop()
{
if (eventTriggered)
{
// your logic here
//send event "myevent"
events.send("my event content","myevent",millis());
}
}
if (!!window.EventSource)
{
var source = new EventSource('/events');
source.addEventListener('open', function(e)
{
console.log("Events Connected");
}, false);
source.addEventListener('error', function(e)
{
if (e.target.readyState != EventSource.OPEN)
{
console.log("Events Disconnected");
}
}, false);
source.addEventListener('message', function(e)
{
console.log("message", e.data);
}, false);
source.addEventListener('myevent', function(e)
{
console.log("myevent", e.data);
}, false);
}
Server goes through handlers in same order as they were added. You can't simple add handler with same path to override them. To remove handler:
// save callback for particular URL path
auto handler = server.on("/some/path", [](AsyncWebServerRequest *request)
{
//do something useful
});
// when you don't need handler anymore remove it
server.removeHandler(&handler);
// same with rewrites
server.removeRewrite(&someRewrite);
server.onNotFound([](AsyncWebServerRequest *request)
{
request->send(404);
});
// remove server.onNotFound handler
server.onNotFound(NULL);
// remove all rewrites, handlers and onNotFound/onFileUpload/onRequestBody callbacks
server.reset();
#include <LwIP.h>
#include <STM32Ethernet.h>
#include <AsyncWebServer_STM32.h>
// Enter a MAC address and IP address for your controller below.
#define NUMBER_OF_MAC 20
byte mac[][NUMBER_OF_MAC] =
{
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x01 },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x02 },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x03 },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x04 },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x05 },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x06 },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x07 },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x08 },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x09 },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x0A },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x0B },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x0C },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x0D },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x0E },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x0F },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x10 },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x11 },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x12 },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x13 },
{ 0xDE, 0xAD, 0xBE, 0xEF, 0x32, 0x14 },
};
// Select the IP address according to your local network
IPAddress ip(192, 168, 2, 232);
AsyncWebServer server(80);
const int led = 13;
void handleRoot(AsyncWebServerRequest *request)
{
digitalWrite(led, 1);
request->send(200, "text/plain", String("Hello from AsyncWebServer_STM32 on ") + BOARD_NAME );
digitalWrite(led, 0);
}
void handleNotFound(AsyncWebServerRequest *request)
{
digitalWrite(led, 1);
String message = "File Not Found\n\n";
message += "URI: ";
//message += server.uri();
message += request->url();
message += "\nMethod: ";
message += (request->method() == HTTP_GET) ? "GET" : "POST";
message += "\nArguments: ";
message += request->args();
message += "\n";
for (uint8_t i = 0; i < request->args(); i++)
{
message += " " + request->argName(i) + ": " + request->arg(i) + "\n";
}
request->send(404, "text/plain", message);
digitalWrite(led, 0);
}
void setup(void)
{
pinMode(led, OUTPUT);
digitalWrite(led, 0);
Serial.begin(115200);
while (!Serial && millis() < 5000);
Serial.println("\nStart Async_HelloServer on " + String(BOARD_NAME));
// start the ethernet connection and the server
// Use random mac
uint16_t index = millis() % NUMBER_OF_MAC;
// Use Static IP
//Ethernet.begin(mac[index], ip);
// Use DHCP dynamic IP and random mac
Ethernet.begin(mac[index]);
server.on("/", HTTP_GET, [](AsyncWebServerRequest * request)
{
handleRoot(request);
});
server.on("/inline", [](AsyncWebServerRequest * request)
{
request->send(200, "text/plain", "This works as well");
});
server.onNotFound(handleNotFound);
server.begin();
Serial.print(F("HTTP EthernetWebServer is @ IP : "));
Serial.println(Ethernet.localIP());
}
void loop(void)
{
}
#include <Arduino.h>
#include <LwIP.h>
#include <STM32Ethernet.h>
#include <AsyncWebServer_STM32.h>
#include <functional>
...
