Changes for page ThingsBoard

Last modified by Dilisi S on 2025/04/23 19:23

From version 176.1
edited by Dilisi S
on 2025/03/26 20:27
Change comment: Mar 26 edits - part 1
To version 153.1
edited by Dilisi S
on 2025/03/17 00:09
Change comment: Uploaded new attachment "emqx.png", version {1}

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... ... @@ -22,10 +22,7 @@
22 22  To complete this tutorial, you need to have the following:
23 23  
24 24  * ThingsBoard cloud account
25 -* MQTT Broker (public or private) such as,
26 -** **[[HiveMQ Cloud>>https://www.hivemq.com]] - You can create a free account to try it or subscribe for a paid account. - We use HiveMQ Cloud as the MQTT broker to build example in this tutorial.**
27 -** [[emqx>>https://www.emqx.com/zh/mqtt/public-mqtt5-broker]] - The public MQTT server is only used for MOTT learning and testing, and should not be used in the production environment.
28 -** [[lns1.thingseye.io>>http://lns1.thingseye.io/]] - This is Dragino's MQTT broker, which requires a CA certificate to use.
25 +* HiveMQ Cloud account
29 29  
30 30  == 2.1 ThingsBoard Cloud ==
31 31  
... ... @@ -69,9 +69,7 @@
69 69  
70 70  == 2.2 HiveMQ Cloud ==
71 71  
72 -=== 2.2.1 HiveMQ Cloud ===
73 73  
74 -
75 75  Go to [[https:~~/~~/www.hivemq.com>>https://www.hivemq.com]]
76 76  
77 77  Click on the **Start Free** button.
... ... @@ -146,195 +146,126 @@
146 146  You will need these MQTT connection parameters when configuring the MQTT integration in the '**Add Integration**' section.
147 147  
148 148  
149 -=== 2.2.2 emqx ===
144 += 3. Data Converters =
150 150  
151 151  
152 -The [[emqx>>https://www.emqx.com/zh/mqtt/public-mqtt5-broker]] public MQTT server is only used for MOTT learning and testing, and should not be used in the production environment.
147 +In **ThingsBoard**, **Data Converters** are components used to transform incoming or outgoing data between different formats, typically to convert raw telemetry data from devices into a structured format that ThingsBoard can understand, or vice versa.
153 153  
154 154  
155 -[[image:emqx.png||height="420" width="500"]]
150 +== 3.1 Uplink ==
156 156  
157 157  
158 -=== 2.2.3 Ins1.thingseye.io ===
153 +In the left navigation, click **Integrations center**, and then click **Data converters**.
159 159  
160 -[[lns1.thingseye.io>>http://lns1.thingseye.io/]] is the Dragino's MQTT broker, which requires a CA certificate file, Certificate file, and the Private key file to use.
161 161  
162 -If customers need to use this MQTT connection with ThingsBoard, they need to contact the TE team to obtain three license files.
163 163  
164 -[[image:ins1.png||height="310" width="500"]]
157 +[[image:data-converters-list-empty.png]]
165 165  
166 166  
167 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %)
168 -= 3. Creating Devices =
160 +On the **Data converters** page, click on the ‘**+**’ button, and then click on the **Create new converter** from the dropdown menu.
169 169  
170 170  
171 -First, you need to create devices in ThingsBoard to represent your physical devices. For example, you can name it **Device A**, and the second device could be **Device B** or any name you prefer. The device name should be unique within the **Devices** space.
172 172  
164 +[[image:create-new-converter-menu.png||height="259" width="500"]]
173 173  
174 -In the left navigation, click Entities -> Devices.
175 175  
176 -Click the **Add Device** button (the button with the **+** sign), and from the dropdown menu, click **Add new device**.
167 +The **Add data converter** window will appear. Name it ‘**MQTT Uplink Converter NB/CB**’ and select the Type as **Uplink**.
177 177  
178 -In the **Add new device** dialog box, enter the device name in the **Name** text box. For example, we will use **Device A**.
