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Client implementation of the MQTT 3.1.1 specification for embedded devices

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coreMQTT Client Library

This repository contains the coreMQTT library that has been optimized for a low memory footprint. The coreMQTT library is compliant with the MQTT 3.1.1 standard. It has no dependencies on any additional libraries other than the standard C library, a customer-implemented network transport interface, and optionally a user-implemented platform time function. This library is distributed under the MIT Open Source License.

This library has gone through code quality checks including verification that no function has a GNU Complexity score over 8, and checks against deviations from mandatory rules in the MISRA coding standard. Deviations from the MISRA C:2012 guidelines are documented under MISRA Deviations. This library has also undergone both static code analysis from Coverity static analysis, and validation of memory safety through the CBMC automated reasoning tool.

See memory requirements for this library here.

coreMQTT v1.1.0 source code is part of the FreeRTOS 202012.00 LTS release.

MQTT Config File

The MQTT client library exposes build configuration macros that are required for building the library. A list of all the configurations and their default values are defined in core_mqtt_config_defaults.h. To provide custom values for the configuration macros, a custom config file named core_mqtt_config.h can be provided by the application to the library.

By default, a core_mqtt_config.h custom config is required to build the library. To disable this requirement and build the library with default configuration values, provide MQTT_DO_NOT_USE_CUSTOM_CONFIG as a compile time preprocessor macro.

Thus, the MQTT library can be built by either:

  • Defining a core_mqtt_config.h file in the application, and adding it to the include directories list of the library
    OR
  • Defining the MQTT_DO_NOT_USE_CUSTOM_CONFIG preprocessor macro for the library build.

Sending metrics to AWS IoT

When establishing a connection with AWS IoT, users can optionally report the Operating System, Hardware Platform and MQTT client version information of their device to AWS. This information can help AWS IoT provide faster issue resolution and technical support. If users want to report this information, they can send a specially formatted string (see below) in the username field of the MQTT CONNECT packet.

Format

The format of the username string with metrics is:

<Actual_Username>?SDK=<OS_Name>&Version=<OS_Version>&Platform=<Hardware_Platform>&MQTTLib=<MQTT_Library_name>@<MQTT_Library_version>

Where

  • <Actual_Username> is the actual username used for authentication, if username and password are used for authentication. When username and password based authentication is not used, this is an empty value.
  • <OS_Name> is the Operating System the application is running on (e.g. FreeRTOS)
  • <OS_Version> is the version number of the Operating System (e.g. V10.4.3)
  • <Hardware_Platform> is the Hardware Platform the application is running on (e.g. WinSim)
  • <MQTT_Library_name> is the MQTT Client library being used (e.g. coreMQTT)
  • <MQTT_Library_version> is the version of the MQTT Client library being used (e.g. 1.0.2)

Example

  • Actual_Username = “iotuser”, OS_Name = FreeRTOS, OS_Version = V10.4.3, Hardware_Platform_Name = WinSim, MQTT_Library_Name = coremqtt, MQTT_Library_version = 1.1.0. If username is not used, then “iotuser” can be removed.
/* Username string:
 * iotuser?SDK=FreeRTOS&Version=v10.4.3&Platform=WinSim&[email protected]
 */

#define OS_NAME                   "FreeRTOS"
#define OS_VERSION                "V10.4.3"
#define HARDWARE_PLATFORM_NAME    "WinSim"
#define MQTT_LIB                  "[email protected]"

#define USERNAME_STRING           "iotuser?SDK=" OS_NAME "&Version=" OS_VERSION "&Platform=" HARDWARE_PLATFORM_NAME "&MQTTLib=" MQTT_LIB
#define USERNAME_STRING_LENGTH    ( ( uint16_t ) ( sizeof( USERNAME_STRING ) - 1 ) )

MQTTConnectInfo_t connectInfo;
connectInfo.pUserName = USERNAME_STRING;
connectInfo.userNameLength = USERNAME_STRING_LENGTH;
mqttStatus = MQTT_Connect( pMqttContext, &connectInfo, NULL, CONNACK_RECV_TIMEOUT_MS, pSessionPresent );

Building the Library

The mqttFilePaths.cmake file contains the information of all source files and the header include path required to build the MQTT library.

Additionally, the MQTT library requires two header files that are not part of the ISO C90 standard library, stdbool.h and stdint.h. For compilers that do not provide these header files, the source/include directory contains the files stdbool.readme and stdint.readme, which can be renamed to stdbool.h and stdint.h, respectively, to provide the type definitions required by MQTT.

As mentioned in the previous section, either a custom config file (i.e. core_mqtt_config.h) OR MQTT_DO_NOT_USE_CUSTOM_CONFIG macro needs to be provided to build the MQTT library.

For a CMake example of building the MQTT library with the mqttFilePaths.cmake file, refer to the coverity_analysis library target in test/CMakeLists.txt file.

Building Unit Tests

Checkout CMock Submodule

By default, the submodules in this repository are configured with update=none in .gitmodules to avoid increasing clone time and disk space usage of other repositories (like amazon-freertos that submodules this repository).

To build unit tests, the submodule dependency of CMock is required. Use the following command to clone the submodule:

git submodule update --checkout --init --recursive test/unit-test/CMock

Platform Prerequisites

  • For running unit tests
    • C90 compiler like gcc
    • CMake 3.13.0 or later
    • Ruby 2.0.0 or later is additionally required for the CMock test framework (that we use).
  • For running the coverage target, gcov and lcov are additionally required.

Steps to build Unit Tests

  1. Go to the root directory of this repository. (Make sure that the CMock submodule is cloned as described above)

  2. Run the cmake command: cmake -S test -B build

  3. Run this command to build the library and unit tests: make -C build all

  4. The generated test executables will be present in build/bin/tests folder.

  5. Run cd build && ctest to execute all tests and view the test run summary.

Reference examples

Please refer to the demos of the MQTT client library in the following locations for reference examples on POSIX and FreeRTOS platforms:

Platform Location Transport Interface Implementation
POSIX AWS IoT Device SDK for Embedded C POSIX sockets for TCP/IP and OpenSSL for TLS stack
FreeRTOS FreeRTOS/FreeRTOS FreeRTOS+TCP for TCP/IP and mbedTLS for TLS stack
FreeRTOS FreeRTOS AWS Reference Integrations Based on Secure Sockets Abstraction

Documentation

Existing Documentation

For pre-generated documentation, please see the documentation linked in the locations below:

Location
AWS IoT Device SDK for Embedded C
FreeRTOS.org

Note that the latest included version of coreMQTT may differ across repositories.

Generating Documentation

The Doxygen references were created using Doxygen version 1.8.20. To generate the Doxygen pages, please run the following command from the root of this repository:

doxygen docs/doxygen/config.doxyfile

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md for information on contributing.

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Client implementation of the MQTT 3.1.1 specification for embedded devices

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