Book Image

Hands-On MQTT Programming with Python

By : Gaston C. Hillar
Book Image

Hands-On MQTT Programming with Python

By: Gaston C. Hillar

Overview of this book

<p>MQTT is a lightweight messaging protocol for small sensors and mobile devices. This book explores the features of the latest versions of MQTT for IoT and M2M communications, how to use them with Python 3, and allow you to interact with sensors and actuators using Python.</p> <p>The book begins with the specific vocabulary of MQTT and its working modes, followed by installing a Mosquitto MQTT broker. You will use different utilities and diagrams to understand the most important concepts related to MQTT. You will learn to make all the necessary configuration to work with digital certificates for encrypting all data sent between the MQTT clients and the server. You will also work with the different Quality of Service levels and later analyze and compare their overheads.</p> <p>You will write Python 3.x code to control a vehicle with MQTT messages delivered through encrypted connections (TLS 1.2), and learn how leverage your knowledge of the MQTT protocol to build a solution based on requirements. Towards the end, you will write Python code to use the PubNub cloud-based real-time MQTT provider to monitor a surfing competition.</p> <p>In the end, you will have a solution that was built from scratch by analyzing the requirements and then write Python code that will run on water-proof IoT boards connected to multiple sensors in surfboards.</p>
Table of Contents (9 chapters)

Testing the MQTT TLS client authentication with command-line tools

Now, we will use the Mosquitto command-line tools to test the client authentication configuration.

The following command specifies the certificate authority certificate file, the client certificate, and the client key. You have to replace ca.crt, board001.crt, and board001.key with the full path to these files created in the certificates directory. However, it is a better idea to copy these files to a new directory as if we were working with files that will be only available to the device that wants to establish a connection with Mosquitto. As with previous commands, this command uses the -h option followed by the MQTT server host. In this case, we specify the IPv4 address of the computer that is running the Mosquitto MQTT server: 192.168.1.1. Notice that this value must match the IPv4 or IPv6 address that we specified...