In this project, you’ll learn how to make HTTPS requests using an ESP32 with the SIM7000G LTE/GPS/GPRS module. We’ll use the LILYGO T-SIM7000G ESP32 that combines the ESP32 chip, the SIM7000G module, a microSD card slot, battery holder, and charger on the same board. We’ll show you how to connect it to the internet using your SIM card data plan and make an HTTPS GET request.
Compatibility
This board supports 2G, LTE CAT-M1, and NB-IoT protocols. You can go to the following links to check if any of these protocols are supported in your country:
Table of Contents
Throughout this tutorial, we’ll cover the following topics:
- Introducing the LILYGO T-SIM7000G ESP32
- Phone Provider APN Details
- Installing Libraries
- Preparing the LILYGO T-SIM7000G ESP32 Board
- Make HTTPS Get Requests – LILYGO T-SIM7000G ESP32
Introducing the LILYGO T-SIM7000G ESP32
The LILYGO T-SIM7000G is an ESP32 development board with a SIM7000G chip. This adds GPS, GPRS, LTE CAT-M1, and NB-IoT protocols to your board. This means that with this board you can send SMS, get location and time using GPS, and connect it to the internet using a SIM card data plan. You can find more information by reading our in-depth guide.
Where to buy LILYGO T-SIM7000G ESP32?
You can use the preceding links or go directly to MakerAdvisor.com/tools to find all the parts for your projects at the best price!
APN Details
To connect your SIM card to the internet, you need to have your phone plan provider’s APN details. You need the domain name, username, and password.
In my case, I’m using Vodafone Portugal. If you search for “GPRS APN settings” followed by your phone plan provider name, (in my case: “GPRS APN Vodafone Portugal”), you can usually find in a forum or their website all the information that you need.
It might be a bit tricky to find the details if you don’t use a well-known provider. So, you might need to contact them directly.
Libraries
The ESP32 communicates with the SIM7000G chip by sending AT commands via serial communication. You don’t need a library, you can simply establish a serial communication with the module and start sending AT commands.
However, it might be more practical to use a library. For example, the TinyGSM library knows which commands to send, and how to handle AT responses, and wraps that into the standard Arduino Client interface—that’s the library we’ll use in this tutorial.
Installing the TinyGSM Library
Open your Arduino IDE and go to Sketch > Include Library > Manage Libraries. The Library Manager should open. Search for TinyGSM. Select the TinyGSM library by Volodymyr Shymanskyy.
Installing the ArduinoHttpClient Library
You also need to install the ArduinoHttpClient library to make HTTPS requests. Go to Sketch > Include Library > Manage Libraries, search for ArduinoHttpClient, and install it.
Preparing the LILYGO T-SIM7000G ESP32 Board
Compatibility
This board supports 2G, LTE CAT-M1, and NB-IoT protocols. You can go to the following links to check if any of these protocols are supported in your country:
Before testing your board, you need to follow the next two steps:
1. Insert a nano SIM card;
2. Connect the Full Band LTE antenna to the correct antenna port as illustrated in the following image:
Make HTTPS Get Requests – LILYGO T-SIM7000G ESP32
In this sample sketch, the ESP32 will initialize the modem, establish an internet connection using the SIM card data plan, and will make an HTTPS GET request to the following URL:
The URL returns the following ASCII art text:
- Copy the following code to your Arduino IDE.
/*
Rui Santos
Complete project details at https://RandomNerdTutorials.com/esp32-https-requests-sim-card-sim7000g/
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files.
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. Based on the library example: github.com/vshymanskyy/TinyGSM/blob/master/examples/HttpsClient/HttpsClient.ino
*/
// Select your modem
#define TINY_GSM_MODEM_SIM7000SSL
#define TINY_GSM_RX_BUFFER 1024 // Set RX buffer to 1Kb
// Set serial for debug console (to the Serial Monitor, default speed 115200)
#define SerialMon Serial
#define SerialAT Serial1
#include <TinyGsmClient.h>
#include <ArduinoHttpClient.h>
// Define the serial console for debug prints, if needed
#define TINY_GSM_DEBUG SerialMon
// #define LOGGING // <- Logging is for the HTTP library
// Add a reception delay, if needed.
// This may be needed for a fast processor at a slow baud rate.
