A simple shell script that triggers an IFTTT webhook to POST the device's local IP address.
My use case is a headless SSH device on a network where you cannot make its local IP static, such as a Raspberry Pi on a University Network.
The script requires netcat
and curl
. You'll need git
to clone the repo and a text editor like nano
to edit the .env
file. You'll need cron
if you want to set up a cronjob to run on startup.
If you're intending to use a wireless network, you must configure your device to use the wireless network and ensure that your device automatically connects to that network on startup.
Ensure git
is installed, then clone the git repo.
git clone https://github.com/ethmth/pi-ip.git
cd pi-ip/
Determine your device's wireless or wired network interface, whichever you want to determine the local IP of. ip a
gives a list of network interfaces on your device. A common wireless interface is wlan0
.
Edit the .env
file with your network interface.
INTERFACE_NAME=<your_network_interface>
Put your interface in place of <your_network_interface>
,
For example: INTERFACE_NAME=wlan0
NOTE: The
.env
file may be hidden, but if you cloned this repo from GitHub and entered its directory, it will be there. You can edit it by typingnano .env
.
Register an IFTTT account, then create an applet.
For the If This service, select "Webhooks" then "Receive a web request with a JSON payload". Call the event name something you'll remember, such as pi_awoken.
Add the event name to the .env
file.
IFTTT_EVENT=<your_event_name>
For the Then That service, you could theoretically select anything, but I selected "Send an email."
Once the Applet is created, go to ifttt.com/maker_webhooks and click Documentation. It should say "Your key is: <your_key>". Copy the key, then add it to the .env
file.
IFTTT_KEY=<your_key>
You can put whatever you'd like for the IFTTT_MESSAGE
.
Make the script executable.
chmod +x ipcheck.sh
Once you added the environment variables to the .env
file, test the script by running it.
./ipcheck.sh
If you set it up correctly, your IFTTT event should get triggered with the local IP address info of your device.
If you would like this script to run on startup, and tell you the local IP address of your device every time it turns on, I would recommend setting up a cronjob
.
crontab -e # Edit your crontab
Then, add the following lines, replacing the directory with the directory you cloned the git repo into.
*/5 * * * * /home/$USER/pi-ip/ipcheck.sh
@reboot /home/$USER/pi-ip/ipcheck.sh startup
The first line will cause the script to check for local IP updates every 5 minutes, which is probably not necessary. The second line will cause the script to check for local IP updates every time the system boots up, which you will likely want to enable.