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Hands-On MQTT Programming with Python

Hands-On MQTT Programming with Python

By : Gaston C. Hillar
2.3 (3)
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Hands-On MQTT Programming with Python

Hands-On MQTT Programming with Python

2.3 (3)
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)
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Sending messages with Python

So far, we have been publishing MQTT messages to control the vehicle with GUI and command-line tools. Now, we will write code in Python to publish the commands to control each vehicle and check the results of the execution of these commands. Of course, GUI utilities, such as MQTT.fx and the Mosquitto command-line utilities, are extremely useful. However, after we know that things are working as we expect, we can write the necessary code to perform tests in the same programming language we are using to run the code on the IoT board.

Now, we are going to code a Python client that will publish messages to the vehicles/vehiclepi01/commands topic and will subscribe to the vehicles/vehiclepi01/executedcommands topic. We will code both a publisher and a subscriber. This way, we will be able to design applications that can talk to IoT devices with MQTT messages...

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