Book Image

Practical Node-RED Programming

By : Taiji Hagino
5 (1)
Book Image

Practical Node-RED Programming

5 (1)
By: Taiji Hagino

Overview of this book

Node-RED is a free and open source flow-based programming tool used to handle IoT data that allows programmers of any level to interconnect physical I/O, cloud-based systems, databases, and APIs to build web applications without code. Practical Node-RED Programming is a comprehensive introduction for anyone looking to get up to speed with the Node-RED ecosystem in no time. Complete with hands-on tutorials, projects, and self-assessment questions, this easy-to-follow guide will help you to become well versed in the foundations of Node-RED. You’ll learn how to use Node-RED to handle IoT data and build web applications without having to write complex code. Once you’ve covered the basics, you’ll explore various visual programming techniques and find out how to make sample flows as you cover web development, IoT development, and cloud service connections, and finally build useful real-world applications. By the end of this book, you’ll have learned how to use Node-RED to develop a real-world application from scratch, which can then be implemented in your business.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Section 1: Node-RED Basics
6
Section 2: Mastering Node-RED
11
Section 3: Practical Matters

How to connect to the database

Now that the database has actually been created, we will move toward the hands-on tutorial, where we will clone the Node-RED flow from GitHub, and implement the connection to that database from the Node-RED flow. Use the project feature you learned in the previous chapter to connect to your GitHub repository, load the prepared flow definition file, and implement it on Node-RED in your local environment. Since you have already done this in the previous chapter, it is not necessary to create a new flow this time.

Configuring Node-RED

The first thing you need to do is change the localhost path (URL) of the Node-RED flow editor. Currently, you can access the flow editor at localhost:1880, but in order to change the path (URL) of the web application created by this hands-on tutorial to localhost:1880, we need to change the path of the flow editor to localhost:1880/admin.

This is because you have to move the root path of the Node-RED flow editor to...