10 KiB
MQTT Module
Since | Origin / Contributor | Maintainer | Source |
---|---|---|---|
2015-01-23 | Stephen Robinson, Tuan PM | Vowstar | mqtt.c |
The client adheres to version 3.1.1 of the MQTT protocol. Make sure that your broker supports and is correctly configured for version 3.1.1. The client is backwards incompatible with brokers running MQTT 3.1.
mqtt.Client()
Creates a MQTT client.
Syntax
mqtt.Client(clientid, keepalive[, username, password, cleansession])
Parameters
clientid
client IDkeepalive
keepalive secondsusername
user namepassword
user passwordcleansession
0/1 forfalse
/true
. Default is 1 (true
).
Returns
MQTT client
Example
-- init mqtt client without logins, keepalive timer 120s
m = mqtt.Client("clientid", 120)
-- init mqtt client with logins, keepalive timer 120sec
m = mqtt.Client("clientid", 120, "user", "password")
-- setup Last Will and Testament (optional)
-- Broker will publish a message with qos = 0, retain = 0, data = "offline"
-- to topic "/lwt" if client don't send keepalive packet
m:lwt("/lwt", "offline", 0, 0)
m:on("connect", function(client) print ("connected") end)
m:on("offline", function(client) print ("offline") end)
-- on publish message receive event
m:on("message", function(client, topic, data)
print(topic .. ":" )
if data ~= nil then
print(data)
end
end)
-- for TLS: m:connect("192.168.11.118", secure-port, 1)
m:connect("192.168.11.118", 1883, 0, function(client)
print("connected")
-- Calling subscribe/publish only makes sense once the connection
-- was successfully established. You can do that either here in the
-- 'connect' callback or you need to otherwise make sure the
-- connection was established (e.g. tracking connection status or in
-- m:on("connect", function)).
-- subscribe topic with qos = 0
client:subscribe("/topic", 0, function(client) print("subscribe success") end)
-- publish a message with data = hello, QoS = 0, retain = 0
client:publish("/topic", "hello", 0, 0, function(client) print("sent") end)
end,
function(client, reason)
print("failed reason: " .. reason)
end)
m:close();
-- you can call m:connect again
MQTT Client
mqtt.client:close()
Closes connection to the broker.
Syntax
mqtt:close()
Parameters
none
Returns
true
on success, false
otherwise
mqtt.client:connect()
Connects to the broker specified by the given host, port, and secure options.
Syntax
mqtt:connect(host[, port[, secure[, autoreconnect]]][, function(client)[, function(client, reason)]])
Parameters
host
host, domain or IP (string)port
broker port (number), default 1883secure
0/1 forfalse
/true
, default 0. Take note of constraints documented in the net module.autoreconnect
0/1 forfalse
/true
, default 0. This option is deprecated.function(client)
callback function for when the connection was establishedfunction(client, reason)
callback function for when the connection could not be established. No further callbacks should be called.
Returns
true
on success, false
otherwise
Notes
Don't use autoreconnect
. Let me repeat that, don't use autoreconnect
. You should handle the errors explicitly and appropriately for
your application. In particular, the default for cleansession
above is true
, so all subscriptions are destroyed when the connection
is lost for any reason.
In order to acheive a consistent connection, handle errors in the error callback. For example:
function handle_mqtt_error(client, reason)
tmr.create():alarm(10 * 1000, tmr.ALARM_SINGLE, do_mqtt_connect)
end
function do_mqtt_connect()
mqtt:connect("server", function(client) print("connected") end, handle_mqtt_error)
end
In reality, the connected function should do something useful!
This is the description of how the autoreconnect
functionality may (or may not) work.
When
autoreconnect
is set, then the connection will be re-established when it breaks. No error indication will be given (but all the subscriptions may be lost ifcleansession
is true). However, if the very first connection fails, then no reconnect attempt is made, and the error is signalled through the callback (if any). The first connection is considered a success if the client connects to a server and gets back a good response packet in response to its MQTT connection request. This implies (for example) that the username and password are correct.
