The AWS IoT Device SDK for Python allows developers to write Python script to use their devices to access the AWS IoT platform through MQTT or MQTT over the WebSocket protocol. By connecting their devices to AWS IoT, users can securely work with the message broker, rules, and the device shadow (sometimes referred to as a thing shadow) provided by AWS IoT and with other AWS services like AWS Lambda, Amazon Kinesis, Amazon S3, and more.
This document provides instructions for installing and configuring the AWS IoT Device SDK for Python. It includes examples demonstrating the use of the SDK APIs.
The SDK is built on top of a modified Paho MQTT Python client library. Developers can choose from two types of connections to connect to AWS IoT:
- MQTT (over TLS 1.2) with X.509 certificate-based mutual authentication.
- MQTT over the WebSocket protocol with AWS Signature Version 4 authentication.
- MQTT (over TLS 1.2) with X.509 certificate-based mutual authentication with TLS ALPN extension.
For MQTT over TLS (port 8883 and port 443), a valid certificate and a private key are required for authentication. For MQTT over the WebSocket protocol (port 443), a valid AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) access key ID and secret access key pair are required for authentication.
A device shadow, or thing shadow, is a JSON document that is used to store and retrieve current state information for a thing (device, app, and so on). A shadow can be created and maintained for each thing or device so that its state can be get and set regardless of whether the thing or device is connected to the Internet. The SDK implements the protocol for applications to retrieve, update, and delete shadow documents. The SDK allows operations on shadow documents of single or multiple shadow instances in one MQTT connection. The SDK also allows the use of the same connection for shadow operations and non-shadow, simple MQTT operations.
Python 2.7+ or Python 3.3+ for X.509 certificate-based mutual authentication via port 8883 and MQTT over WebSocket protocol with AWS Signature Version 4 authentication
Python 2.7.10+ or Python 3.5+ for X.509 certificate-based mutual authentication via port 443
OpenSSL version 1.0.1+ (TLS version 1.2) compiled with the Python executable for X.509 certificate-based mutual authentication
To check your version of OpenSSL, use the following command in a Python interpreter:
>>> import ssl >>> ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION
pip install AWSIoTPythonSDK
git clone https://github.com/aws/aws-iot-device-sdk-python.git
cd aws-iot-device-sdk-python
python setup.py install
The SDK zip file is available here. Unzip the package and install the SDK like this:
python setup.py install
Beginning with Release v1.3.0 of the SDK, AWS collects usage metrics indicating which language and version of the SDK is being used. This feature is enabled by default and allows us to prioritize our resources towards addressing issues faster in SDKs that see the most and is an important data point. However, we do understand that not all customers would want to report this data. In that case, the sending of usage metrics can be easily disabled by the user using the corresponding API:
# AWS IoT MQTT Client
AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.AWSIoTMQTTClient.enableMetricsCollection()
AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.AWSIoTMQTTClient.disableMetricsCollection()
# AWS IoT MQTT Shadow Client
AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.AWSIoTMQTTShadowClient.enableMetricsCollection()
AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.AWSIoTMQTTShadowClient.disableMetricsCollection()
The SDK supports two types of credentials that correspond to the two connection types:
X.509 certificate
For the certificate-based mutual authentication connection type. Download the AWS IoT root CA. Use the AWS IoT console to create and download the certificate and private key. You must specify the location of these files when you initialize the client.
IAM credentials
For the Websocket with Signature Version 4 authentication type. You will need IAM credentials: an access key ID, a secret access key, and an optional session token. You must also download the AWS IoT root CA. You can specify the IAM credentials by:
Passing method parameters
The SDK will first call the following method to check if there is any input for a custom IAM credentials configuration:
# AWS IoT MQTT Client AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.AWSIoTMQTTClient.configureIAMCredentials(obtainedAccessKeyID, obtainedSecretAccessKey, obtainedSessionToken) # AWS IoT MQTT Shadow Client AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.AWSIoTMQTTShadowClient.configureIAMCredentials(obtainedAccessKeyID, obtainedSecretAccessKey, obtainedSessionToken)
Note: We do not recommend hard-coding credentials in a custom script. You can use Amazon Cognito Identity or another credential provider.
Exporting environment variables
If there is no custom configuration through method calls, the SDK will then check these environment variables for credentials:
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
The access key for your AWS account.
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
The secret key for your AWS account.
AWS_SESSION_TOKEN
The session key for your AWS account. This is required only when you are using temporary credentials. For more information, see here.
