Spidey Wall is the name for a physical wall lit up by multiple addressable LED strips. This program is an LPC1768 web server to control the wall from a browser.

Dependencies:   EthernetInterfacePlusHostname RdWebServer mbed-rtos mbed

This project is part of a Light-Wall using addressable LED strips (WS2801). I have published a few posts on my blog about the construction of the wall and building a game to play on it (PacMan). I have also had a guest post from a friend who has set his children the task of producing some interesting animations. The original post is http://robdobson.com/2015/07/spidey-wall/ /media/uploads/Bobty/20130722_112945_img_9674_62895-1184x1579.jpg

So far, however, I hadn't fully connected the physical (and electronic) wall with the web-browser creations to drive it. This project is hopefully the final link. A fast and reliable web server using REST commands to drive the 1686 LEDs in the Spidey Wall from code running in a browser (say on an iPad while you are playing a game).

The approach taken here results in the ability to control the RGB values of all 1686 LEDs at a rate of 20 frames per second.

A blog post describing the whole thing is here:

http://robdobson.com/2015/08/a-reliable-mbed-webserver/

Revision:
1:362331cec9b7
Parent:
0:887096209439
Child:
3:e5ea80fae61d
--- a/ledstrip.h	Tue Aug 18 16:03:29 2015 +0000
+++ b/ledstrip.h	Thu Aug 20 07:41:02 2015 +0000
@@ -30,6 +30,7 @@
             return mLedsInStrip;
         }
         void Clear();
+        void RawFill(int startLed, int numLeds, const unsigned char* pLedVals);
         void Fill(int startLed, int numLeds, 
                 int r1, int g1, int b1, 
                 int r2, int g2, int b2);