169 +Click on the **TBEL** button if not selected it by default. Delete the existing decoder function in the code editor. Now copy and paste the following decoder function written in **TBEL (ThingsBoard Expression Language)** in to the **code editor**. This decoder function is compatible for both NB and CB series devices.
179 179  
180 -Click the **Add** button.
171 +{{code language="JavaScript"}}
172 +/** Decoder **/
181 181  
182 -Skip the **connectivity testing** by clicking the **Close** button.
174 +// decode payload to string
175 +var payloadStr = decodeToString(payload);
176 +var data = JSON.parse(payloadStr);
183 183  
184 -The device is created and listed on the **Devices** page. Note that its initial state is **Inactive** because it has not received any data yet.
178 +var deviceName = metadata.topic.split("/")[3];
179 +// decode payload to JSON
180 +var deviceType = 'sensor';
185 185  
182 +// Result object with device attributes/telemetry data
183 +var result = {
184 + deviceName: deviceName,
185 + deviceType: deviceType,
186 + attributes: {
187 + integrationName: metadata['integrationName'],
188 + },
189 + telemetry: {
190 + temperature: data.temperature,
191 + humidity: data.humidity,
192 + }
193 +};
186 186  
187 -= 4. Data Converters =
195 +/** Helper functions 'decodeToString' and 'decodeToJson' are already built-in **/
188 188  
197 +return result;
198 +{{/code}}
189 189  
190 -In **ThingsBoard**, **Data Converters** are components used to transform incoming or outgoing data between different formats, typically to convert raw telemetry data from devices into a structured format that ThingsBoard can understand, or vice versa.
191 191  
201 +Click on the **Add** button.
192 192  
193 -== 4.1 Uplink ==
194 194  
195 195  
196 -In the left navigation, click **Integrations center**, and then click **Data converters**.
205 +[[image:add-uplink-data-converter.png||height="529" width="500"]]
197 197  
198 198  
199 -[[image:data-converters-list-empty.png]]
208 +You should see that the newly added **MQTT Uplink converter **NB/CB is listed on the **Data Converters** page.
200 200  
210 +[[image:data-converter-list-showing-uplink-dc.png]]
201 201  
202 -On the **Data converters** page, click on the ‘**+**’ button, and then click on the **Create new converter** from the dropdown menu.
203 203  
204 204  
214 +== 3.2 Downlink ==
205 205  
206 -[[image:create-new-converter-menu.png||height="259" width="500"]]
207 207  
217 +On the **Data converters** page, click on the ‘**+**’ button, and then click on the **Create new converter** from the dropdown menu.
208 208  
209 -The **Add data converter** window will appear. Name it ‘**MQTT Uplink Converter NB/CB**’ and select the Type as **Uplink**.
210 210  
211 -Click on the **JavaScript** button.
220 +[[image:create-new-converter-menu.png||width="500"]]
212 212  
213 -Delete the default decoder function in the code editor. Now copy and paste the following decoder function written in **JavaScript** in to the **code editor**. This decoder function is compatible for both NB and CB series devices.
214 214  
215 -{{info}}
216 -Please note that the value assigned to the IMEI field in the payload will be used by ThingsBoard to create a device on the platform with the same name.
217 -{{/info}}
218 218  
224 +The **Add data converter** window will appear. Name it ‘**MQTT Downlink Converter NB/CB**’ and select the Type as **Downlink**.
225 +
226 +Click on the **TBEL** button if not selected it by default. Now copy and paste the following encoder function written in **TBEL (ThingsBoard Expression Language)** in to the **code editor**. This encoder function is compatible for both NB and CB series devices.
227 +
228 +
219 219  {{code language="JavaScript"}}
220 -//Version: 0.1
221 -// decode payload to string
222 -var payloadStr = decodeToString(payload);
230 +// Encode downlink data from incoming Rule Engine message
223 223  
224 -// decode payload to JSON
225 -var objdata = {};
226 -var obj1 = {};
227 -var data = decodeToJson(payload);
228 -var deviceName = data.IMEI;
229 -delete data.IMEI;
230 -var modelname = "Dragino " + data.Model;
231 -//var mod = data.mod
232 -delete data.Model;
233 -//delete data.mod
234 -var timestamp = new Date().getTime();
232 +// msg - JSON message payload downlink message json
233 +// msgType - type of message, for ex. 'ATTRIBUTES_UPDATED', 'POST_TELEMETRY_REQUEST', etc.
