This is a simple mbed client example demonstrating, registration of a device with mbed Device Connector and reading and writing values as well as deregistering on different Network Interfaces including Ethernet, WiFi, 6LoWPAN ND and Thread respectively.

Getting started with mbed Client on mbed OS

This is the mbed Client example for mbed OS. It demonstrates how to register a device with mbed Device Connector, how to read and write values, and how to deregister. If you are unfamiliar with mbed Device Connector, we recommend that you read the introduction to the data model first.

The application:

  • Connects to network with WiFi, Ethernet, 6LoWPAN ND or Thread connection.
  • Registers with mbed Device Connector.
  • Gives mbed Device Connector access to its resources (read and write).
  • Records the number of clicks on the device’s button and sends the number to mbed Device Connector.
  • Lets you control the blink pattern of the LED on the device (through mbed Device Connector).

Required hardware

  • K64F board.
  • 1-2 micro-USB cables.
  • mbed 6LoWPAN gateway router for 6LoWPAN ND and Thread.
  • mbed 6LoWPAN shield (AT86RF212B/AT86RF233 for 6LoWPAN ND and Thread.
  • Ethernet cable and connection to the internet.

Requirements for non K64F board

This example application is primarily designed for FRDM-K64F board but you can also use other mbed OS supported boards to run this example application , with some minor modifications for setup.

  • To get the application registering successfully on non K64F boards , you need Edit the mbed_app.json file to add NULL_ENTROPY feature for mbedTLS:

""macros": ["MBEDTLS_USER_CONFIG_FILE=\"mbedtls_mbed_client_config.h\"",
            "MBEDTLS_NO_DEFAULT_ENTROPY_SOURCES",
            "MBEDTLS_TEST_NULL_ENTROPY"],
  • On non K64F boards, there is no unregistration functionality and button press is simulated through timer ticks incrementing every 15 seconds.

Application setup

To configure the example application, please check following:

Connection type

The application uses Ethernet as the default connection type. To change the connection type, set one of them in mbed_app.json. For example, to enable 6LoWPAN ND mode:

    "network-interface": {
        "help": "options are ETHERNET,WIFI,MESH_LOWPAN_ND,MESH_THREAD.",
        "value": "MESH_LOWPAN_ND"
    }

Client credentials

To register the application to the Connector service, you need to create and set the client side certificate.

  • Go to mbed Device Connector and log in with your mbed account.
  • On mbed Device Connector, go to My Devices > Security credentials and click the Get my device security credentials button to get new credentials for your device.
  • Replace the contents in `security.h` of this project's directory with content copied above.

6LoWPAN ND and Thread settings

First you need to select the RF driver to be used by 6LoWPAN/Thread stack.

For example Atmel AT86RF233/212B driver is located in https://github.com/ARMmbed/atmel-rf-driver

To add that driver to you application , import library from following URL:

https://github.com/ARMmbed/atmel-rf-driver

Then you need to enable the IPV6 functionality as the 6LoWPAN and Thread are part of IPv6 stack. Edit the mbed_app.json file to add IPV6 feature:

"target.features_add": ["CLIENT", "IPV6", "COMMON_PAL"],

6LoWPAN ND and Thread use IPv6 for connectivity. Therefore, you need to verify first that you have a working IPv6 connection. To do that, ping the Connector IPv6 address 2607:f0d0:2601:52::20 from your network.

mbed gateway

To connect the example application in 6LoWPAN ND or Thread mode to Connector, you need to set up an mbed 6LoWPAN gateway router as follows:

  • Use an Ethernet cable to connect the mbed 6LoWPAN gateway router to the internet.
  • Use a micro-USB cable to connect the mbed 6LoWPAN gateway router to your computer. The computer will list the router as removable storage.
  • The firmware for the gateway is located in the `GW_Binary` folder in the root of this example. Select the binary matching your application bootstrap mode:
  • For the 6LoWPAN ND bootstrap, use `gateway6LoWPANDynamic.bin`.
  • For the Thread bootstrap, use `gatewayThreadDynamic.bin`.

The dynamic binaries use IPv6 autoconfiguration and enable the client to connect to the Connector service. The static binaries create a site-local IPv6 network and packets cannot be routed outside.

