Book Image

MQTT Essentials - A Lightweight IoT Protocol

5 (1)
Book Image

MQTT Essentials - A Lightweight IoT Protocol

5 (1)

Overview of this book

This step-by-step guide will help you gain a deep understanding of the lightweight MQTT protocol. We’ll begin with the specific vocabulary of MQTT and its working modes, followed by installing a Mosquitto MQTT broker. Then, you will use best practices to secure the MQTT Mosquitto broker to ensure that only authorized clients are able to publish and receive messages. Once you have secured the broker with the appropriate configuration, you will develop a solution that controls a drone with Python. Further on, you will use Python on a Raspberry Pi 3 board to process commands and Python on Intel Boards (Joule, Edison and Galileo). You will then connect to the MQTT broker, subscribe to topics, send messages, and receive messages in Python. You will also develop a solution that interacts with sensors in Java by working with MQTT messages. Moving forward, you will work with an asynchronous API with callbacks to make the sensors interact with MQTT messages. Following the same process, you will develop an iOS app with Swift 3, build a website that uses WebSockets to connect to the MQTT broker, and control home automation devices with HTML5, JavaScript code, Node.js and MQTT messages
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
MQTT Essentials - A Lightweight IoT Protocol
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgment
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Dedication
Preface

Creating a security helper class to establish a TLS secured connection


Now, we will create a new security helper class named SecurityHelper, which will provide many static methods that we will use to make it easy to establish a TLS secured connection with an MQTT server. We will use the recently added dependencies for the Bouncy Castle libraries to load the certificates and key files.

The public static CreateSocketFactory method will receive the file names for the certificate authority certificate, the client certificate, and the client key. The method will load all these files, generate the appropriate instances from them, and return an instance of java.net.ssl.SSLSocketFactory.

Tip

It is very important to avoid being confused by the old SSL name. We will be working with TLS version 1.2, but Java has the old java.net.ssl.SSLSocketFactory that has been upgraded to work with the latest TLS versions (but it didn't change its name from SSL to TLS to keep compatibility with the previous versions...