Table of Contents

IOT3: Connecting to the MQTT and publishing data

In the following scenario, you will learn how to connect to the MQTT broker and publish a message.

Prerequisites

To implement this scenario, it is necessary to get familiar with at least one of the following scenarios first:

and obligatory:

There are many implementations of the MQTT protocol, but we will use the following library:

lib_deps = 
    knolleary/PubSubClient@^2.8

Suggested Readings and Knowledge Resources

Hands-on Lab Scenario

Note - this scenario can be used in pair with IOT4: Connecting to the MQTT and subscribing to the messages to build a publish-subscribe solution using two devices (sender and receiver). You need to book two devices then and develop them in parallel.

Task to be implemented

Connect to the “internal IoT” WiFI access point as presented in the scenario IOT2: Reading IP address of the WiFi—present connection status on display. Once connected to the networking layer (WiFi), connect the MQTT client to the MQTT broker and present the connection status on the display, then publish an MQTT message of your choice.

MQTT clients are identified by their name, so use a unique one, e.g., the end of the IP address assigned, your unique name, etc. It is essential because if you accidentally use someone else's name, then you will mess with messages, and your MQTT client will be instantly disconnected when another one with the same name connects!

Start

Check if you can clearly see a full display (of your choice) in your video stream. Book a device and create a dummy Arduino file with void setup()… and void loop()….
Implement a connection to the “internal IoT” network as a client. Refer to the supervisor or the technical documentation on credentials (SSID, passphrase). We do not provide the exact code on how to connect to the WiFi as it is a part of IOT2: Reading IP address of the WiFi scenario.

Steps

Step 1

Once the device is booked, check if your display of choice is visible in the camera's FOV.
Refer to the hardware documentation and ensure an understanding of the network infrastructure you're interfacing with.
Implement the code to display on the selected device.
Connect to the WiFi in the STA mode (as a client) and ensure the connection is OK and you got an IP from the DHCP server.

Step 2

Include the MQTT implementation library header in your code:

#include <PubSubClient.h>

Step 3

Declare necessary addresses, constants, etc.:

IPAddress mqttServer(127,0,0,1); //change it to the MQTT broker IP
#define mqtt_user "mqtt user"
#define mqtt_password "mqtt password"
#define mqtt_client_id "some_unique_client_id"
#define mqtt_topic "/sample/topic/comes/here/change/it/please"
#define mqtt_payload "sample payload"

Refer to the technical documentation (nodes) or the supervisor's guidance if working in the interactive mode to obtain the mqttServer IP address, the mqtt_user and mqtt_password.
Remember to choose some unique client ID and topic!

Step 4

Declare WiFi communication client and MQTT communication client:

  WiFiClient espClient;
  PubSubClient client(espClient);

Note that your clients are not yet online!

Step 5

Set MQTT client's configuration (proposed in the void setup() function:

  ...
  client.setServer(mqttServer,1883); //default port is 1883, change if needed
  ...

Step 6

Finally, connect the MQTT client to the MQTT broker and publish a message (sample code, adjust to your case):

  while (!client.connected())
    {
      if (client.connect(mqtt_client_id,mqtt_user,mqtt_password))
      {
        // Drop some info on the display that the MQTT broker is connected
        client.publish(mqtt_topic,mqtt_payload);
      }
      else
      {
        int status = client.state(); //read error code
        //present it on the display to trace/troubleshoot
      }
    }

In the case, the client does not connect to the MQTT broker, the client.state(); returns an int that can be interpreted as below:

// Possible values for client.state()
#define MQTT_CONNECTION_TIMEOUT     -4
#define MQTT_CONNECTION_LOST        -3
#define MQTT_CONNECT_FAILED         -2
#define MQTT_DISCONNECTED           -1
#define MQTT_CONNECTED               0
#define MQTT_CONNECT_BAD_PROTOCOL    1
#define MQTT_CONNECT_BAD_CLIENT_ID   2
#define MQTT_CONNECT_UNAVAILABLE     3
#define MQTT_CONNECT_BAD_CREDENTIALS 4
#define MQTT_CONNECT_UNAUTHORIZED    5
In many code samples, including those provided along with this MQTT client library, there is a client.loop(); function executed in the main void loop() body. While it is obligatory in the case of the use of asynchronous sending and receiving of the MQTT messages, in the simple case as above, it can be abandoned because client.publish(topic,payload); makes a blocking call and ensures sending of the message to the MQTT broker.

Result validation

You should be able to connect to the WiFi and MQTT broker (verified by the status present on the selected display) and then publish a message (once or periodically). Depending on whether you're fully remote or able to access our networks with an additional device, you need to implement a subscriber (as present in the scenario IOT4: Connecting to the MQTT and subscribing to the messages) or use MQTT Explorer (or any other application capable of connecting to our MQTT Broker) to observe messages that you publish.

FAQ

My MQTT client disconnects randomly: The most common reason is you're using a non-unique MQTT client name. Please change it to some other (even random generated) and give it another try.
How do I observe messages that I send?: Use a software client, such as MQTT Explorer, if you're able to access the “internal IoT” network (you're in the range of the network). If you're remote, the only way is to book another device and implement a client subscribing to your message, as presented in the scenario IOT4: Connecting to the MQTT and subscribing to the messages. Our MQTT broker is also visible in the campus network on the wired interfaces so that you can access it, e.g. via EduVPN or from the laboratory computers. Refer to the supervisor for IP and credentials.
Do I need to authorise to publish and subscribe?: Yes, you do. The supervisor provides the user and password on demand, also presented in the Node's technical documentation.

Project information


This Intellectual Output was implemented under the Erasmus+ KA2.
Project IOT-OPEN.EU Reloaded – Education-based strengthening of the European universities, companies and labour force in the global IoT market.
Project number: 2022-1-PL01-KA220-HED-000085090.

Erasmus+ Disclaimer
This project has been funded with support from the European Commission.
This publication reflects the views of only the author, and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use that may be made of the information contained therein.

Copyright Notice
This content was created by the IOT-OPEN.EU Reloaded consortium, 2022,2024.
The content is Copyrighted and distributed under CC BY-NC Creative Commons Licence, free for Non-Commercial use.