  • Copy the gateway binary file to the mbed 6LoWPAN gateway router to flash the device. The device reboots automatically after flashing. If that does not happen, press the Reset button on the board.

You can view debug traces from the gateway with a serial port monitor. The gateway uses baud rate 460800. The gateway IPv6 address is correctly configured when the following trace is visible: `Eth bootstrap ready, IP=XXXX:XXXX:XXXX:XXXX:XXXX:XXXX:XXXX:XXXX`.

Channel settings

The default 2.4GHz channel settings are already defined by the mbed-mesh-api to match the mbed gateway settings. The application can override these settings by adding them to the mbed_app.json file in the main project directory. For example:

    "target_overrides": {
        "*": {
            "mbed-mesh-api.6lowpan-nd-channel-page": 0,
            "mbed-mesh-api.6lowpan-nd-channel": 12,
            "mbed-mesh-api.thread-config-channel-page": 0,
            "mbed-mesh-api.thread-config-channel": 12
        }
    }

For sub-GHz shields (AT86RF212B) use the following overrides, 6LoWPAN ND only:

"mbed-mesh-api.6lowpan-nd-channel-page": 2,
"mbed-mesh-api.6lowpan-nd-channel": 1

For more information about the radio shields, see [the related documentation](docs/radio_module_identify.md). All the configurable settings can be found in the mbed-os-example-client/mbed-os/features/FEATURE_IPV6/mbed-mesh-api/mbed_lib.json file.

Thread-specific settings

With Thread, you can change the operating mode of the client from the default router mode to a sleepy end device by adding the following override to the `mbed_app.json` file:

    "mbed-mesh-api.thread-device-type": "MESH_DEVICE_TYPE_THREAD_SLEEPY_END_DEVICE"

Ethernet settings

For running the example application using Ethernet, you need:

  • An Ethernet cable.
  • An Ethernet connection to the internet.

Wi-Fi settings

The example application uses ESP8266 WiFi Interface for managing the wireless connectivity. To run this application using WiFi, you need:

    "network-interface": {
        "help": "options are ETHERNET,WIFI,MESH_LOWPAN_ND,MESH_THREAD.",
        "value": "WIFI"
    }

Provide your WiFi SSID and password here and leave `\"` in the beginning and end of your SSID and password (as shown in the example below). Otherwise, the example cannot pick up the SSID and password in correct format.

    "wifi-ssid": {
        "help": "WiFi SSID",
        "value": "\"SSID\""
    },
    "wifi-password": {
        "help": "WiFi Password",
        "value": "\"Password\""
    }

IP address setup

This example uses IPv4 to communicate with the mbed Device Connector Server except for 6LoWPAN ND and Thread. The example program should automatically get an IPv4 address from the router when connected over Ethernet.

If your network does not have DHCP enabled, you have to manually assign a static IP address to the board. We recommend having DHCP enabled to make everything run smoothly.

Changing socket type

Your device can connect to mbed Device Connector via UDP or TCP binding mode. The default is UDP. The binding mode cannot be changed in 6LoWPAN ND or Thread mode.

To change the binding mode:

  • In the `simpleclient.h` file, find the parameter `SOCKET_MODE`. The default is `M2MInterface::UDP`.
  • To switch to TCP, change it to `M2MInterface::TCP`.
  • Rebuild and flash the application.

Tip: The instructions in this document remain the same, irrespective of the socket mode you select.

Monitoring the application

The application prints debug messages over the serial port, so you can monitor its activity with a serial port monitor. The application uses baud rate 115200.

SerialPC

After connecting, you should see messages about connecting to mbed Device Connector:

In app_start()
IP address 10.2.15.222
Device name 6868df22-d353-4150-b90a-a878130859d9

When you click the `SW2` button on your board you should see messages about the value changes:

handle_button_click, new value of counter is 1

Testing the application

  • Flash the application.
  • Verify that the registration succeeded. You should see `Registered object successfully!` printed to the serial port.
  • On mbed Device Connector, go to My devices > Connected devices. Your device should be listed here.
  • Press the `SW2` button on the device a number of times (make a note of how many times you did that).
  • Go to Device Connector > API Console.
  • Enter https://api.connector.mbed.com/endpoints/DEVICE_NAME/3200/0/5501 in the URI field and click TEST API. Replace DEVICE_NAME with your actual endpoint name. The device name can be found in the security.h file, see variable MBED_ENDPOINT_NAME or it can be found from the traces.
  • The number of times you pressed SW2 is shown.
  • Press the SW3 button to unregister from mbed Device Connector. You should see Unregistered Object Successfully printed to the serial port and the LED starts blinking. This will also stop your application. Press the `RESET` button to run the program again.

