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Raspberry Pi Image Information
IMPORTANT: YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR PROTECTING THE RASPBERRY PI & DOING BACKUPS
You can download the Raspberry Pi Image from https://www.magicbug.co.uk/assets/2020-02-17-raspbian-buster-cloudlog.zip
SSH is enabled so if you plug the ethernet into the Pi you should be able to access it with
- Username:
pi
- Password:
raspberry
Wifi hasn't been configured so you'll have to do that using sudo raspi-config
You should be able to access Cloudlog by just going to http://cloudlog.local the default login is
- Username:
m0abc
- Password:
demo
You will need to create a new station profile via the admin system and follow the rest of the guide for setting up HamQTH or QRZ but this should get you going.
Cloudlog is stored in /home/pi/www/Cloudlog/
you can find the most important files in /home/pi/www/Cloudlog/application/config
which you might need to change to fit your requirements.
While there is a cronjob to update Cloudlog weekly you can manually do it by logging to the raspberry pi on the command line and running ./update_cloudlog.sh
from within the /home/pi
directory
By default, there are three cronjobs set up to run weekly these are for doing the following
- Cloudlog Update
- LOTW Users
- Clublog SCP
You can run crontab -e
on the command line to change these or add more.
This image uses MariaDB instead of MySQL if you'd like to login to MariaDB the information is as follows
- Username:
root
- Password:
6B6@&9EeSG9M&XnRN2e76
Cloudlog uses a database called cloudlog
- Installation on Linux server
- Installation on Windows server
- Updating Cloudlog
- Hints & Tips
- cloudlog.php Config
- API
- Station Locations
- Radio Interface
- ADIF Import / Export
- Logbook of The World
- eQSL
- Print Requested QSLs
- Clublog Upload
- QRZ Logbook
- KML Export