MQTT Server for BeagleBone
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Gerardo Marx Chávez-Campos 3f67193e16 UI added 2 years ago
Imagenes Imagen introduccion 2 years ago
README.md UI added 2 years ago
add-broker.png Images added on deploy 2 years ago
add-tab.png UI added 2 years ago
deploy.png Images added on deploy 2 years ago
flows.json mosquito.conf minimal conf and Readme until process on Node 2 years ago
group.png UI added 2 years ago
mosquitto.conf mosquito.conf minimal conf and Readme until process on Node 2 years ago
mqtt-node.png Images added on deploy 2 years ago
process.png UI added 2 years ago
topic.png Images added on deploy 2 years ago
ui.png UI added 2 years ago

README.md

Introduction

This reposity includes the basic information to mount a server using Node-RED as a Dashboard and also working as a MQTT server using Mosquitto. The MQTT server is tested with a ESP32 client to publish random numbers every two seconds.

The general scheme is shown below, the complete environment requires a client, mqtt server or broker, and a mqtt client that works like a user interface (dashboard).

The basic communication scheme could work like:

  1. The ESP32 starts the communication chain by sending a text message to the broker, the broker can be public or local.

  2. Depending on the code, the sending message can be replicated to all the connected clients in the topic.

  3. Finally, a web server based on Node-RED will read the publicated data in the broker to be displayed in the UI.

mqttesp32

The client code to test the environment is hosted in the mqtt-client-esp32-v2.

Thanks to Andrés Perez for the first version.

MQTT Server

Installing Mosquitto

For the Raspberry pi, based on Debian's distribution, we can use:

sudo apt update
sudo apt upgrade
sudo apt install mosquitto

To execute mosquitto and enable every time the system starts:

sudo systemctl enable mosquitto.service

Configuring the Mosquitto server

First replace the default configuration file by the file providing in this repository:

sudo cp ./mosquitto.conf /etc/mosquitto/mosquitto.conf

then, create the password file instanced on the mosquitto.conf file

sudo touch /etc/mosquitto/passwd

finally, restart the service:

sudo systemctl restart mosquitto

Node-RED installation

To install nodejs write in terminal:

sudo apt update
sudo apt install nodejs
sudo apt install npm

Then, let us install the Node-RED app and the Dashboard complement by using the Node Package Manager:

npm install node-red
npm install node-red-dashboard

now, we require to run in background the app and verify that node-RED is running:

node-red &
sudo netstat -plnt

then, to get access to node-RED go to your web browser at rasp-hostname.local:1880 or rasp-ip:18080.

A flow process in Node-RED

A basic process is implemented on Node-RED to test the mqtt protocol. Thus, add the next blocks:

  1. mqtt in from network group
  2. debug from common
  3. textfrom dashboard

then, double-click on mqtt-in to open and edit the node:

click on Add new mqtt-brocker, then, in the Connection tab: set Name to Rasp, point the server to the raspberry's ip or hostname and port 1883. Leave unchanged the Security and Message tabs and click on the Add button.

Finally, set the topic to data/esp32 and the output to a String in the mqtt properties' node: Next, connect the blocks as shows in the image and click on the Deploy button to check if the process can connect to the Broker:

Creating the UI

Next, make double-click on the dashboard-text node and add a new Group by click on the pencil icon:

set the name Project, and add also a new Dashboard tab, do not change the default names:

once the parameters have been configured click the add button twice; for the tabs and for the node properties. Next, click on the Deploy button and visit the hostname-or-ip/ui to see the output generated by the MQTT client:

Note: you can also check the generated data on the Arduino IDE serial tools.