// #define TINY_GSM_YIELD() { delay(2); }
// set GSM PIN, if any
#define GSM_PIN ""
// flag to force SSL client authentication, if needed
// #define TINY_GSM_SSL_CLIENT_AUTHENTICATION
// Set your APN Details / GPRS credentials
const char apn[] = "";
const char gprsUser[] = "";
const char gprsPass[] = "";
// Server details
const char server[] = "gist.githubusercontent.com";
const char resource[] = "/RuiSantosdotme/7db8537cef1c84277c268c76a58d07ff/raw/d3fe4cd6eff1ed43e6dbd1883ab7eba8414e2406/gistfile1.txt";
const int port = 443;
TinyGsm modem(SerialAT);
TinyGsmClientSecure client(modem);
HttpClient http(client, server, port);
// LilyGO T-SIM7000G Pinout
#define UART_BAUD 115200
#define PIN_DTR 25
#define PIN_TX 27
#define PIN_RX 26
#define PWR_PIN 4
#define SD_MISO 2
#define SD_MOSI 15
#define SD_SCLK 14
#define SD_CS 13
#define LED_PIN 12
void modemPowerOn(){
pinMode(PWR_PIN, OUTPUT);
digitalWrite(PWR_PIN, LOW);
delay(1000);
digitalWrite(PWR_PIN, HIGH);
}
void modemPowerOff(){
pinMode(PWR_PIN, OUTPUT);
digitalWrite(PWR_PIN, LOW);
delay(1500);
digitalWrite(PWR_PIN, HIGH);
}
void modemRestart(){
modemPowerOff();
delay(1000);
modemPowerOn();
}
void setup() {
// Set Serial Monitor baud rate
SerialMon.begin(115200);
delay(10);
// Set LED OFF
pinMode(LED_PIN, OUTPUT);
digitalWrite(LED_PIN, HIGH);
modemPowerOn();
SerialMon.println("Wait...");
// Set GSM module baud rate and Pins
SerialAT.begin(UART_BAUD, SERIAL_8N1, PIN_RX, PIN_TX);
delay(6000);
// Restart takes quite some time
// To skip it, call init() instead of restart()
SerialMon.println("Initializing modem...");
modem.restart();
// modem.init();
String modemInfo = modem.getModemInfo();
SerialMon.print("Modem Info: ");
SerialMon.println(modemInfo);
// Unlock your SIM card with a PIN if needed
if (GSM_PIN && modem.getSimStatus() != 3) {
modem.simUnlock(GSM_PIN);
}
Serial.println("Make sure your LTE antenna has been connected to the SIM interface on the board.");
delay(10000);
}
void loop() {
modem.gprsConnect(apn, gprsUser, gprsPass);
SerialMon.print("Waiting for network...");
if (!modem.waitForNetwork()) {
SerialMon.println(" fail");
delay(10000);
return;
}
SerialMon.println(" success");
if (modem.isNetworkConnected()) {
SerialMon.println("Network connected");
}
SerialMon.print(F("Performing HTTPS GET request... "));
http.connectionKeepAlive(); // Currently, this is needed for HTTPS
int err = http.get(resource);
if (err != 0) {
SerialMon.println(F("failed to connect"));
delay(10000);
return;
}
int status = http.responseStatusCode();
SerialMon.print(F("Response status code: "));
SerialMon.println(status);
if (!status) {
delay(10000);
return;
}
SerialMon.println(F("Response Headers:"));
while (http.headerAvailable()) {
String headerName = http.readHeaderName();
String headerValue = http.readHeaderValue();
SerialMon.println(" " + headerName + " : " + headerValue);
}
int length = http.contentLength();
if (length >= 0) {
SerialMon.print(F("Content length is: "));
SerialMon.println(length);
}
if (http.isResponseChunked()) {
SerialMon.println(F("The response is chunked"));
}
String body = http.responseBody();
SerialMon.println(F("Response:"));
SerialMon.println(body);
SerialMon.print(F("Body length is: "));
SerialMon.println(body.length());
// Shutdown
http.stop();
SerialMon.println(F("Server disconnected"));
modem.gprsDisconnect();
SerialMon.println(F("GPRS disconnected"));
// Do nothing forevermore
while (true) {
delay(1000);
}
}
- Insert your SIM card pin, if you have it. In my case, I disabled the pin.