void handleRequest(AsyncWebServerRequest *request){}
class WebClass
{
public :
AsyncWebServer classWebServer = AsyncWebServer(81);
WebClass(){};
void classRequest (AsyncWebServerRequest *request){}
void begin()
{
// attach global request handler
classWebServer.on("/example", HTTP_ANY, handleRequest);
// attach class request handler
classWebServer.on("/example", HTTP_ANY, std::bind(&WebClass::classRequest, this, std::placeholders::_1));
}
};
AsyncWebServer globalWebServer(80);
WebClass webClassInstance;
void setup()
{
// attach global request handler
globalWebServer.on("/example", HTTP_ANY, handleRequest);
// attach class request handler
globalWebServer.on("/example", HTTP_ANY, std::bind(&WebClass::classRequest, webClassInstance, std::placeholders::_1));
}
void loop()
{
}
// Disable client connections if it was activated
if ( ws.enabled() )
ws.enable(false);
// enable client connections if it was disabled
if ( !ws.enabled() )
ws.enable(true);
In some cases, such as when working with CORS
, or with some sort of custom authentication system,
you might need to define a header that should get added to all responses (including static, websocket and EventSource).
The DefaultHeaders
singleton allows you to do this.
Example:
DefaultHeaders::Instance().addHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "*");
webServer.begin();
NOTE: You will still need to respond to the OPTIONS method for CORS
pre-flight in most cases. (unless you are only using GET)
This is one option:
webServer.onNotFound([](AsyncWebServerRequest *request)
{
if (request->method() == HTTP_OPTIONS)
{
request->send(200);
}
else
{
request->send(404);
}
});
With path variable you can create a custom regex
rule for a specific parameter in a route.
For example we want a sensorId
parameter in a route rule to match only an integer.
server.on("^\\/sensor\\/([0-9]+)$", HTTP_GET, [] (AsyncWebServerRequest *request)
{
String sensorId = request->pathArg(0);
});
NOTE: All regex patterns starts with ^
and ends with $
To enable the Path variable
support, you have to define the buildflag -DASYNCWEBSERVER_REGEX
.
For Arduino IDE create/update platform.local.txt
:
Windows
: C:\Users(username)\AppData\Local\Arduino15\packages\{espxxxx}
\hardware\espxxxx
\{version}
\platform.local.txt
Linux
: ~/.arduino15/packages/{espxxxx}
/hardware/{espxxxx}
/{version}
/platform.local.txt
Add/Update the following line:
compiler.cpp.extra_flags=-DDASYNCWEBSERVER_REGEX
For platformio modify platformio.ini
:
[env:myboard]
build_flags = -DASYNCWEBSERVER_REGEX
NOTE: By enabling ASYNCWEBSERVER_REGEX
, <regex>
will be included. This will add an 100k to your binary.
This is the Wiring for STM32F4 (BLACK_F407VE, etc.) using LAN8720
LAN8720 PHY | <---> | STM32F4 |
---|---|---|
TX1 | <---> | PB_13 |
TX_EN | <---> | PB_11 |
TX0 | <---> | PB_12 |
RX0 | <---> | PC_4 |
RX1 | <---> | PC_5 |
nINT/RETCLK | <---> | PA_1 |
CRS | <---> | PA_7 |
MDIO | <---> | PA_2 |
MDC | <---> | PC_1 |
GND | <---> | GND |
VCC | <---> | +3.3V |
Connect as follows. To program, use STM32CubeProgrammer or Arduino IDE with
- U(S)ART Support: "Enabled (generic Serial)"
- Upload Method : "STM32CubeProgrammer (SWD)"
STLink | <---> | STM32F4 |
---|---|---|
SWCLK | <---> | SWCLK |
SWDIO | <---> | SWDIO |
RST | <---> | NRST |
GND | <---> | GND |
5v | <---> | 5V |
Connect FDTI (USB to Serial) as follows:
FDTI | <---> | STM32F4 |
---|---|---|
RX | <---> | TX=PA_9 |
TX | <---> | RX=PA_10 |
GND | <---> | GND |
- Async_AdvancedWebServer
- AsyncFSBrowser_STM32
- Async_HelloServer
- Async_HelloServer2
- Async_HttpBasicAuth
- Async_PostServer
- AsyncMultiWebServer_STM32
- Async_RegexPatterns_STM32
- Async_SimpleWebServer_STM32
- MQTTClient_Auth
- MQTTClient_Basic