You can set your IAM credentials as environment variables by using the preconfigured names. For Unix systems, you can do the following:
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=<your aws access key id string> export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=<your aws secret access key string> export AWS_SESSION_TOKEN=<your aws session token string>
For Windows, open
Control Panel
and chooseSystem
. InAdvanced system settings
chooseEnvironment Variables
and then configure the required environment variables.Configuring shared credentials file
If there are no such environment variables specified, the SDK will check the default section for a shared credentials file (in Unix,
~/.aws/credentials
and in Windows,%UserProfile%\.aws\credentials
) as follows:[default] aws_access_key_id=foo aws_secret_access_key=bar aws_session_token=baz
You can use the AWS CLI to configure the shared credentials file <http://aws.amazon.com/cli/>`__:
aws configure
This is the client class used for plain MQTT communication with AWS IoT. You can initialize and configure the client like this:
# Import SDK packages
from AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib import AWSIoTMQTTClient
# For certificate based connection
myMQTTClient = AWSIoTMQTTClient("myClientID")
# For Websocket connection
# myMQTTClient = AWSIoTMQTTClient("myClientID", useWebsocket=True)
# Configurations
# For TLS mutual authentication
myMQTTClient.configureEndpoint("YOUR.ENDPOINT", 8883)
# For Websocket
# myMQTTClient.configureEndpoint("YOUR.ENDPOINT", 443)
# For TLS mutual authentication with TLS ALPN extension
# myMQTTClient.configureEndpoint("YOUR.ENDPOINT", 443)
myMQTTClient.configureCredentials("YOUR/ROOT/CA/PATH", "PRIVATE/KEY/PATH", "CERTIFICATE/PATH")
# For Websocket, we only need to configure the root CA
# myMQTTClient.configureCredentials("YOUR/ROOT/CA/PATH")
myMQTTClient.configureOfflinePublishQueueing(-1) # Infinite offline Publish queueing
myMQTTClient.configureDrainingFrequency(2) # Draining: 2 Hz
myMQTTClient.configureConnectDisconnectTimeout(10) # 10 sec
myMQTTClient.configureMQTTOperationTimeout(5) # 5 sec
...
For basic MQTT operations, your script will look like this:
...
myMQTTClient.connect()
myMQTTClient.publish("myTopic", "myPayload", 0)
myMQTTClient.subscribe("myTopic", 1, customCallback)
myMQTTClient.unsubscribe("myTopic")
myMQTTClient.disconnect()
...
This is the client class used for device shadow operations with AWS IoT. You can initialize and configure the client like this:
from AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib import AWSIoTMQTTShadowClient
# For certificate based connection
myShadowClient = AWSIoTMQTTShadowClient("myClientID")
# For Websocket connection
# myMQTTClient = AWSIoTMQTTClient("myClientID", useWebsocket=True)
# Configurations
# For TLS mutual authentication
myShadowClient.configureEndpoint("YOUR.ENDPOINT", 8883)
# For Websocket
# myShadowClient.configureEndpoint("YOUR.ENDPOINT", 443)
# For TLS mutual authentication with TLS ALPN extension
# myShadowClient.configureEndpoint("YOUR.ENDPOINT", 443)
myShadowClient.configureCredentials("YOUR/ROOT/CA/PATH", "PRIVATE/KEY/PATH", "CERTIFICATE/PATH")
# For Websocket, we only need to configure the root CA
# myShadowClient.configureCredentials("YOUR/ROOT/CA/PATH")
myShadowClient.configureConnectDisconnectTimeout(10) # 10 sec
myShadowClient.configureMQTTOperationTimeout(5) # 5 sec
...
For shadow operations, your script will look like this:
...
myShadowClient.connect()
# Create a device shadow instance using persistent subscription
myDeviceShadow = myShadowClient.createShadowHandlerWithName("Bot", True)
# Shadow operations
myDeviceShadow.shadowGet(customCallback, 5)
myDeviceShadow.shadowUpdate(myJSONPayload, customCallback, 5)
myDeviceShadow.shadowDelete(customCallback, 5)
myDeviceShadow.shadowRegisterDeltaCallback(customCallback)
myDeviceShadow.shadowUnregisterDeltaCallback()
...
You can also retrieve the MQTTClient(MQTT connection) to perform plain MQTT operations along with shadow operations:
myMQTTClient = myShadowClient.getMQTTConnection()
myMQTTClient.publish("plainMQTTTopic", "Payload", 1)
This is the client class used for jobs operations with AWS IoT. See docs here: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/iot/latest/developerguide/iot-jobs.html You can initialize and configure the client like this:
from AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib import AWSIoTMQTTThingJobsClient
# For certificate based connection
myJobsClient = AWSIoTMQTTThingJobsClient("myClientID", "myThingName")
# For Websocket connection
# myJobsClient = AWSIoTMQTTThingJobsClient("myClientID", "myThingName", useWebsocket=True)
# Configurations
# For TLS mutual authentication
myJobsClient.configureEndpoint("YOUR.ENDPOINT", 8883)
# For Websocket
# myJobsClient.configureEndpoint("YOUR.ENDPOINT", 443)
myJobsClient.configureCredentials("YOUR/ROOT/CA/PATH", "PRIVATE/KEY/PATH", "CERTIFICATE/PATH")
# For Websocket, we only need to configure the root CA
# myJobsClient.configureCredentials("YOUR/ROOT/CA/PATH")
myJobsClient.configureConnectDisconnectTimeout(10) # 10 sec
myJobsClient.configureMQTTOperationTimeout(5) # 5 sec
...
