Difference between revisions of "Automation - MQTT"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
*Proven on SparkyLinux 5.11 | *Proven on SparkyLinux 5.11 | ||
*Proven on raw Debian (With a [[#Debian Caveat{{!}}caveat]]) | *Proven on raw Debian (With a [[#Debian Caveat{{!}}caveat]]) | ||
*Proven on raw Ubuntu | |||
[https://mosquitto.org/ Mosquitto MQTT Broker] | [https://mosquitto.org/ Mosquitto MQTT Broker] | ||
Revision as of 17:45, 11 January 2022
- Proven on Mint 19.3
- Proven on SparkyLinux 5.11
- Proven on raw Debian (With a caveat)
- Proven on raw Ubuntu
Installing Mosquitto
sudo apt-get install mosquitto
Pretty simple, eh?
Ensure that Mosquitto broker is running
sudo service mosquitto status
expected result is Active: active (running)
Debian Caveat
During an install on a raw Debian system, I discovered that Mosquitto refused connection when I tried to access it with anything other than "localhost" as the hostname...
There is SOME possibility it's a newer version of Mosquitto causing the issue. Further research required...
But for now, It's a simple matter of editing the config file for Mosquitto.
sudo vi /etc/mosquitto/mosquitto.conf
& add in:
listener 1883 allow_anonymous true
Then,
sudo service mosquitto restart
Install client tools for testing etc
(Do this on any machine expected to manually use MQTT)
sudo apt install mosquitto-clients
Testing
In a terminal:
mosquitto_sub -h localhost -t "mqtt" -v
In another terminal:
mosquitto_pub -h localhost -t "mqtt" -m "Hello MQTT"
Now the message “mqtt Hello MQTT
” will be displayed in the first terminal where the topic “mqtt” is subscribed.
Subscribing to #
gives you a subscription to everything except for topics that start with a $
(these are normally control topics anyway).