- MQTT_ThingStream
- WebClient
- WebClientRepeating
- Async_AdvancedWebServer_favicon New
- Async_AdvancedWebServer_MemoryIssues_SendArduinoString New
- Async_AdvancedWebServer_MemoryIssues_Send_CString New
- Async_AdvancedWebServer_SendChunked New
- AsyncWebServer_SendChunked New
- Async_AdvancedWebServer_LAN8720
- AsyncFSBrowser_STM32_LAN8720
- Async_HelloServer_LAN8720
- Async_HelloServer2_LAN8720
- Async_HttpBasicAuth_LAN8720
- AsyncMultiWebServer_STM32_LAN8720
- Async_PostServer_LAN8720
- Async_RegexPatterns_STM32_LAN8720
- Async_SimpleWebServer_STM32_LAN8720
- MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720
- MQTTClient_Basic_LAN8720
- MQTT_ThingStream_LAN8720
- WebClient_LAN8720
- WebClientRepeating_LAN8720
Example Async_AdvancedWebServer
You can access the Async Advanced WebServer @ the server IP
1. AsyncMultiWebServer_STM32 on NUCLEO_F767ZI using Built-in LAN8742A Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library
Following are debug terminal output and screen shots when running example AsyncMultiWebServer_STM32 on STM32F7 Nucleo-144 NUCLEO_F767ZI using Built-in LAN8742A Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library to demonstrate the operation of 3 independent AsyncWebServers on 3 different ports and how to handle the complicated AsyncMultiWebServers.
Starting AsyncMultiWebServer_STM32 on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
AsyncWebServer_STM32 v1.6.0
Connected to network. IP = 192.168.2.141
Initialize multiServer OK, serverIndex = 0, port = 8080
HTTP server started at ports 8080
Initialize multiServer OK, serverIndex = 1, port = 8081
HTTP server started at ports 8081
Initialize multiServer OK, serverIndex = 2, port = 8082
HTTP server started at ports 8082
You can access the Async Advanced WebServers @ the server IP and corresponding ports (8080, 8081 and 8082)
Following is debug terminal output when running example WebClient on STM32F7 Nucleo-144 NUCLEO_F767ZI using Built-in LAN8742A Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library.
Starting WebClient on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
AsyncWebServer_STM32 v1.6.0
You're connected to the network, IP = 192.168.2.71
Starting connection to server...
Connected to server
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Server: nginx/1.4.2
Date: Mon, 28 Dec 2020 22:30:39 GMT
Content-Type: text/plain
Content-Length: 2263
Last-Modified: Wed, 02 Oct 2013 13:46:47 GMT
Connection: close
Vary: Accept-Encoding
ETag: "524c23c7-8d7"
Accept-Ranges: bytes
`:;;;,` .:;;:.
.;;;;;;;;;;;` :;;;;;;;;;;: TM
`;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;` :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; `;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
;;;;;;;;:` `;;;;;;;;; ,;;;;;;;;.` .;;;;;;;;
.;;;;;;, :;;;;;;; .;;;;;;; ;;;;;;;
;;;;;; ;;;;;;; ;;;;;;, ;;;;;;.
,;;;;; ;;;;;;.;;;;;;` ;;;;;;
;;;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;` ``` ;;;;;`
;;;;; ;;;;;;;;;, ;;; .;;;;;
`;;;;: `;;;;;;;; ;;; ;;;;;
,;;;;` `,,,,,,,, ;;;;;;; .,,;;;,,, ;;;;;
:;;;;` .;;;;;;;; ;;;;;, :;;;;;;;; ;;;;;
:;;;;` .;;;;;;;; `;;;;;; :;;;;;;;; ;;;;;
.;;;;. ;;;;;;;. ;;; ;;;;;
;;;;; ;;;;;;;;; ;;; ;;;;;
;;;;; .;;;;;;;;;; ;;; ;;;;;,
;;;;;; `;;;;;;;;;;;; ;;;;;
`;;;;;, .;;;;;; ;;;;;;; ;;;;;;
;;;;;;: :;;;;;;. ;;;;;;; ;;;;;;
;;;;;;;` .;;;;;;;, ;;;;;;;; ;;;;;;;:
;;;;;;;;;:,:;;;;;;;;;: ;;;;;;;;;;:,;;;;;;;;;;
`;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:
,;;;;;;;;;;;;;, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
.;;;;;;;;;` ,;;;;;;;;:
;;; ;;;;;` ;;;;: .;; ;; ,;;;;;, ;;. `;, ;;;;
;;; ;;:;;; ;;;;;; .;; ;; ,;;;;;: ;;; `;, ;;;:;;
,;:; ;; ;; ;; ;; .;; ;; ,;, ;;;,`;, ;; ;;
;; ;: ;; ;; ;; ;; .;; ;; ,;, ;;;;`;, ;; ;;.
