Book Image

Raspberry Pi and MQTT Essentials

By : Dhairya Parikh
Book Image

Raspberry Pi and MQTT Essentials

By: Dhairya Parikh

Overview of this book

The future of IoT has the potential to be limitless. Wouldn’t it be great if you could add it to your own technological stacks? But where to start? With the basics, of course. In this book, you will start by learning about the most popular hardware and communication protocol, Raspberry Pi and MQTT. You will see how to use them together by setting up your own MQTT server on Raspberry Pi and understand how it works. This book explores MQTT in detail, including the clients and devices that you can connect to your server. You will discover two very popular IoT development boards among project developers: the ESP8266 and ESP32 development boards. Then, you will learn how to build interactive dashboards on your Pi and monitor your client devices. The book also shows you how to build a dashboard using another popular software – Node-RED. You will be able to put your skills to the test by creating two full-scale projects. That’s not all: you will also learn how to host your own MQTT server on a virtual cloud service. Finally, you will be guided on how to move forward from here, what technologies to learn, and some project recommendations to polish or test your knowledge. By the end of this book, you will be able to build meaningful projects using Raspberry Pi and MQTT and create dashboards for your projects on Node-RED.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
1
Part 1:Covering the Basics
6
Part 2: Practical Implementation – Building Two Full-Scale Projects
9
Part 3: How to Take Things Further – What Next?

How to take your broker global

In this section, we will discuss the two major options that we have to grant internet access to our existing projects.

There are two ways to obtain access to a global MQTT broker:

  • Online MQTT brokers: Several online MQTT brokers provide you with a ready-to-use MQTT broker (credentials are provided). These are available on a subscription basis (monthly, quarterly, or annually).

Some popular sites for this are HiveMQ, Paho, CloudMQTT, and Adafruit IO. These can be seen in the following diagram:

Figure 7.2 – Some popular online MQTT brokers

We will be using the HiveMQ platform to test this later. We will use the free plan provided by the platform, wherein you will be given the following features:

Figure 7.3 – Free plan provisions

  • Virtual Server: If you want more customization and additional features, you can get a virtual server from AWS, Azure, Google Cloud Platform...