234 +// metadata - list of key-value pairs with additional data about the message
235 +// integrationMetadata - list of key-value pairs with additional data defined in Integration executing this converter
235 235  
236 -for (var key in data) {
237 -
238 - if (Number(key)) {
239 - obj1[key] = data[key];
240 - obj1[key][obj1[key].length - 1] = Number(new Date(
241 - obj1[key][obj1[key].length - 1]));
237 +/** Encoder **/
242 242  
243 - }
244 -//Alec submitted25/02/25
245 -//turn old key into new
246 - else if (key === "Reading") {
247 - objdata["reading"] = data[key];
248 - } else if (key === "work mode") {
249 - objdata["work_mode"] = data[key];
250 - } else if (key === "hum") {
251 - objdata["humidity"] = data[key];
252 - }else if (key === "hum2") {
253 - objdata["humidity2"] = data[key];
254 - } else if (key === "hum3") {
255 - objdata["humidity3"] = data[key];
256 - } else if (key === "tem") {
257 - objdata["temperature"] = data[key];
258 - } else if (key === "tem2") {
259 - objdata["temperature2"] = data[key];
260 - } else if (key === "tem3") {
261 - objdata["temperature3"] = data[key];
262 - } else if (key === "DS18B20_Temp") {
263 - objdata["temperature_pro"] = data[key];
264 - } else if (key === "ds18b20_temperature") {
265 - objdata["temperature_pro"] = data[key];
266 - } else if (key === "DS18B20_temperature_pro") {
267 - objdata["temperature_pro"] = data[key];
268 - } else if (key === "tdc send flag") {
269 - objdata["tdc_send_flag"] = data[key];
270 - } else if (key === "trigger mode") {
271 - objdata["trigger_mode"] = data[key];
272 - } else if (key === "soil dielectric constant") {
273 - objdata["soil_dielectric_constant"] = data[key];
274 - } else if (key === "door open num") {
275 - objdata["door_open_num"] = data[key];
276 - } else if (key === "door duration") {
277 - objdata["door_duration"] = data[key];
278 - } else if (key === "count time") {
279 - objdata["count_time"] = data[key];
280 - } else if (key === "last open time2") {
281 - objdata["last_open_time2"] = data[key];
282 - } else if (key === "last open time3") {
283 - objdata["last_open_time3"] = data[key];
284 - }
285 -//Alec submitted25/02/25
286 - else {
287 - objdata[key] = data[key]
288 - }
289 -}
290 -var listdata = [{
291 - "ts": timestamp,
292 - "values": objdata
293 -}]
294 -for (var key1 in obj1) {
295 - if (modelname == "Dragino RS485-NB") {
296 - listdata.push({
297 - "ts": obj1[key1][obj1[key1].length - 1],
298 - "values": {
299 - "Payload": obj1[key1][0],
300 - }
301 - })
302 - } else {
303 - listdata.push({
304 - "ts": obj1[key1][obj1[key1].length - 1],
305 - "values": {
306 - "values": obj1[key1]
307 - },
308 - })
309 - }
310 -}
311 -var result = {
239 +var data = {};
312 312  
313 - deviceName: deviceName,
314 - deviceType: modelname,
315 - attributes: {
316 - model: modelname,
317 - //customerName: "NB-CB",
318 - //groupName: "NB-CB",
319 - //integrationName: metadata['integrationName']
241 +// Process data from incoming message and metadata
320 320  
321 - },
322 - telemetry: listdata
323 -}
243 +data.tempFreq = msg.temperatureUploadFrequency;
244 +data.humFreq = msg.humidityUploadFrequency;
324 324  
325 -function decodeToString(payload) {
326 - return String.fromCharCode.apply(String, payload);
327 -}
246 +data.devSerialNumber = metadata['ss_serialNumber'];
328 328  
329 -function decodeToJson(payload) {
330 - // covert payload to string.
