- Introduction
- Create device on ThingsBoard
- Install required libraries and tools
- Connect device to ThingsBoard
- Synchronize device state using client and shared attribute requests
- Check data on ThingsBoard
- Control device using shared attributes
- Control device using RPC
- Conclusion
Introduction
The ODROID-XU4 is a powerful single-board computer designed for computing tasks that demand high performance and energy efficiency. It features a Samsung Exynos5422 Cortex-A15 processor, 2GB of RAM, Gigabit Ethernet, and two USB 3.0 ports. The board also has a microSD card slot, eMMC module socket, and 40-pin GPIO header for interfacing with a variety of peripherals and sensors. The ODROID-XU4 is compatible with a variety of operating systems, including Ubuntu, Debian, and Android. This makes it ideal for developers, hobbyists, and DIY enthusiasts looking to build anything from media centers to gaming consoles.
In this guide, we will learn how to create device on Thingsboard, install required libraries and tools.
After this we will modify our code and upload it to the device, and check the results of our coding and check data on ThingsBoard using imported dashboard.
Our device will synchronize with ThingsBoard using client and shared attributes requests functionality.
Of course, we will control our device using provided functionality like shared attributes or RPC requests.
Prerequisites
To continue with this guide we will need the following:
Create device on ThingsBoard
For simplicity, we will provide the device manually using the UI.
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Log in to your ThingsBoard instance and open the Devices page.
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By default, you navigate to the device group “All”. Click on the “+” icon in the top right corner of the table and then select “Add new device”.
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Input device name. For example, “My Device”. No other changes are required at this time. Click “Add” to add the device.
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Your first device has been added.
Install required libraries and tools
You should have installed thingsboard-python-client-sdk which can be installed using the following command. Still, we recommend installing packages outside the global environment:
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pip3 install tb-mqtt-client
Also, you should have tools that allow editing code, for example, you can use Nano editor that is going out of the box or install any other code editor you are familiar with.
Connect device to ThingsBoard
To connect your device, you’ll first need to get its credentials. While ThingsBoard supports a variety of device credentials, for this guide, we will use the default auto-generated credentials, which is an access token.
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Click on the device row in the table to open device details.
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Click “Copy access token”. The token will be copied to your clipboard. Please save it in a safe place.
Now you are ready to publish telemetry data on behalf of your device. We will use, as mentioned before, the “thingsboard-python-client-sdk” library. Let’s setup our project:
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Create project folder:
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mkdir thingsboard_example && cd thingsboard_example
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Install packages:
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pip3 install tb-mqtt-client
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Create the main script:
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nano main.py
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Copy and paste the following code:
In the code above change values for the following variables - THINGSBOARD_SERVER, ACCESS_TOKEN to your credentials.
Necessary variables for connection:
Variable name Default value Description ACCESS_TOKEN TEST_TOKEN Your device access token THINGSBOARD_SERVER eu.thingsboard.cloud Your ThingsBoard host or ip address. - Click Ctrl+O and Ctrl+X keys to save the file.
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And finally, let’s start our script:
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python3 main.py
If you did everything right, you should see the following console output:
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> INFO:tb_device_mqtt:connection SUCCESS
>
>
> {'ip_address': '192.168.1.198', 'macaddress': '3c:06:30:44:e0:24'} {'cpu_usage': 6.6, 'processes_count': 8, 'disk_usage': 70.0, 'RAM_usage': 73.9, 'swap_memory_usage': 69.4, 'battery': 29, 'boot_time': 1675154176.0}
>
Let’s review and make an explanation for our code. In this step, we are interested in the get_data
function.
Data packing and returning in the get_data
function, so you can easily add new telemetry or attributes to the dictionary if you want to monitor more values:
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...
def get_data():
cpu_usage = round(float(os.popen('''grep 'cpu ' /proc/stat | awk '{usage=($2+$4)*100/($2+$4+$5)} END {print usage }' ''').readline().replace('\n', '').replace(',', '.')), 2)
ip_address = os.popen('''hostname -I''').readline().replace('\n', '').replace(',', '.')[:-1]
mac_address = os.popen('''cat /sys/class/net/*/address''').readline().replace('\n', '').replace(',', '.')
processes_count = os.popen('''ps -Al | grep -c bash''').readline().replace('\n', '').replace(',', '.')[:-1]
swap_memory_usage = os.popen("free -m | grep Swap | awk '{print ($3/$2)*100}'").readline().replace('\n', '').replace(',', '.')[:-1]
ram_usage = float(os.popen("free -m | grep Mem | awk '{print ($3/$2) * 100}'").readline().replace('\n', '').replace(',', '.')[:-1])
st = os.statvfs('/')
used = (st.f_blocks - st.f_bfree) * st.f_frsize
boot_time = os.popen('uptime -p').read()[:-1]
avg_load = (cpu_usage + ram_usage) / 2
attributes = {
'ip_address': ip_address,
'macaddress': mac_address
}
telemetry = {
'cpu_usage': cpu_usage,
'processes_count': processes_count,
'disk_usage': used,
'RAM_usage': ram_usage,
'swap_memory_usage': swap_memory_usage,
'boot_time': boot_time,
'avg_load': avg_load
}
print(attributes, telemetry)
return attributes, telemetry
...
Send data part, as you can see below, we send our attributes and telemetry data every 60 seconds (feel free to change it if you want more frequent data updating):
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...
while not client.stopped:
attributes, telemetry = get_data()
client.send_attributes(attributes)
client.send_telemetry(telemetry)
time.sleep(60)
...
