TRIGGERcmd
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Search
    • Register
    • Login

    Controlling Pi-Hole on the Raspberry Pi remotely through Alexa

    Raspberry Pi
    2
    6
    810
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • G
      Georgi_Sharkov
      last edited by

      Good Evening, and Sorry for the repeating topic.
      I am trying to control Pi-Hole on my Pi with Alexa Echo device. I have installed Triggercmd ( subscribed to it, to use commands more often.)on Windows 10 laptop . Can I enter a command (pihole_on_off.sh)that allows me to run the script on my Pi without installing triggercmd on Pi.
      Sorry again I am quite new in scripting.
      Thanks.
      3375bc8a-325d-4f36-abaf-5c28e5d5dbfa-image.png

      RussR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • RussR
        Russ @Georgi_Sharkov
        last edited by Russ

        @georgi_sharkov, yes, you can use ssh to run commands on your Raspberry Pi from your Windows 10 PC without installing a triggercmd agent on the Raspberry Pi.

        Install the OpenSSH client in Windows 10 by opening an elevated command prompt (right-click cmd and run as administrator) and running this command:

        dism /Online /Add-Capability /CapabilityName:OpenSSH.Client
        

        Then to generate a public/private key pair, run this from a normal cmd prompt, run this and press enter a few times.

        ssh-keygen
        

        You'll end up with a .ssh folder with an id_rsa file and an id_rsa.pub file. The id_rsa is your private key, so keep that private. The id_rsa.pub file contains text you need to copy into the authorized_keys file on your Raspberry Pi so you can ssh into the Pi without a password.

        Log into your Raspberry Pi as the pi user, or which ever user you use:

        ssh pi@garagepi
        

        At this point you'll still need to enter your password.

        Once logged in, edit your pi user's ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file, and append the contents of the id_rsa.pub file to the end of that authorized_keys file. If it's empty that's fine. Just paste the contents in and save it.

        Now logout, and run this command again:

        ssh pi@raspberrypi
        

        If it logs in without a password, you're golden. Now you can run remote commands on the Raspberry Pi like this:

        ssh pi@raspberrypi ls
        

        In that case I ran the ls command on the Pi from my Windows box, but you could run any command including a script that enables or disables Pi Hole. For example your Command and Off Command could be these:

        ssh pi@raspberrypi ~/pi_hole_on.sh
        ssh pi@raspberrypi ~/pi_hole_off.sh
        

        Russell VanderMey

        G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • G
          Georgi_Sharkov @Russ
          last edited by

          @russ Thank you for the reply and apologies for the late reply from my side. Is it possible to run a curl command in the triggercmd that will be able to deactivate or activate the PiHole?PiHole is installed on the Pi4 and it is accessible through a browser with an internal IP address like 192.168.8.102 from my PC. What will be the command to insert in the triggercmd command line in this case?

          RussR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • RussR
            Russ @Georgi_Sharkov
            last edited by

            @georgi_sharkov, you could use Chrome, press F12, find the request under the network tab, then copy the "Copy all as cURL (cmd)" option.

            a4e9240c-0cb7-41bf-92d6-ac43abf74272-image.png

            That will give you the curl command, but if there's authentication in the request, it will likely expire after some time.

            Russell VanderMey

            G 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • G
              Georgi_Sharkov @Russ
              last edited by

              @russ Thank you for the advice. I tried this command:
              http://192.168.8.102/admin/api.php?disable=300&auth=
              (auth parameter doesn't have any hashed value as I don't have a password setup for Pihole)
              16172f57-f3dd-4d8c-b96e-a125fd1357d8-image.png
              It works just fine if I type it manually in the browser. When I add it to the CMD GUI window command, when I run it with the start command, it shows me the message:
              Empty token! Check if cookies are enabled on your system.
              All cookies are enabled in the browser. What could be the issue?
              Maybe this will help you- when I run the command, it appears in the browser without the last bit 335e47c7-655a-4fc3-84d4-421b473c7e44-image.png
              I don't know, maybe I am doing something wrong as I am quite new in this field.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • G
                Georgi_Sharkov @Russ
                last edited by

                @russ I added the password to pi-hole and generated the token from web API. New URL that appeared with that token has been added to the TriggerCMD. However, this still doesn't resolve the problem, I am receiving the same message with empty token. Can anyone help with the issue? Where to dig further? Thanks

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • First post
                  Last post