;: ;; ;;;;;: ;; ;; .;; ;; ,;, ;;`;;;, ;; ;;`
,;;;;; ;;`;; ;; ;; .;; ;; ,;, ;; ;;;, ;; ;;
;; ,;, ;; .;; ;;;;;: ;;;;;: ,;;;;;: ;; ;;, ;;;;;;
;; ;; ;; ;;` ;;;;. `;;;: ,;;;;;, ;; ;;, ;;;;
Disconnecting from server...
Following is debug terminal output when running example MQTTClient_Auth on STM32F7 Nucleo-144 NUCLEO_F767ZI using Built-in LAN8742A Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library.
Starting MQTTClient_Auth on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
AsyncWebServer_STM32 v1.6.0
Connected to network. IP = 192.168.2.71
Attempting MQTT connection to broker.emqx.io...connected
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Auth on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Auth on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Auth on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Auth on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Following is debug terminal output when running example MQTTClient_Basic on STM32F7 Nucleo-144 NUCLEO_F767ZI using Built-in LAN8742A Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library.
Starting MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
AsyncWebServer_STM32 v1.6.0
Connected to network. IP = 192.168.2.71
Attempting MQTT connection to broker.shiftr.io...connected
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Basic on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Following is debug terminal output when running example MQTT_ThingStream on STM32F7 Nucleo-144 NUCLEO_F767ZI using Built-in LAN8742A Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library.
Starting MQTT_ThingStream on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
AsyncWebServer_STM32 v1.6.0
Connected to network. IP = 192.168.2.71
***************************************
STM32_Pub
***************************************
Attempting MQTT connection to broker.emqx.io
...connected
Published connection message successfully!
Subscribed to: STM32_Sub
MQTT Message Send : STM32_Pub => Hello from MQTT_ThingStream on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
MQTT Message receive [STM32_Pub] Hello from MQTT_ThingStream on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
MQTT Message Send : STM32_Pub => Hello from MQTT_ThingStream on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
MQTT Message receive [STM32_Pub] Hello from MQTT_ThingStream on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
MQTT Message Send : STM32_Pub => Hello from MQTT_ThingStream on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
MQTT Message receive [STM32_Pub] Hello from MQTT_ThingStream on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
MQTT Message Send : STM32_Pub => Hello from MQTT_ThingStream on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
MQTT Message receive [STM32_Pub] Hello from MQTT_ThingStream on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
MQTT Message Send : STM32_Pub => Hello from MQTT_ThingStream on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
MQTT Message receive [STM32_Pub] Hello from MQTT_ThingStream on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Following is debug terminal output when running example MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on STM32F4 BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library.
Start MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
AsyncWebServer_STM32 v1.6.0
Connected to network. IP = 192.168.2.150
Attempting MQTT connection to broker.emqx.io...connected
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
Message Send : MQTT_Pub => Hello from MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
Message arrived [MQTT_Pub] Hello from MQTTClient_Auth_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
Following is the screen shot when running example Async_AdvancedWebServer_LAN8720 on STM32F4 BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library to demonstrate the operation of AsyncWebServer.
8. AsyncMultiWebServer_STM32_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE using LAN8720 Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library
Following are debug terminal output and screen shots when running example AsyncMultiWebServer_STM32_LAN8720 on STM32F4 BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet and STM32Ethernet Library to demonstrate the operation of 3 independent AsyncWebServers on 3 different ports and how to handle the complicated AsyncMultiWebServers.
