Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Nov 16, 2023. It is now read-only.

Latest commit

 

History

History
79 lines (49 loc) · 3.95 KB

File metadata and controls

79 lines (49 loc) · 3.95 KB

Azure IoT Hub Client Sample

Walk-through: Connecting to Microsoft IoT Central

01/10/2018 5 minutes to read

Additional documentation for this sample

Contributors

  • David Campbell
  • George Mileka

In this article

This article describes how, as a device developer, to connect a device running a Windows 10 IoT Core device (like Raspberry Pi) to your Microsoft IoT Central application using the C# programming language.

Before you begin

To complete the steps in this article, you need the following:

  • A Microsoft IoT Central application created from the Sample Devkits application template. For more information, see Create your Microsoft IoT Central Application.
  • A device running the Windows 10 IoT Core operating system. For this walkthrough, we will use a Raspberry Pi.
  • Visual Studio installed (only needed if you are going to build/deploy the source code).
    • With 'The Universal Windows Platform development' workload installed.

Add a Real Device in Microsoft IoT Central

In Microsoft IoT Central,

  • Add a real device from the Raspberry Pi device template.
  • Make a note of the device connection string. For more information, see Add a real device to your Microsoft IoT Central application.

Setup A Physical Device

To setup a physical device, we need:

  • A device running Windows IoT Core operating system.
    • To do that, follow the steps described here.
  • A client application that can communicate with Microsoft IoT Central.
    • You can either build your own custom application using the Azure SDK and deploy it to your device (using Visual Studio). OR
    • You can download a pre-built sample and simply deploy and run it on the device.

Deploy The Pre-built Sample Client Application to The Device

To deploy the client application to your Windows IoT Device,

  • Ensure the connection string is stored on the device for the client application to use.
    • On the desktop, save the connection string in a text file named connection.string.iothub.
    • Copy the text file to the device’s document folder:
      • [device-IP-address]\C$\Data\Users\DefaultAccount\Documents\connection.string.iothub
  • Go to the device web portal (in any browser, type http://[device-IP-address]:8080) (This will allow you to manage many aspects of your Windows IoT device. The feature we’ll need for this exercise is app installation).
    • On the left, expand the ‘Apps’ node.
    • Click ‘Quick-run samples’
    • Click ‘Azure IoT Hub Client’
    • Click ‘Deploy and run’

The application should launch on the device, and will look something like this:

In Microsoft IoT Central, you can see how the code running on the Raspberry Pi interacts with the application:

  • On the Measurements page for your real device, you can see the telemetry.
  • On the Properties page, you can see the value of the reported Die Number property.
  • On the Settings page, you can change various settings on the Raspberry Pi such as voltage and fan speed.

Source Code

You can see the source code for the client application on the Windows IoT samples page here.

Additional resources

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.