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Save sscarduzio/05ed0b41d6234530d724 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
#!/bin/bash | |
# CONF | |
DBG=true | |
[email protected] | |
RELOG_PASSW=xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx | |
# END CONF | |
IS_LOGGED_IN=$(wget "https://www.btopenzone.com:8443/home" --timeout 30 -O - 2>/dev/null | grep "accountLogoff") | |
if [ "$IS_LOGGED_IN" ] | |
then | |
[[ $DBG ]] && echo "currently logged in. Nothing to do.." | |
else | |
[[ $DBG ]] && echo "It's not logged in.. Will log in!" | |
OUT=$(wget -qO- --post-data "USERNAME=$RELOG_UNAME&PASSWORD=$RELOG_PASSW" "https://btwifi.portal.fon.com/remote?res=hsp-login&HSPNAME=FonBT%3AGB&WISPURL=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.btopenzone.com%3A8443%2FfonLogon&WISPURLHOME=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.btopenzone.com%3A8443&VNPNAME=FonBT%3AGB&LOCATIONNAME=FonBT%3AGB") | |
ONLINE=$(echo $OUT | grep youre_online ) | |
if [ "$ONLINE" ] | |
then | |
[[ $DBG ]] && echo "You're online!" | |
else | |
[[ $DBG ]] && echo "Could not login :(" | |
fi | |
fi |
A little update with @s4l1h script. I now have much lower ping and I disconnect a lot less (once every 4+ hours compared to 30min-1hour with macrodriod) , but when it tries to reconnect it can take a while sometimes (3-8seconds or sometimes 30 seconds). I think this could be on the btwifi router side, as when i refresh the web Brower btwifi doesnt come up. will update in a few weeks to come.
A little update with @s4l1h script. I now have much lower ping and I disconnect a lot less (once every 4+ hours compared to 30min-1hour with macrodriod) , but when it tries to reconnect it can take a while sometimes (3-8seconds or sometimes 30 seconds). I think this could be on the btwifi router side, as when i refresh the web Brower btwifi doesnt come up. will update in a few weeks to come.
nice im currently learning and writing a windows .EXE program that runs in the system tray using vb.net for this also to experiment with, think its almost done, don't think i will use it much as i use the openwrt solution but i wanted to make a nice windows solution (other than running the bash script inside windows) and it was something useful for me to learn with :)
nice im currently learning and writing a windows .EXE program that runs in the system tray using vb.net for this also to experiment with, think its almost done, don't think i will use it much as i use the openwrt solution but i wanted to make a nice windows solution (other than running the bash script inside windows) and it was something useful for me to learn with :)
I would certainly be interested once it's ready - still using a .BAT run by the scheduler, which works fine but is obviously not incredibly reliable!
nice im currently learning and writing a windows .EXE program that runs in the system tray using vb.net for this also to experiment with, think its almost done, don't think i will use it much as i use the openwrt solution but i wanted to make a nice windows solution (other than running the bash script inside windows) and it was something useful for me to learn with :)
I would certainly be interested once it's ready - still using a .BAT run by the scheduler, which works fine but is obviously not incredibly reliable!
Uploaded & Ready To Try :)
https://github.com/aidanmacgregor/BT_Wi-fi_Autologin_-_OpenWrt_Windows.EXE_Linux_Android-Macrodroid
Won't run on Win7, so I'm probably missing something from VBNet. Also would be nice to have a timer entry, so we can set our own delay. :)
Needs at least .net 4.6, this is included & should run on all windows 10 & 11 automatically, i targeted .net 4.6 as its compatible as far back as windows vista after manually installing it on older OS :)
Needs at least .net 4.6, this is included & should run on all windows 10 & 11 automatically, i targeted .net 4.6 as its compatible as far back as windows vista after manually installing it on older OS :)
Well, that's odd... I ran the .NET 4.6 updater and apparently I already have 4.7.2. "Repaired" that but it still won't run. Says I need to check whether I need x32 or x64 (I assume it's an x64 exe). Gah!