For more methods check the mbed Device Connector Quick Start.

Application resources

The application exposes three resources:

  • 3200/0/5501. Number of presses of SW2 (GET).
  • 3201/0/5850. Blink function, blinks LED1 when executed (POST).
  • 3201/0/5853. Blink pattern, used by the blink function to determine how to blink. In the format of 1000:500:1000:500:1000:500 (PUT).

For information on how to get notifications when resource 1 changes, or how to use resources 2 and 3, take a look at the mbed Device Connector Quick Start.

Building this example

Building with mbed CLI

If you'd like to use mbed CLI to build this, then you should follow the instructions in the Handbook TODO - new link. The instructions here relate to using the developer.mbed.org Online Compiler

If you'd like to use the online Compiler, then you can Import this code into your compiler, select your platform from the top right, compile the code using the compile button, load it onto your board, press the reset button on the board and you code will run. See the client go online!

More instructions for using the mbed Online Compiler can be found at TODO - update this

Committer:
mbed_official
Date:
Tue Oct 09 07:00:07 2018 +0100
Revision:
163:82842f9dde56
Parent:
153:bfdc9d467a90
Merge pull request #419 from adbridge/master

Updating mbed-os to mbed-os-5.9.7
.
Commit copied from https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbed-os-example-client

Who changed what in which revision?