331 - var str = decodeToString(payload);
248 +// Result object with encoded downlink payload
249 +var result = {
332 332  
333 - // parse string to JSON
334 - var data = JSON.parse(str);
335 - return data;
336 -}
251 + // downlink data content type: JSON, TEXT or BINARY (base64 format)
252 + contentType: "JSON",
337 337  
254 + // downlink data
255 + data: JSON.stringify(data),
256 +
257 + // Optional metadata object presented in key/value format
258 + metadata: {
259 + topic: metadata['deviceType']+'/'+metadata['deviceName']+'/upload'
260 + }
261 +
262 +};
263 +
338 338  return result;
339 339  {{/code}}
340 340  
... ... @@ -342,19 +342,20 @@
342 342  Click on the **Add** button.
343 343  
344 344  
345 -[[image:mqtt-uplink.png||width="500"]]
346 346  
272 +[[image:add-downlink-data-converter.png||height="529" width="500"]]
347 347  
348 348  
349 -You should see that the newly added **MQTT Uplink converter **NB/CB is listed on the **Data Converters** page.
275 +You should see that the newly added **MQTT Downlink** Converter NB/CB is listed on the **Data Converters** page.
350 350  
351 351  
352 -[[image:data-converter-list-showing-uplink-dc.png]]
278 +[[image:data-converters-list.png]]
353 353  
354 354  
355 -= 5. Add Integration =
356 356  
282 += 4. Add Integration =
357 357  
284 +
358 358  In the left navigation, click **Integrations center**, and then click **Integrations**.
359 359  
360 360  
... ... @@ -379,6 +379,7 @@
379 379  Click **Next** button.
380 380  
381 381  
309 +
382 382  [[image:add-integration-basic-settings.png||height="511" width="500"]]
383 383  
384 384  
... ... @@ -390,34 +390,33 @@
390 390  Click **Next** button.
391 391  
392 392  
321 +
393 393  [[image:add-integration-uplink-data-converter.png||height="511" width="500"]]
394 394  
395 395  
396 396  **Downlink data converter:**
397 397  
398 -Dragino NB/CB devices don't require a downlink data converter to decode their payloads, so you can skip this step.
327 +* Click on the **Select existing** button.
328 +* **Downlink data converter**: Select **MQTT Downlink Converter NB/CB **from the dropdown list.
399 399  
400 -* Click on the **Skip **button in the Downlink data converter section.
330 +Click **Next** button.
401 401  
402 -Click **Skip** button.
403 403  
404 404  
405 -[[image:integration-dl-skip.png||height="511" width="500"]]
334 +[[image:add-integration-downlink-data-converter.png||height="511" width="500"]]
406 406  
407 407  
408 -
409 409  **Connection:**
410 410  
411 -* **Host**: Cluster URL (Eg. 011731f7xxxxxxxxxxxfbbedfc63f4.s1.eu.hivemq.cloud)
339 +* **Host**: Cluster URL (Eg. 011731f7928541588a6cdfbbedfc63f4.s1.eu.hivemq.cloud)
412 412  * **Port**: 8883
413 413  * **Credentials**: Basic
414 414  * **Enable SSL**: YES
415 415  * **Username**: Username (from your HiveMQ Cloud Cluster with your credentials)
416 416  * **Password:** Password (from your HiveMQ Cloud Cluster with your credentials)
417 -* **Topic: v1/devices/me/telemetry** (The topic can be anything; you can even use just the device name. For example, you can use your device name here, such as S31B-NB.)
345 +* **Topic:** tb/mqtt-integration-tutorial/sensors/+/telemetry (the + replaces any 'device name' and creates devices in the Entities -> Devices)
418 418  * **QoS:** 0-At most once
419 419  
420 -
421 421  [[image:add-integration-connection.png||height="511" width="500"]]
422 422  
423 423  
... ... @@ -448,35 +448,48 @@
448 448  Since we haven't received data from a device yet, the integration **Status** is shown as **Pending.**
449 449  
450 450  
378 +
451 451  [[image:new-integration-pending.png]]
452 452  
453 453  
454 -= 6. Verifying the receipt of data from virtual devices =
382 += 5. Verifying the receipt of data from virtual devices =
455 455  
456 456  
457 -== 6.1 How does it work? ==
385 +== 5.1 How does it work? ==
458 458  
459 459  
460 460  We use the Mosquitto MQTT client to simulate MQTT messages, acting as a virtual device. First, install the Mosquitto client on your computer from [[this link>>url:https://mosquitto.org/download/]]. The Mosquitto client publishes messages to the MQTT broker (HiveMQ) on a specified MQTT topic. ThingsBoard subscribes to these messages using the same topic.