not entirely sure will try targeting 32 bit specifically, current timings are coded as follows,
IF NO INTERNET = ping (500ms timeout), wait (500ms), Ping (500ms Timeout), Run Selected Login
IF INTERNET Ping (Timeout Not Relevant), Wait (1000ms), Loop Back To Ping
not entirely sure will try targeting 32 bit specifically, current timings are coded as follows, IF NO INTERNET = ping (500ms timeout), wait (500ms), Ping (500ms Timeout), Run Selected Login IF INTERNET Ping (Timeout Not Relevant), Wait (1000ms), Loop Back To Ping
I don't think anyone still uses 32-bit, do they? Not sure why mine (x64) won't run it, to be honest, but then I haven't reformatted and reinstalled for years (used to do it every 6 months) so Windows has probably accumulated a whole load of icky stuff that gets in the way...
The timing thing: I meant between checks, sorry. I have my current batch going every 2 minutes or so, which can give a fair bit of downtime if the network's rubbish but avoids getting things piled up with constant checks!
not entirely sure will try targeting 32 bit specifically, current timings are coded as follows, IF NO INTERNET = ping (500ms timeout), wait (500ms), Ping (500ms Timeout), Run Selected Login IF INTERNET Ping (Timeout Not Relevant), Wait (1000ms), Loop Back To Ping
I don't think anyone still uses 32-bit, do they? Not sure why mine (x64) won't run it, to be honest, but then I haven't reformatted and reinstalled for years (used to do it every 6 months) so Windows has probably accumulated a whole load of icky stuff that gets in the way... The timing thing: I meant between checks, sorry. I have my current batch going every 2 minutes or so, which can give a fair bit of downtime if the network's rubbish but avoids getting things piled up with constant checks!
ahh its set to loop so if first test passes waits 1 second and runs the same single packet ping again :)
EDIT: v4 Windows Exe Now Available
https://github.com/aidanmacgregor/BT_Wi-fi_Autologin_-_OpenWrt_Windows.EXE_Linux_Chrome-OS_Android-Macrodroid
@aidanmacgregor also now using your script (OpenWRT service). Nice work, thank you! Though I swapped the config over to /etc/btwifi.conf
since I'm not sure what owns rc.local
on OpenWRT.
@aidanmacgregor also now using your script (OpenWRT service). Nice work, thank you! Though I swapped the config over to
/etc/btwifi.conf
since I'm not sure what ownsrc.local
on OpenWRT.
Hey Awesome! Glad its Working Well For You, and i was under impression nothing touched it besides from the user :)
@shuckster With the SSID of BT WiFi hotspots now changing to "EE WiFi", will the cloud-connect plugin need to be altered, and if so, what is required?
@adammcguk - Thanks for the report.
If you're already using the plugin, you can try modifying this line in this file in your local filesystem.
Change it from:
BT_SSID=${CC_WIRELESS_SSID_MATCH:-"BTWi-fi\|BTWifi-with-FON"}
To:
BT_SSID=${CC_WIRELESS_SSID_MATCH:-"EE WiFi\|BTWi-fi\|BTWifi-with-FON"}
I have a suspicion the space may cause issues, so if the above doesn't work, try:
BT_SSID=${CC_WIRELESS_SSID_MATCH:-"EE\ WiFi\|BTWi-fi\|BTWifi-with-FON"}
If you are able try this and check that it works, I'll update the plugin in the repo so others can benefit.
@shuckster I tried the 2nd way and I also changed the main config file in the cloud connect plugin, as it also references the SSID. Not sure if this was required but after doing both, it is working.
awesome, glad your up and running, deffo let me know how your timings and stability goes, i've never used go but might try again with this login program for curiosity's sake, I'm also looking into "incorporate Bash commands into a Windows batch file or PowerShell script" to see if this can produce an easier windows login, Thats the idea in my head anyway haha, but i'm learning all this as i go :)