Connection failure callback reason codes:
Constant | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
mqtt.CONN_FAIL_SERVER_NOT_FOUND |
-5 | There is no broker listening at the specified IP Address and Port |
mqtt.CONN_FAIL_NOT_A_CONNACK_MSG |
-4 | The response from the broker was not a CONNACK as required by the protocol |
mqtt.CONN_FAIL_DNS |
-3 | DNS Lookup failed |
mqtt.CONN_FAIL_TIMEOUT_RECEIVING |
-2 | Timeout waiting for a CONNACK from the broker |
mqtt.CONN_FAIL_TIMEOUT_SENDING |
-1 | Timeout trying to send the Connect message |
mqtt.CONNACK_ACCEPTED |
0 | No errors. Note: This will not trigger a failure callback. |
mqtt.CONNACK_REFUSED_PROTOCOL_VER |
1 | The broker is not a 3.1.1 MQTT broker. |
mqtt.CONNACK_REFUSED_ID_REJECTED |
2 | The specified ClientID was rejected by the broker. (See mqtt.Client() ) |
mqtt.CONNACK_REFUSED_SERVER_UNAVAILABLE |
3 | The server is unavailable. |
mqtt.CONNACK_REFUSED_BAD_USER_OR_PASS |
4 | The broker refused the specified username or password. |
mqtt.CONNACK_REFUSED_NOT_AUTHORIZED |
5 | The username is not authorized. |
mqtt.client:lwt()
Setup Last Will and Testament (optional). A broker will publish a message with qos = 0, retain = 0, data = "offline" to topic "/lwt" if client does not send keepalive packet.
As the last will is sent to the broker when connecting, lwt()
must be called BEFORE calling connect()
.
The broker will publish a client's last will message once he NOTICES that the connection to the client is broken. The broker will notice this when:
- The client fails to send a keepalive packet for as long as specified in mqtt.Client()
- The tcp-connection is properly closed (without closing the mqtt-connection before)
- The broker tries to send data to the client and fails to do so, because the tcp-connection is not longer open.
This means if you specified 120 as keepalive timer, just turn off the client device and the broker does not send any data to the client, the last will message will be published 120s after turning off the device.
Syntax
mqtt:lwt(topic, message[, qos[, retain]])
Parameters
topic
the topic to publish to (string)message
the message to publish, (buffer or string)qos
QoS level, default 0retain
retain flag, default 0
Returns
nil
mqtt.client:on()
Registers a callback function for an event.
Syntax
mqtt:on(event, function(client[, topic[, message]]))
Parameters
event
can be "connect", "message" or "offline"function(client[, topic[, message]])
callback function. The first parameter is the client. If event is "message", the 2nd and 3rd param are received topic and message (strings).
Returns
nil
mqtt.client:publish()
Publishes a message.
Syntax
mqtt:publish(topic, payload, qos, retain[, function(client)])
Parameters
topic
the topic to publish to (topic string)message
the message to publish, (buffer or string)qos
QoS levelretain
retain flagfunction(client)
optional callback fired when PUBACK received. NOTE: When calling publish() more than once, the last callback function defined will be called for ALL publish commands.
Returns
true
on success, false
otherwise
mqtt.client:subscribe()
Subscribes to one or several topics.
Syntax
mqtt:subscribe(topic, qos[, function(client)])
mqtt:subscribe(table[, function(client)])
Parameters
topic
a topic stringqos
QoS subscription level, default 0table
array of 'topic, qos' pairs to subscribe tofunction(client)
optional callback fired when subscription(s) succeeded. NOTE: When calling subscribe() more than once, the last callback function defined will be called for ALL subscribe commands.
Returns
true
on success, false
otherwise
Example
-- subscribe topic with qos = 0
m:subscribe("/topic",0, function(conn) print("subscribe success") end)
-- or subscribe multiple topic (topic/0, qos = 0; topic/1, qos = 1; topic2 , qos = 2)
m:subscribe({["topic/0"]=0,["topic/1"]=1,topic2=2}, function(conn) print("subscribe success") end)
!!! caution
Rather than calling `subscribe` multiple times you should use the multiple topics syntax shown in the above example if you want to subscribe to more than one topic at once.
mqtt.client:unsubscribe()
Unsubscribes from one or several topics.
Syntax
mqtt:unsubscribe(topic[, function(client)])
mqtt:unsubscribe(table[, function(client)])
Parameters
topic
a topic stringtable
array of 'topic, anything' pairs to unsubscribe fromfunction(client)
optional callback fired when unsubscription(s) succeeded. NOTE: When calling unsubscribe() more than once, the last callback function defined will be called for ALL unsubscribe commands.
Returns
true
on success, false
otherwise
Example
-- unsubscribe topic
m:unsubscribe("/topic", function(conn) print("unsubscribe success") end)
-- or unsubscribe multiple topic (topic/0; topic/1; topic2)
m:unsubscribe({["topic/0"]=0,["topic/1"]=0,topic2="anything"}, function(conn) print("unsubscribe success") end)