461 461  
462 -The Mosquitto client publishes messages (payloads) on the topic **v1/devices/me/telemetry**. Of course, you can use any topic for testing.
390 +The Mosquitto client publishes messages on the topic v1/devices/[device_name]/telemetry. The [device_name]placeholder can be replaced with any device name, for example, 'S31B-NB'. Then, the MQTT topic would be v1/devices/S31B-NB/telemetry.
463 463  
464 -(% id="cke_bm_37386S" style="display:none" %) (%%)The MQTT payload format is as follows, which is common for all **~-~-NB** and **~-~-CB** series devices. The **IMEI** field is mandatory and is used to provision a new device with the name assigned to it in ThingsBoard.
392 +On the ThingsBoard side, we configure the MQTT topic subscription as v1/devices/+/telemetry. The + wildcard represents any device name and allows ThingsBoard to automatically create (provision) a device with that name, such as S31B-NB, for example.
465 465  
394 +
395 +**The new device is created the first time the MQTT topic is received. For subsequent MQTT topics with the same device name, no duplicate devices will be created.**
396 +
397 +
398 +For example, if you send two MQTT messages with different device names in the topic:
399 +
400 +1. v1/devices/**S31B-NB**/telemetry
401 +1. v1/devices/**LDS25-NB**/telemetry
402 +
403 +ThingsBoard will create two devices named **S31B-NB** and **LDS25-NB** in the **//Devices//** section.
404 +
405 +
406 +The MQTT payload format is as follows, which is common for all ~-~-NB and ~-~-CB series devices:
407 +
466 466  {{code language="none"}}
467 -{"IMEI": "S31B-NB", "temperature": 27, ......}
409 +{"temperature":10.4, "humidity":85}
468 468  {{/code}}
469 469  
470 -Once ThingsBoard receives this message, it automatically creates (provisions) the device mentioned in the **IMEI**, for example, S31B-NB.
471 471  
472 -
473 473  == 5.2 Sending messages ==
474 474  
475 475  
476 -On the terminal, issue the following MQTT command which simulates the device S31B-NB. The message payload contains the fields temperature and humidity, which hold the values S31B-NB and 27, respectively. This payload is also (technically) known as telemetry.
416 +On the terminal, issue the following MQTT command which simulates the device S31B-NB. The message payload contains the fields temperature and humidity, which hold the values 10.4 and 85, respectively. This payload is also (technically) known as telemetry.
477 477  
478 478  {{code language="none"}}
479 -mosquitto_pub -d -q 1 -h 011731f7928xxxxx.s1.eu.hivemq.cloud -p 8883 -t "v1/devices/me/telemetry" -u "xxxxx" -P "xxxxx" -m '{"IMEI": "S31B-NB", "temperature": 27}'
419 +mosquitto_pub -d -q 1 -h 011731f7928xxxxx.s1.eu.hivemq.cloud -p 8883 -t "tb/mqtt-integration-tutorial/sensors/S31B-NB/telemetry" -u "xxxxx" -P "xxxxx" -m '{"temperature":10.4, "humidity":85}'
480 480  {{/code}}
481 481  
482 482  If the integration was performed without errors, the status of the integration changes to 'Active' after the first telemetry transmission.
... ... @@ -488,51 +488,40 @@
488 488  Also, a new device named **S31B-NB** will appear under **//Entities -> Devices -> All//**. This means the first MQTT message triggers ThingsBoard to provision a device named **S31B-NB**.