#define GSM_PIN ""
- Insert your apn details on the following lines:
// Set your APN Details / GPRS credentials
const char apn[] = "";
const char gprsUser[] = "";
const char gprsPass[] = "";
For example, in my case:
const char apn[] = "net2.vodafone.pt";
const char gprsUser[] = "vodafone";
const char gprsPass[] = "vodafone";
- Go to Tools > Board and select ESP32 Dev Module.
- Finally, upload the code to your board.
Then, open the Serial Monitor at a baud rate of 115200. Press the on-board RST button to restart the board.
Wait some time until the board connects to the network (in my case, it may take up to 2 minutes). You should get something similar in your Serial Monitor—see the picture below.
You can see that it identifies the SIM7000G module and connects to the network successfully. Finally, it establishes a connection to the example website, returns the “Random Nerd Tutorials” text and prints it in the response. If you see something similar in your Arduino IDE Serial Monitor, it means the code is running successfully.
How the Code Works
Let’s take a quick look at the parts of the code that are relevant to this example.
SIM Module
First, you need to define the module you’re using. The library is compatible with many different modules. To use the SIM7000G, include the following line:
#define TINY_GSM_MODEM_SIM7000SSL
Libraries
Include the TinyGSM and ArduinoHttpClient libraries.
#include <TinyGsmClient.h>
#include <ArduinoHttpClient.h>
APN Details
Insert the SIM card pin and APN details (in our case, it’s the following APN, user and pass):
// set GSM PIN, if any
#define GSM_PIN ""
// Set your APN Details / GPRS credentials
const char apn[] = "net2.vodafone.pt";
const char gprsUser[] = "vodafone";
const char gprsPass[] = "vodafone";
Server Domain and Resource
Define the server (domain name), resource (URL path), and port where you want to make the HTTPS GET request:
// Server details
const char server[] = "gist.githubusercontent.com";
const char resource[] = "/RuiSantosdotme/7db8537cef1c84277c268c76a58d07ff/raw/d3fe4cd6eff1ed43e6dbd1883ab7eba8414e2406/gistfile1.txt";
const int port = 443;
Initialize TinyGSMClient
Create a TinyGsmClient instance:
TinyGsm modem(SerialAT);
TinyGsmClientSecure client(modem);
HttpClient http(client, server, port);
SIM7000G pinout
The following lines set the module baud rate and pinout:
#define UART_BAUD 115200
#define PIN_DTR 25
#define PIN_TX 27
#define PIN_RX 26
#define PWR_PIN 4
#define SD_MISO 2
#define SD_MOSI 15
#define SD_SCLK 14
#define SD_CS 13
#define LED_PIN 12
Power the modem
In the setup(), you need to include the following instructions to turn on the modem:
pinMode(PWR_PIN, OUTPUT);
digitalWrite(PWR_PIN, HIGH);
delay(300);
digitalWrite(PWR_PIN, LOW);
Start Serial Communication
Start a serial communication with the modem:
SerialAT.begin(UART_BAUD, SERIAL_8N1, PIN_RX, PIN_TX);
Restart and Initialize the Modem
Call the following function to restart the modem:
SerialMon.println("Initializing modem...");
modem.restart();
You can also use the modem.init(). The difference between restart() and init() according to documentation: “restart() generally takes longer than init() but ensures the module doesn’t have lingering connections”.
Get Modem Info
You can use the getModemInfo() to get information about the modem.
String modemInfo = modem.getModemInfo();
SerialMon.print("Modem Info: ");
SerialMon.println(modemInfo);
If you’re using the same model, it will print in the Arduino IDE Serial monitor the following information (SIM7000G):
Unlock and Connect GPRS
If your SIM card has a pin, the next command will use the pin and unlock the card:
if (GSM_PIN && modem.getSimStatus() != 3) {
modem.simUnlock(GSM_PIN);
}
Next, connect the GPRS using the APN details:
modem.gprsConnect(apn, gprsUser, gprsPass);
SerialMon.print("Waiting for network...");
if (!modem.waitForNetwork()) {
SerialMon.println(" fail");
delay(10000);
return;
}
SerialMon.println(" success");
To check if it is connected, you can use the isNetworkConnected() method:
if (modem.isNetworkConnected()) {
SerialMon.println("Network connected");
}
Perform the HTTPS GET Request
Making an HTTPS GET request is fairly easy using the ArduinoHttpClient library, you just need to call http.get(resource).