UserRevisionLine numberNew contents of line
mbed_official 24:5db6419ee4be 1 /**
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 2 * Minimal configuration for using mbedtls as part of mbed-client
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 3 *
mbed_official 24:5db6419ee4be 4 * NOTE! This is an optimized, minimal configuration for mbed Client.
mbed_official 24:5db6419ee4be 5 * We know it works with mbed Client but if you want to add more
mbed_official 24:5db6419ee4be 6 * services/communications to the application yourself - please ensure
mbed_official 24:5db6419ee4be 7 * you update this configuration accordingly. The default configuration
mbed_official 24:5db6419ee4be 8 * can be found from mbedTLS Github:
mbed_official 24:5db6419ee4be 9 *
mbed_official 24:5db6419ee4be 10 * https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbedtls/blob/development/include/mbedtls/config.h
mbed_official 24:5db6419ee4be 11 *
mbed_official 24:5db6419ee4be 12 *
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 13 * Copyright (C) 2006-2016, ARM Limited, All Rights Reserved
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 14 * SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 15 *
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 16 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 17 * not use this file except in compliance with the License.
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 18 * You may obtain a copy of the License at
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 19 *
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 20 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 21 *
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 22 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 23 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 24 * WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 25 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 26 * limitations under the License.
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 27 *
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 28 * This file is part of mbed TLS (https://tls.mbed.org)
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 29 */
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 30
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 31
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 32 #ifndef MBEDTLS_CUSTOM_CONFIG_H
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 33 #define MBEDTLS_CUSTOM_CONFIG_H
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 34
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 35 /* System support */
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 36 #define MBEDTLS_HAVE_ASM
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 37
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 38 /* mbed TLS feature support */
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 39 #define MBEDTLS_ECP_DP_SECP256R1_ENABLED
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 40 #define MBEDTLS_ECP_NIST_OPTIM
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 41 #define MBEDTLS_SSL_MAX_FRAGMENT_LENGTH
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 42 #define MBEDTLS_SSL_PROTO_TLS1_2
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 43 #define MBEDTLS_SSL_PROTO_DTLS
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 44 #define MBEDTLS_SSL_DTLS_ANTI_REPLAY
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 45 #define MBEDTLS_SSL_DTLS_HELLO_VERIFY
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 46 #define MBEDTLS_SSL_EXPORT_KEYS
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 47
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 48 /* mbed TLS modules */
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 49 #define MBEDTLS_AES_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 50 #define MBEDTLS_ASN1_PARSE_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 51 #define MBEDTLS_ASN1_WRITE_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 52 #define MBEDTLS_BIGNUM_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 53 #define MBEDTLS_CIPHER_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 54 #define MBEDTLS_CTR_DRBG_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 55 #define MBEDTLS_ECP_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 56 #define MBEDTLS_ENTROPY_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 57 #define MBEDTLS_MD_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 58 #define MBEDTLS_OID_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 59 #define MBEDTLS_PK_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 60 #define MBEDTLS_PK_PARSE_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 61 #define MBEDTLS_SHA256_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 62 #define MBEDTLS_SSL_COOKIE_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 63 #define MBEDTLS_SSL_CLI_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 64 #define MBEDTLS_SSL_SRV_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 65 #define MBEDTLS_SSL_TLS_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 66
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 67 // XXX mbedclient needs these: mbedtls_x509_crt_free, mbedtls_x509_crt_init, mbedtls_x509_crt_parse
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 68 #define MBEDTLS_X509_USE_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 69 #define MBEDTLS_X509_CRT_PARSE_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 70
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 71 // XXX: clean these up!!
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 72 #define MBEDTLS_SHA512_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 73 #define MBEDTLS_ECDH_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 74 #define MBEDTLS_GCM_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 75
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 76 #define MBEDTLS_ECDH_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 77 #define MBEDTLS_ECDSA_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 78 #define MBEDTLS_X509_CRT_PARSE_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 79
mbed_official 153:bfdc9d467a90 80 // Remove RSA, save 20KB at total.
mbed_official 153:bfdc9d467a90 81 // However, with Mbed OS 5.9 onwards - UBLOX_EVK_ODIN_W2 must have RSA!
mbed_official 153:bfdc9d467a90 82 // A more abstract macro define added for that which you can trigger via
mbed_official 153:bfdc9d467a90 83 // macros -part in the mbed_app.json.
mbed_official 153:bfdc9d467a90 84 #if !defined(MBED_CONF_RSA_REQUIRED)
mbed_official 153:bfdc9d467a90 85 #undef MBEDTLS_RSA_C
mbed_official 153:bfdc9d467a90 86 #undef MBEDTLS_PK_RSA_ALT_SUPPORT
mbed_official 153:bfdc9d467a90 87 #undef MBEDTLS_KEY_EXCHANGE_ECDHE_RSA_ENABLED
mbed_official 153:bfdc9d467a90 88 #undef MBEDTLS_KEY_EXCHANGE_RSA_ENABLED
mbed_official 153:bfdc9d467a90 89 #undef MBEDTLS_KEY_EXCHANGE_RSA_PSK_ENABLED
mbed_official 153:bfdc9d467a90 90 #endif // !MBED_CONF_RSA_REQUIRED
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 91
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 92 // Remove error messages, save 10KB of ROM
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 93 #undef MBEDTLS_ERROR_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 94
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 95 // Remove selftesting and save 11KB of ROM
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 96 #undef MBEDTLS_SELF_TEST
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 97
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 98 // Reduces ROM size by 30 kB
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 99 #undef MBEDTLS_ERROR_STRERROR_DUMMY
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 100 #undef MBEDTLS_VERSION_FEATURES
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 101 #undef MBEDTLS_DEBUG_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 102
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 103 // needed for parsing the certificates
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 104 #define MBEDTLS_PEM_PARSE_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 105 // dep of the previous
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 106 #define MBEDTLS_BASE64_C
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 107
mbed_official 24:5db6419ee4be 108 // Reduce IO buffer to save RAM, default is 16KB
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 109 #define MBEDTLS_SSL_MAX_CONTENT_LEN 2048
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 110
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 111 // define to save 8KB RAM at the expense of ROM
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 112 #undef MBEDTLS_AES_ROM_TABLES
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 113
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 114 // Save ROM and a few bytes of RAM by specifying our own ciphersuite list
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 115 #define MBEDTLS_SSL_CIPHERSUITES MBEDTLS_TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384,MBEDTLS_TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 116
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 117 #include "mbedtls/check_config.h"
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 118
mbed_official 5:b7d7ca715fdb 119 #endif /* MBEDTLS_CUSTOM_CONFIG_H */