The Azure IoT Gateway SDK was our first step to enabling edge analytics in IoT solutions. We’re doubling down on, and expanding, this vision as explained in Satya’s Keynote at the Build conference and Sam George’s blog post. As part of this evolution, the SDK is becoming an extensible product you can use instead of a set of code you build. To reflect this, we’re changing the name to Azure IoT Edge.
All the important developer concepts are maintained as we continue to improve Azure IoT Edge. Specifically…
- modules remain units compute which can be written in your programming language of choice.
- traditional cloud services and 3rd party business logic can run as a module.
- modules can communicate with each other via declarative message passing.
This similarity means that existing solutions can evolve with the product! There will be some infrastructural changes. For example: modules will run in Docker containers and the broker used to pass messages between module code will move to a lite version of IoT Hub running locally in a module. The vast majority of this is shielded from both a module developer and gateway developer.
Sign up here to be kept up to date about the next generation of Azure IoT Edge features. In the meantime, be sure to check out the great features we just added to Azure IoT Edge, like development packages and an Azure Stream Analytics module.
IoT scenarios vary drastically between industries and even between customers within the same industry. Azure IoT Edge lets you build IoT solutions tailored to your exact scenario. Connect new or existing devices, regardless of protocol. Process the data in an on-premises gateway using the language of your choice (Java, C#, Node.js, or C), before sending it to the cloud. Deploy the solution on hardware that meets your performance needs and runs the operating system of your choice.
In the image below an existing device has been connected to the cloud using edge intelligence. The on-premises gateway not only performs protocol adaptation which allows the device to send data to the cloud, it also filters the data so that only the most important information is uploaded.
Using existing modules from the Azure IoT Edge ecosystem significantly reduces your development and maintenance costs. Running the gateway on-premises opens up all kinds of scenarios like communicating between devices in real time, operating your IoT solution with an intermittent cloud connection, or enforcing additional security requirements.
Visit https://azure.microsoft.com/campaigns/iot-edge to learn more about Azure IoT Edge.
The following modules are available in this repository:
Name Description ble Represents a Bluetooth low energy (BLE) device connected to the gateway hello_world Sends a "hello world" message periodically identitymap Maps MAC addresses to IoT Hub device IDs/keys iothub Sends/receives messages to/from mapped devices and IoT Hub logger Writes received message content to a file simulated_device Simulates a gateway-connected BLE device azure_functions Sends message content to an Azure Function
The fastest way to setup your development environment to start writing modules is to leverage our packages for Java, C#, and Node.js. Our sample apps repo has quick steps on getting started with these packages:
- Azure IoT Edge Maven: With this you will be able to run the Azure IoT Edge sample app and start writing Java modules. This package contains the Azure IoT Edge core and links to the module dependencies’ packages for Linux or Windows. Requires the java binding package.
- Azure IoT Edge npm: With this you will be able to run the Azure IoT Edge sample app and start writing Node.js modules. This package contains the Azure IoT Edge core and auto-installs the module dependencies’ packages for Linux or Windows.
- Azure IoT Edge NuGet .NET Standard: With this you will be able to run the Azure IoT Edge sample app and write .NET Standard modules on Windows (IoT Edge Core for Windows) or Ubuntu (IoT Edge Core for Ubuntu).
- Azure IoT Edge NuGet .NET Framework: With this you will be able to run the Azure IoT Edge sample app and write .NET Framework modules on Windows, dependent on IoT Edge Core for Windows.
Other people are creating modules for Azure IoT Edge too! See the More information link for a module to find out how to get it, who supports it, etc.
Name More information Targets IoT Edge version OPC Publisher https://github.com/Azure/iot-edge-opc-publisher 2017-04-27 OPC Proxy https://github.com/Azure/iot-edge-opc-proxy 2017-04-27 Modbus https://github.com/Azure/iot-gateway-modbus 2017-01-13 GZip Compression https://github.com/Azure/iot-gateway-compression-gzip-nodejs 2016-12-16 Proficy Historian https://github.com/azure-samples/iot-gateway-proficy-historian 2017-01-13 SQLite https://github.com/Azure/iot-gateway-sqlite 2017-01-13 Batch/Shred https://github.com/Azure/iot-gateway-batch-nodejs 2017-01-13
We'd love to feature your module here! See our Contribution guidelines for more info.
Azure IoT Edge is designed to be used with a broad range of operating system platforms. It has been tested on the following operating systems:
- Ubuntu 14.04
- Ubuntu 15.10
- Yocto Linux 3.0 on Intel Edison
- Windows 10
- Wind River 7.0
Azure IoT Edge is designed to be independent from hardware in addition to the operating system. Developers can power their gateways with hardware as constrained as a microcontroller to systems as powerful as a ruggedized server.
This folder contains general documentation for Azure IoT Edge as well as step by step instructions for building and running the samples:
General documentation
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Dev box setup contains instructions for configuring your machine to build Azure IoT Edge as well as instructions for configuring your machine to build modules written in Java, Node.js, and .NET.
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Ubuntu Snap Package Walk-through provides the step-by-step instructions used to create Azure IoT Edge Snap package. The walk-through is a great starting point for anyone trying to integrate Azure IoT Edge into their own snap package.
API documentation can be found here.
This folder contains all of the samples for Azure IoT Edge. Samples are separated in their own folders. Step by step instructions for building and running each sample can be found in the README.md file in the root of each sample's folder.
Samples include:
- Hello World - Learn the basic concepts of Azure IoT Edge by creating a simple gateway that logs a hello world message to a file every 5 seconds.
- Simulated Device Send data to IoTHub from a gateway using a simulated device instead of using a real device.
- Real Device - Send data to IoTHub from a real device that could not connect to the cloud unless it connected through a gateway. This sample uses a Bluetooth Low Energy Texas Instruments SensorTag as the end device .
This folder contains all of the modules included with Azure IoT Edge. Each module represents a specific piece of functionality that can be composed into an end to end gateway solution. Details on the implementation of each module can be found in each module's devdoc/ folder.
This folder contains all of the core infrastructure necessary to create a gateway solution. In general, developers only need to use components in the core folder, not modify them. API documentation for core infrastructure can be found here. Details on the implementation of core components can be found in core/devdoc.
This is the default folder that cmake will place the output from our build scripts. The developer always has the final say about the destinaiton of build output by creating a folder, navigating to it, and then running cmake from there. Detailed instructions are contained in each sample doc.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact [email protected] with any additional questions or comments