Synchronize device state using client and shared attribute requests
In order to get the state of the device from ThingsBoard during booting we have functionality to do this in the code. Responsible parts of the example code:
Attribute callback:
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def sync_state(result, exception=None):
global period
if exception is not None:
print("Exception: " + str(exception))
else:
period = result.get('shared', {'blinkingPeriod': 1.0})['blinkingPeriod']
Attribute request:
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def main():
client = TBDeviceMqttClient("eu.thingsboard.cloud", username="ACCESS_TOKEN")
client.connect()
client.request_attributes(shared_keys=['blinkingPeriod'], callback=sync_state)
...
In order to give ability to our callbacks to receive the data we have to send a request to ThingsBoard. This functionality allows us to keep the actual state after rebooting.
Check data on ThingsBoard
Once you have successfully published the attributes and telemetry data, you should immediately see them in the Device Telemetry Tab:
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Click on the device row in the table to open device details.
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Navigate to the telemetry tab.
Also, let’s display single board computer attributes and telemetry on a dashboard. For this, you can create your own dashboard with your custom widgets or use a ready-made dashboard and simply import it.
Import dashboardYou are able to import a dashboard in JSON format. To import a dashboard, you should go to the Dashboard group and click on the “+” button in the upper right corner of the page and choose “Import dashboard”. The dashboard import window should pop up, and you will be prompted to upload the JSON file and click “Import”. Below, you can find the dashboard JSON file: Check and control device data dashboard After importing, we should choose an entity alias for our device. If you did everything right, you have to see the following dashboard: |
Create new dashboardWe will create a dashboard and add the most popular widgets. See the instructions below.
Add Entity AliasAlias is a reference to a single entity or group of entities that are used in the widgets. An alias may be static or dynamic. We will use the ‘Single entity’ alias, referring to a single entity. In this case, ‘ODROID-XU4 ‘. It is possible to configure an alias that references multiple devices. For example, devices of a certain type or related to a certain asset. You may learn more about different aliases here.
To add the new widget, we need to select it from the widget library. The widgets are grouped into widget bundles. Each widget has a data source. It is how the widget “knows” what data to display. We should configure the data source to see the latest value of our “cpu_usage” data that we sent during step 2.
|
Control device using shared attributes
Also, we can change the period of the blinking using shared attribute update functionality.
This type of attribute is available only for Devices. It is similar to the Server-side attributes but has one important difference. The device firmware/application may request the value of the shared attribute(s) or subscribe to the updates of the attribute(s). The most common use case of shared attributes is to store device settings.
In order to run the code of this part of the guide, we recommend using Python 3.9 or above.
If you haven’t installed Python, please, follow next steps:
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sudo apt update
sudo apt install software-properties-common
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sudo add-apt-repository ppa:deadsnakes/ppa
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sudo apt install python3.9
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sudo apt-get install -y python3 git python3-pip
Also, we will need Adafruit-Blinka library. Please, use the following command to install it:
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pip3 install Adafruit-Blinka
For now, we are ready to write our code. In this part, we use new packages for blinking our LED in the blink
function.
Also, we use the attibute_callback
function, which will be called when we change the value of our shared attribute. And
finally, we bind our callback to subscriber in the main
function.
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import digitalio
import board
...
# default blinking period
period = 1.0
# callback function that will call when we will change value of our Shared Attribute
def attribute_callback(client, result):
print(client, result)
# make sure that you paste YOUR shared attribute name
period = result.get('blinkingPeriod', 1.0)
def main():
...
# make sure that you paste YOUR shared attribute name
sub_id_1 = client.subscribe_to_attribute("blinkingPeriod", attribute_callback)
sub_id_2 = client.subscribe_to_all_attributes(attribute_callback)
led = digitalio.DigitalInOut(board.PD14)
led.direction = digitalio.Direction.OUTPUT
...
led.value = True
time.sleep(period)
led.value = False
time.sleep(period)
Also, if you are using the imported dashboard, you can change the blinking period using the following widget, which you can see in the bottom right corner of the dashboard:
Control device using RPC
ThingsBoard allows you to send Remote Procedure Calls (RPC) from server-side applications to devices and vice versa. Basically, this feature will enable you to send commands to/from devices and receive the results of command execution.
In this guide, we will configure the RPC command to get OrangePI telemetry data immediately. If you are using the imported dashboard, you don’t need to configure anything as in your dashboard you can see the following widget:
For now, we are ready to write our code. Firstly we need to create an rpc_callback
function which will call when we
will get RPC from the server. And as in the example with shared attributes, we need to bind our rpc callback function
with the subscriber in the main
function.
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client = None
...
# callback function that will call when we will send RPC
def rpc_callback(id, request_body):
# request body contains method and other parameters
print(request_body)
method = request_body.get('method')
if method == 'getTelemetry':
attributes, telemetry = get_data()
client.send_attributes(attributes)
client.send_telemetry(telemetry)
else:
print('Unknown method: ' + method)
...
def main():
...
# now rpc_request_response will process rpc requests from server
client.set_server_side_rpc_request_handler(rpc_callback)
...
Finally, let’s try to push our button and force getting OrangePI data:
Also, if you did everything right, you should see the following console output:
{'method': 'getTelemetry', 'params': {}}
Conclusion
With the knowledge outlined in this guide, you can easily connect your ODROID-XU4 and send data to ThingsBoard.
Explore the platform documentation to learn more about key concepts and features. For example, configure alarm rules or dashboards.