Start AsyncMultiWebServer_STM32_LAN8720 on BLACK_F407VE with LAN8720 Ethernet
AsyncWebServer_STM32 v1.6.0
Connected to network. IP = 192.168.2.150
Initialize multiServer OK, serverIndex = 0, port = 8080
HTTP server started at ports 8080
Initialize multiServer OK, serverIndex = 1, port = 8081
HTTP server started at ports 8081
Initialize multiServer OK, serverIndex = 2, port = 8082
HTTP server started at ports 8082
You can access the Async Advanced WebServers @ the server IP and corresponding ports (8080, 8081 and 8082)
Following is the debug terminal when running example Async_AdvancedWebServer_favicon on NUCLEO_F767ZI, with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet, to demonstrate the operation of AsyncWebServer_STM32, to display favicon.ico
, which many browsers support.
Start Async_AdvancedWebServer_favicon on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
AsyncWebServer_STM32 v1.6.0
STM32 Core version v2.2.0
HTTP EthernetWebServer is @ IP : 192.168.2.69
You can see the favicon.ico
at the upper left corner
10. Async_AdvancedWebServer_MemoryIssues_Send_CString on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
Following is the debug terminal and screen shot when running example Async_AdvancedWebServer_MemoryIssues_Send_CString on NUCLEO_F767ZI, with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet, to demonstrate the new and powerful HEAP-saving
feature
Start Async_AdvancedWebServer_MemoryIssues_Send_CString on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
AsyncWebServer_STM32 v1.6.0
HEAP DATA - Start => Free RAM: 479908 Used heap: 260
STM32 Core version v2.2.0
HTTP EthernetWebServer is @ IP : 192.168.2.72
HEAP DATA - Pre Create Arduino String Free RAM: 439116 Used heap: 41052
.
HEAP DATA - Pre Send Free RAM: 437380 Used heap: 42788
HEAP DATA - Post Send Free RAM: 437216 Used heap: 42952
......
Out String Length=31248
... ....
Out String Length=31194
...... .
Out String Length=31223
.......
Out String Length=31244
.. .....
While using Arduino String, the HEAP usage is very large, even with smaller data. Unfortunately, we currently can't use Arduino String
larger than 5,5 KBytes now.
Async_AdvancedWebServer_MemoryIssues_SendArduinoString ===> very large heap (48,716 bytes) for 5,592 bytes data
Start Async_AdvancedWebServer_MemoryIssues_SendArduinoString on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
AsyncWebServer_STM32 v1.6.0
HEAP DATA - Start => Free RAM: 479908 Used heap: 260
STM32 Core version v2.2.0
HTTP EthernetWebServer is @ IP : 192.168.2.72
HEAP DATA - Pre Create Arduino String Free RAM: 479124 Used heap: 1044
.
HEAP DATA - Pre Send Free RAM: 437172 Used heap: 42996
HEAP DATA - Post Send Free RAM: 431452 Used heap: 48716
......
Out String Length=5580
... ....
Out String Length=5583
...... .
Out String Length=5584
......
Out String Length=5585
... ....
Out String Length=5592
...
You can access the Async Advanced WebServers at the displayed server IP, e.g. 192.168.2.72
Following is debug terminal output when running example Async_AdvancedWebServer_SendChunked on NUCLEO_F767ZI
with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet, to demo how to use beginChunkedResponse()
to send large html
in chunks
Start Async_AdvancedWebServer_SendChunked on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
AsyncWebServer_STM32 v1.6.1
STM32 Core version v2.3.0
AsyncWebServer is @ IP : 192.168.2.124
.[AWS] Total length to send in chunks = 31262
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5716
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 2218
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 0
[AWS] Total length to send in chunks = 31277
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5716
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 2233
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 0
[AWS] Total length to send in chunks = 31233
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5716
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 2189
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 0
You can access the Async_AdvancedWebServer_SendChunked at the displayed server IP, e.g. 192.168.2.123
Following is debug terminal output when running example AsyncWebServer_SendChunked on NUCLEO_F767ZI
with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet, to demo how to use beginChunkedResponse()
to send large html
in chunks
Start AsyncWebServer_SendChunked on NUCLEO_F767ZI with LAN8742A built-in Ethernet
AsyncWebServer_STM32 v1.6.0
STM32 Core version v2.3.0
AsyncWebServer is @ IP : 192.168.2.124
.[AWS] Total length to send in chunks = 41798
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5720
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 1086
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 0
.[AWS] Total length to send in chunks = 41798
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5720
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 5832
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 1086
[AWS] Bytes sent in chunk = 0
Debug is enabled by default on Serial. Debug Level from 0 to 4. To disable, change the ETHERNET_WEBSERVER_LOGLEVEL to 0
// Use this to output debug msgs to Serial
#define ASYNCWEBSERVER_STM32_DEBUG_PORT Serial
// Use this to disable all output debug msgs
// Debug Level from 0 to 4
#define _ASYNCWEBSERVER_STM32_LOGLEVEL_ 0
If you get compilation errors, more often than not, you may need to install a newer version of Arduino IDE, the Arduino STM32
core or depending libraries.