SerialMon.print(F("Performing HTTPS GET request... "));
http.connectionKeepAlive(); // Currently, this is needed for HTTPS
int err = http.get(resource);
if (err != 0) {
SerialMon.println(F("failed to connect"));
delay(10000);
return;
}
If the request is successful, it will print the Response status code: 200 in your Serial Monitor.
int status = http.responseStatusCode();
SerialMon.print(F("Response status code: "));
SerialMon.println(status);
if (!status) {
delay(10000);
return;
}
The following snippet is for debugging purposes, it prints the response header and content length.
SerialMon.println(F("Response Headers:"));
while (http.headerAvailable()) {
String headerName = http.readHeaderName();
String headerValue = http.readHeaderValue();
SerialMon.println(" " + headerName + " : " + headerValue);
}
int length = http.contentLength();
if (length >= 0) {
SerialMon.print(F("Content length is: "));
SerialMon.println(length);
}
if (http.isResponseChunked()) {
SerialMon.println(F("The response is chunked"));
}
The response body is the actual interesting part of the response. The String body is what you can use to scrap some text or information from a website.
String body = http.responseBody();
SerialMon.println(F("Response:"));
SerialMon.println(body);
SerialMon.print(F("Body length is: "));
SerialMon.println(body.length());
In this case, it’s just a sample project, so we’ve returned some characters saying “Random Nerd Tutorials” in ASCII art. In future projects, we’ll scrap useful information from websites. You can easily modify this example to get data from other website by changing the URL and resource.
Finally, stop the http connection and disconnect the GPRS modem from the Internet.
http.stop();
SerialMon.println(F("Server disconnected"));
modem.gprsDisconnect();
SerialMon.println(F("GPRS disconnected"));
That’s it, those are the most relevant code parts of this sketch.
Wrapping Up
In this guide, you’ve learned how to use the LILYGO T-SIM7000G ESP32 board to perform HTTPS GET requests. This tutorial can also be applied if you’re using a “regular” ESP32 connected to an external SIM7000G module, just make sure you adjust the pinout definition if needed.
With this sample sketch, you can connect GPRS to get some sample text from any website using an HTTPS GET request. In future guides, we’ll scrap useful information from websites or make API requests to get data or interact with web services.
You may also like the following SIM7000G tutorials:
- Getting Started with LILYGO T-SIM7000G ESP32 (LTE, GPRS, and GPS)
- LILYGO T-SIM7000G ESP32: Get GPS Data (Latitude, Longitude, Altitude, and more)
Learn more about the ESP32 with our resources:
- Learn ESP32 with Arduino IDE
- Build Web Servers with ESP32 and ESP8266
- Firebase Web App with ESP32 and ESP8266
- Free ESP32 Projects and Tutorials
Thanks for reading.
I don’t understand why do I have to connect an antenna to the board if the Arduino ESP32 has a built-in antenna already???
Hi.
This antenna is for LTE.
The ESP32 built-in antenna is for Wi-Fi.
Regards,
Sara
The web of LILYGO says that this model don’t support 4G and most countries, including Portugal, are shutting down their 3G networks.
Maybe is time to switch to another model like LILYGO TTGO T-SIM7600.
Will this project work with the lily go esp32 and Sim7600E with the battery holder?
Hi.
I think so.
Just make sure you modify the code with the right board model and the right pinout for your board.
Regards,
Sara
Thank you I will try the board I have and give feedback on this comment.All I need is the esp to get internet from the sim7600E
You can also try this on this board
bharatpi.net/product/bharat-pi-4g-lte-module-with-esp32-simcom-a7672-with-gps/
They have a simple SMA connector comes with Antenna, Sim Slot and SD Card slot.
They also have the sample code in their github page which works right out of the box, This board seems to come with GPS also.
here is the sample code
github.com/Bharat-Pi/iot-projects/tree/main/BharatPi_4G_based_Http_SMS_Samplecode
Hi,
I have a problem. I replied the previous code on a SIM800 board based on ESP32. All is connected right, but when it try to carry on the “GET” command, it say “failed to connect”.
Is all OK with the url and the code you show in the post?
BR.
i am using SIMCOM A7670E 4G module i want to mak https post request using ESP8266 OR ESP32 for serial communication how ??