![]() ![]() Change the operating system to Raspberry Pi, and enter ‘pi’ in the Username field. Click Custom and enter 10.55.0.1 in the Address field. Enter a custom VNC password in both fields and click OK.īack in Screens, click the ‘+’ icon and choose New Screen. Change the authentication from UNIX password to VNC.Ĭlick Users & Permissions and click Password. Open VNC Server on Raspberry Pi (click on the VNC Server icon) and click on the menu icon, then choose Options. You’ll need to adjust your VNC Server settings to use it. The Screens app is a better VNC solution because you can point and click the pointer directly on the screen (instead of pushing a virtual pointer around). You will now see your desktop in VNC on iPad Pro. Click Save and click Connect.Įnter ‘pi’ in the Username field and your password, then click Continue. Enter 10.55.0.1 in the address field and give it a name (we called ours Raspberry Pi 4 iPad Pro). VNC Viewer is available from the App Store. You’re now ready to use SSH and VNC to access Raspberry Pi from your iPad Pro. Click Pi4 and you will see the Pi4 USB Device settings. You should see a new option, Ethernet, beneath WiFi. If all is working correctly, you will see your Raspberry Pi as a new Ethernet connection in iPadOS’s Settings app. It should reboot as normal (with the screen resolution size from earlier). Not all USB-C cables work, and we didn’t get it to work with the Apple USB-C cable. It’s a good idea to keep the screen connected while you test everything is working. Swap to iPadĭisconnect Raspberry Pi from the power source and connect the USB-C cable to your iPad Pro. Now add the following line to the end of bash /root/usb.sh The first time we do this, it’ll ask us to select an editor we’re going to use nano: enter 1. We’re going ensure the usb.sh script runs when we boot up Raspberry Pi, to ensure we can always access it. Now make the usb.sh file executable with: If you want to cut and paste, it’s better to use Text Editor to edit the file: Now we need to download and run the usb.sh script on our Raspberry Pi.Ĭut-and-paste the usb.sh code from Ben Hardill’s website. We will use this (or raspberrypi.local) to SSH and VNC into Raspberry Pi. This can be used to connect to Raspberry Pi from the iPad Pro. Now it’s time to pick a static IP address. Now we need to prevent Raspberry Pi from choosing its internet address. Adjust cmdlineĪdd a new line below console=serial0, … and add the following: ![]() Save and close the config.txt file with CTRL+O, then CTRL+X. Head to the end of the config.txt file and ensure that dtoverlay=dwc2 is present: Uncomment both framebuffer lines (remove the # before them) and change the resolution to 1024×768. ![]() Now you need to adjust the resolution and ensure that dtoverlay=dwc2 is at the end of your config.txt file. Click OK to close the Raspberry Pi Configuration tool. Click Interfaces and set both SSH and VNC to Enabled. ![]() Open a Terminal window and make sure everything is up to date with:Ĭlick the Raspberry Pi menu icon and choose Preferences > Raspberry Pi Configuration. Make sure you change the default password during setup. Power up and go through the setup process. Set up Raspberry Pi with a monitor, keyboard, and mouse (we won’t need these by the end of the tutorial). We start with a fresh installation of Raspberry Pi OS (32-bit) flashed to a microSD card using Raspberry Pi Imager. ![]()
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