Sometimes, the library will only work if you update the STM32
core to the latest version because I'm always using the latest cores /libraries.
Submit issues to: AsyncWebServer_STM32 issues
- Fix bug. Add enhancement
- Add support to more Ethernet / WiFi shield
- Add support to more STM32 boards.
- Add support to File using STM32-SD or STM32-FS
- Initial port to STM32 using builtin LAN8742A Etnernet. Tested on STM32F7 Nucleo-144 F767ZI.
- Add more examples.
- Add debugging features.
- Add AsyncUDP_STM32 to support Async UDP on STM32
- Add Authentication support (MD5, SHA1).
- Add support to Ethernet LAN8720 using STM32Ethernet library, for boards such as Nucleo-144 (F429ZI, NUCLEO_F746NG, NUCLEO_F746ZG, NUCLEO_F756ZG), Discovery (DISCO_F746NG) and STM32F4 boards (BLACK_F407VE, BLACK_F407VG, BLACK_F407ZE, BLACK_F407ZG, BLACK_F407VE_Mini, DIYMORE_F407VGT, FK407M1). Tested on STM32F4 BLACK_F407VE.
- Add Table-of-Contents and Version String
- Fix issue with slow browsers or network
- Add functions and example
Async_AdvancedWebServer_favicon
to supportfavicon.ico
- Support using
CString
to save heap to sendvery large data
. Check request->send(200, textPlainStr, jsonChartDataCharStr); - Without using String Class - to save heap #8 - Add examples Async_AdvancedWebServer_SendChunked and AsyncWebServer_SendChunked to demo how to use
beginChunkedResponse()
to send largehtml
in chunks - Use
allman astyle
and addutils
- Based on and modified from Hristo Gochkov's ESPAsyncWebServer. Many thanks to Hristo Gochkov for great ESPAsyncWebServer Library
- Relied on Frederic Pillon's STM32duino LwIP Library.
- Relied on PhilBowles' STM32 AsyncTCP Library.
- Thanks to good work of Miguel Wisintainer for working with, developing, debugging and testing.
- Thanks to Jean-Claude and chris007de to help locate the dependency issue, discuss solution leading to release v1.2.6. Check Compilation broken due to error in STM32AsyncTCP dependency and how to run one of the examples?.
- Thanks to tothtechnika to create the PR Fix base64 encoding of websocket client key and progmem support for webserver #7 leading to new release v1.4.0
- Thanks to salasidis aka rs77can to discuss and make the following
marvellous
PRs in Portenta_H7_AsyncWebServer library
- request->send(200, textPlainStr, jsonChartDataCharStr); - Without using String Class - to save heap #8
- All memmove() removed - string no longer destroyed #11, leading to
v1.6.0
to support usingCString
to save heap to sendvery large data
⭐️⭐️ Hristo Gochkov |
⭐️ Frederic Pillon |
⭐️ Phil Bowles |
tcpipchip |
Jean-Claude |
chris007de |
tothtechnika |
⭐️ salasidis |
If you want to contribute to this project:
- Report bugs and errors
- Ask for enhancements
- Create issues and pull requests
- Tell other people about this library
- The library is licensed under GPLv3
Copyright 2020- Khoi Hoang