489 489  
490 490  
491 -[[image:new-device.png]]
431 +[[image:device-provision-1.png]]
492 492  
493 493  
494 -== 6.3 Viewing messages ==
434 +Click on the device S31B-NB on the devices list to see its details.
495 495  
436 +Then go to the **Latest telemetry** tab.
496 496  
497 -Go back to the **Integrations** page.
438 +You can see the fields temperature and humidity with the values you previously sent using the MQTT message.
498 498  
499 -Click on the **MQTT integration NB/CB** in the **Integrations** page to see its details.
500 500  
501 -Click on the **Edit** button (//**pen icon**//).
441 +[[image:telemetry-1.png]]
502 502  
503 -Click on the **Disabled** button in the upper-right corner.
504 504  
505 -Turn on the **All messages (15 min)** option. This will enable displaying all messages in the **Events** tab. This setting will expire in 15 minutes, and you will need to repeat the same steps if you want to view the messages in the Events tab later.
444 +Now, change the values of the fields and send the MQTT message again. For example, set temperature to 20 and humidity to 70. Observe how the values update in //Latest Telemetry//.
506 506  
507 -Click on the **Apply** button.
508 508  
509 -Then click on the **Apply changes** (//**tick icon**//) button.
447 +[[image:telemetry-2.png]]
510 510  
511 511  
512 -[[image:Screenshot 2025-03-18 at 09.23.10.png]]
450 +Let's provision the second device named **LDS25-NB **with initial telemetry. Use the following MQTT message.
513 513  
514 514  
515 -Now go to the **Events** tab.
453 +{{code language="none"}}
454 +mosquitto_pub -d -q 1 -h 011731f7928541588a6cdfbbedfc63f4.s1.eu.hivemq.cloud -p 8883 -t "tb/mqtt-integration-tutorial/sensors/LDS25-NB/telemetry" -u "pradeeka" -P "Kalpani123@" -m '{"temperature":11, "humidity":87}'
455 +{{/code}}
516 516  
517 -Select the Event type as **Debug** from the dropdown list.
457 +Now, refresh the **Devices** page, and you will see the second device, **LDS25-NB**, which was recently provisioned.
518 518  
519 -Now you can see all the Uplink messages you are simulating through the MQTT broker. The status should be OK if there is no errors in your integration.
520 520  
460 +[[image:device-provision-2.png]]
521 521  
522 -[[image:Screenshot 2025-03-16 at 18.38.59.png]]
523 523  
463 += 6. Creating a Dashboard =
524 524  
525 -Then click on the **three dots (...)** in the **Message** column. You can see the uplink message's **payload** in the **Message** window.
526 -
527 -
528 -[[image:Screenshot 2025-03-16 at 18.39.12.png]]
529 -
530 -
531 -Now, you have successfully tested your integration with a simulated uplink payload and verified that it is received by ThingsBoard, and the device is provisioned.
532 -
533 -
534 -= 7. Creating a Dashboard =
535 -
536 536  ThingsBoard **Dashboards** provide a powerful way to visualize and monitor real-time and historical data from connected devices. They allow users to create interactive, customizable panels displaying telemetry data, device status, and other key metrics. With a variety of widgets, including charts, maps, and tables, dashboards help users gain insights, track trends, and manage IoT deployments efficiently.
537 537  
538 538  
... ... @@ -539,11 +539,6 @@
539 539  This section guides you on how to create a dashboard to display temperature and humidity data from the device on a time-series chart. You may also use other widgets in ThingsBoard to display data according to your requirements.
540 540  
541 541  
542 -First simulate a few messages using MQTT. This time, we have added the 'humidity' field to the payload. Eg:
543 -
544 -{{code language="none"}}mosquitto_pub -d -q 1 -h 011731f7928xxxxx.s1.eu.hivemq.cloud -p 8883 -t "v1/devices/me/telemetry" -u "xxxxx" -P "xxxxx" -m '{"IMEI": "S31B-NB", "temperature": 22, "humidity":80}'{{/code}}
545 -
546 -
547 547  In **ThingsBoard**, from the left navigation menu, click **Dashboards**. Then, click the **+** button and select **Create new dashboard** from the dropdown menu.
