Demo application for using the AT&T IoT Starter Kit Powered by AWS.

Dependencies:   SDFileSystem

Fork of ATT_AWS_IoT_demo by Anthony Phillips

IoT Starter Kit Powered by AWS Demo

This program demonstrates the AT&T IoT Starter Kit sending data directly into AWS IoT. It's explained and used in the Getting Started with the IoT Starter Kit Powered by AWS on starterkit.att.com.

What's required

  • AT&T IoT LTE Add-on (also known as the Cellular Shield)
  • NXP K64F - for programming
  • microSD card - used to store your AWS security credentials
  • AWS account
  • Python, locally installed

If you don't already have an IoT Starter Kit, you can purchase a kit here. The IoT Starter Kit Powered by AWS includes the LTE cellular shield, K64F, and a microSD card.

Revision:
15:6f2798e45099
Parent:
12:1ae41c231014
Child:
16:02008a2a2569
--- a/README.md	Fri Oct 28 13:30:20 2016 +0100
+++ b/README.md	Thu Dec 01 18:05:38 2016 +0000
@@ -1,89 +1,3 @@
-# HTTPS File Download Example for TLS Client on mbed OS
-
-This application downloads a file from an HTTPS server (developer.mbed.org) and looks for a specific string in that file.
-
-## Getting started
-
-Set up your environment if you have not done so already. For instructions, refer to the [main readme](../README.md).
-
-## Required hardware
-
-This example also requires an Ethernet cable and connection to the internet additional to the hardware requirements in the [main readme](../README.md).
-
-The networking stack used in this example requires TLS functionality to be enabled on mbed TLS. On devices where hardware entropy is not present, TLS is disabled by default. This would result in compile time or linking failures.
-
-To learn why entropy is required, read the [TLS Porting guide](https://docs.mbed.com/docs/mbed-os-handbook/en/5.2/advanced/tls_porting/).
-
-## Monitoring the application
-
-__NOTE:__ Make sure that the Ethernet cable is plugged in correctly before running the application.
-
-The output in the terminal window should be similar to this:
-
-```
-Using Ethernet LWIP
-Client IP Address is 10.2.203.43
-Connecting with developer.mbed.org
-Starting the TLS handshake...
-TLS connection to developer.mbed.org established
-Server certificate:
-    cert. version     : 3
-    serial number     : 11:21:B8:47:9B:21:6C:B1:C6:AF:BC:5D:0C:19:52:DC:D7:C3
-    issuer name       : C=BE, O=GlobalSign nv-sa, CN=GlobalSign Organization Validation CA - SHA256 - G2
-    subject name      : C=GB, ST=Cambridgeshire, L=Cambridge, O=ARM Ltd, CN=*.mbed.com
-    issued  on        : 2016-03-03 12:26:08
-    expires on        : 2017-04-05 10:31:02
-    signed using      : RSA with SHA-256
-    RSA key size      : 2048 bits
-    basic constraints : CA=false
-    subject alt name  : *.mbed.com, mbed.org, *.mbed.org, mbed.com
-    key usage         : Digital Signature, Key Encipherment
-    ext key usage     : TLS Web Server Authentication, TLS Web Client Authentication
-Certificate verification passed
+# Avnet AT&T Amazon Web Service Internet-of-Things demo
 
-HTTPS: Received 439 chars from server
-HTTPS: Received 200 OK status ... [OK]
-HTTPS: Received 'Hello world!' status ... [OK]
-HTTPS: Received message:
-
-HTTP/1.1 200 OK
-Server: nginx/1.7.10
-Date: Wed, 20 Jul 2016 10:00:35 GMT
-Content-Type: text/plain
-Content-Length: 14
-Connection: keep-alive
-Last-Modified: Fri, 27 Jul 2012 13:30:34 GMT
-Accept-Ranges: bytes
-Cache-Control: max-age=36000
-Expires: Wed, 20 Jul 2016 20:00:35 GMT
-X-Upstream-L3: 172.17.0.3:80
-X-Upstream-L2: developer-sjc-indigo-1-nginx
-Strict-Transport-Security: max-age=31536000; includeSubdomains
-
-Hello world!
-```
-
-## Debugging the TLS connection
-
-To print out more debug information about the TLS connection, edit the file `main.cpp` and change the definition of `DEBUG_LEVEL` (near the top of the file) from 0 to a positive number:
-
-* Level 1 only prints non-zero return codes from SSL functions and information about the full certificate chain being verified.
-
-* Level 2 prints more information about internal state updates.
-
-* Level 3 is intermediate.
-
-* Level 4 (the maximum) includes full binary dumps of the packets.
-
-
-The TLS connection can fail with an error similar to:
-
-    mbedtls_ssl_write() failed: -0x2700 (-9984): X509 - Certificate verification failed, e.g. CRL, CA or signature check failed
-    Failed to fetch /media/uploads/mbed_official/hello.txt from developer.mbed.org:443
-
-This probably means you need to update the contents of the `SSL_CA_PEM` constant (this can happen if you modify `HTTPS_SERVER_NAME`, or when `developer.mbed.org` switches to a new CA when updating its certificate).
-
-Another possible reason for this error is a proxy providing a different certificate. Proxies can be used in some network configurations or for performing man-in-the-middle attacks. If you choose to ignore this error and proceed with the connection anyway, you can change the definition of `UNSAFE` near the top of the file from 0 to 1.
-
-**Warning:** this removes all security against a possible active attacker, so use at your own risk or for debugging only!
-
+TODO
\ No newline at end of file