548 548  
549 549  
... ... @@ -600,11 +600,11 @@
600 600  
601 601  
602 602  {{code language="none"}}
603 -mosquitto_pub -d -q 1 -h 011731f7928xxxxx.s1.eu.hivemq.cloud -p 8883 -t "v1/devices/me/telemetry" -u "xxxxx" -P "xxxxx" -m '{"IMEI": "S31B-NB", "temperature": 22, "humidity":70}'
527 +mosquitto_pub -d -q 1 -h 011731f7928xxxxx.s1.eu.hivemq.cloud -p 8883 -t "tb/mqtt-integration-tutorial/sensors/S31B-NB/telemetry" -u "xxxxx" -P "xxxxx" -m '{"temperature":20, "humidity":70}'
604 604  
605 -mosquitto_pub -d -q 1 -h 011731f7928xxxxx.s1.eu.hivemq.cloud -p 8883 -t "v1/devices/me/telemetry" -u "xxxxx" -P "xxxxx" -m '{"IMEI": "S31B-NB", "temperature": 27, "humidity":72}'
529 +mosquitto_pub -d -q 1 -h 011731f7928xxxxx.s1.eu.hivemq.cloud -p 8883 -t "tb/mqtt-integration-tutorial/sensors/S31B-NB/telemetry" -u "xxxxx" -P "xxxxx" -m '{"temperature":22, "humidity":71}'
606 606  
607 -mosquitto_pub -d -q 1 -h 011731f7928xxxxx.s1.eu.hivemq.cloud -p 8883 -t "v1/devices/me/telemetry" -u "xxxxx" -P "xxxxx" -m '{"IMEI": "S31B-NB", "temperature": 19, "humidity":80}'
531 +mosquitto_pub -d -q 1 -h 011731f7928xxxxx.s1.eu.hivemq.cloud -p 8883 -t "tb/mqtt-integration-tutorial/sensors/S31B-NB/telemetry" -u "xxxxx" -P "xxxxx" -m '{"temperature":18, "humidity":79}'
608 608  
609 609  {{/code}}
610 610  
... ... @@ -614,10 +614,10 @@
614 614  [[image:timeseries-4.png||height="316" width="700"]]
615 615  
616 616  
617 -= 8. Configure NB-IoT Sensor =
541 += 7. Configure NB-IoT Sensor =
618 618  
619 619  
620 -Now, let's experiment with sending data to ThingsBoard using a real NB-IoT device. For example, we will use the **TS01-NB**.
544 +Now, let's experiment with sending data to ThingsBoard using a real NB-IoT device. For example, we will use the **S31B-NB**.
621 621  
622 622  First, configure the NB-IoT device with the necessary MQTT settings using AT commands. Below is a list of AT commands you can use.
623 623  
... ... @@ -625,8 +625,8 @@
625 625  **AT Commands**
626 626  
627 627  * **AT+PRO=3,3    **~/~/ Use MQTT to connect to ThingsBoard. Payload Type set to 3.
628 -* **AT+SUBTOPIC=<MQTT subscribe topic> Eg: TS01-NB**
629 -* **AT+PUBTOPIC=<MQTT publish topic> Eg: TS01-NB**
552 +* **AT+SUBTOPIC=<MQTT topic>**
553 +* **AT+PUBTOPIC=<MQTT topic>**
630 630  * **AT+CLIENT=null**
631 631  * **AT+UNAME=<MQTT Username>**
632 632  * **AT+PWD=<MQTT Password>**
... ... @@ -633,16 +633,3 @@
633 633  * **AT+SERVADDR=<Broker address, Port>**
634 634  
635 635  Test your uplink by pressing the ACT button for 1 second.
636 -
637 -
638 -
639 -The following image shows the uplink payload of a real Dragino device. The publish topic is **TS01-NB**, and the device name is **861275077962896**, which is represented by the **IMEI**.
640 -
641 -{{info}}
642 -The ThingsBoard uses the device's IMEI number included in the payload to create a device in the Devices section.
643 -{{/info}}
644 -
645 -[[image:image-4.png]]
646 -
647 -
648 -
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