For job operations, your script will look like this:
...
myJobsClient.connect()
# Create a subsciption for $notify-next topic
myJobsClient.createJobSubscription(notifyNextCallback, jobExecutionTopicType.JOB_NOTIFY_NEXT_TOPIC)
# Create a subscription for update-job-execution accepted response topic
myJobsClient.createJobSubscription(updateSuccessfulCallback, jobExecutionTopicType.JOB_UPDATE_TOPIC, jobExecutionTopicReplyType.JOB_ACCEPTED_REPLY_TYPE, '+')
# Send a message to start the next pending job (if any)
myJobsClient.sendJobsStartNext(statusDetailsDict)
# Send a message to update a successfully completed job
myJobsClient.sendJobsUpdate(jobId, jobExecutionStatus.JOB_EXECUTION_SUCCEEDED, statusDetailsDict)
...
You can also retrieve the MQTTClient(MQTT connection) to perform plain MQTT operations along with shadow operations:
myMQTTClient = myJobsClient.getMQTTConnection()
myMQTTClient.publish("plainMQTTTopic", "Payload", 1)
This is the client class for device discovery process with AWS IoT Greengrass. You can initialize and configure the client like this:
from AWSIoTPythonSDK.core.greengrass.discovery.providers import DiscoveryInfoProvider
discoveryInfoProvider = DiscoveryInfoProvider()
discoveryInfoProvider.configureEndpoint("YOUR.IOT.ENDPOINT")
discoveryInfoProvider.configureCredentials("YOUR/ROOT/CA/PATH", "CERTIFICATE/PATH", "PRIVATE/KEY/PATH")
discoveryInfoProvider.configureTimeout(10) # 10 sec
To perform the discovery process for a Greengrass Aware Device (GGAD) that belongs to a deployed group, your script should look like this:
discoveryInfo = discoveryInfoProvider.discover("myGGADThingName")
# I know nothing about the group/core I want to connect to. I want to iterate through all cores and find out.
coreList = discoveryInfo.getAllCores()
groupIdCAList = discoveryInfo.getAllCas() # list([(groupId, ca), ...])
# I know nothing about the group/core I want to connect to. I want to iterate through all groups and find out.
groupList = discoveryInfo.getAllGroups()
# I know exactly which group, which core and which connectivity info I need to connect.
connectivityInfo = discoveryInfo.toObjectAtGroupLevel()["YOUR_GROUP_ID"]
.getCoreConnectivityInfo("YOUR_CORE_THING_ARN")
.getConnectivityInfo("YOUR_CONNECTIVITY_ID")
# Connecting logic follows...
...
For more information about discovery information access at group/core/connectivity info set level, please refer to the
API documentation for AWSIoTPythonSDK.core.greengrass.discovery.models
,
Greengrass Discovery documentation
or Greengrass overall documentation.
Beginning with Release v1.2.0, SDK provides asynchronous APIs and enforces synchronous API behaviors for MQTT operations, which includes: - connect/connectAsync - disconnect/disconnectAsync - publish/publishAsync - subscribe/subscribeAsync - unsubscribe/unsubscribeAsync
- Asynchronous APIs
Asynchronous APIs translate the invocation into MQTT packet and forward it to the underneath connection to be sent out. They return immediately once packets are out for delivery, regardless of whether the corresponding ACKs, if any, have been received. Users can specify their own callbacks for ACK/message (server side PUBLISH) processing for each individual request. These callbacks will be sequentially dispatched and invoked upon the arrival of ACK/message (server side PUBLISH) packets.
- Synchronous APIs
Synchronous API behaviors are enforced by registering blocking ACK callbacks on top of the asynchronous APIs. Synchronous APIs wait on their corresponding ACK packets, if there is any, before the invocation returns. For example, a synchronous QoS1 publish call will wait until it gets its PUBACK back. A synchronous subscribe call will wait until it gets its SUBACK back. Users can configure operation time out for synchronous APIs to stop the waiting.
Since callbacks are sequentially dispatched and invoked, calling synchronous APIs within callbacks will deadlock the
user application. If users are inclined to utilize the asynchronous mode and perform MQTT operations
within callbacks, asynchronous APIs should be used. For more details, please check out the provided samples at
samples/basicPubSub/basicPubSub_APICallInCallback.py
When a non-client-side disconnect occurs, the SDK will reconnect automatically. The following APIs are provided for configuration:
# AWS IoT MQTT Client
AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.AWSIoTMQTTClient.configureAutoReconnectBackoffTime(baseReconnectQuietTimeSecond, maxReconnectQuietTimeSecond, stableConnectionTimeSecond)
# AWS IoT MQTT Shadow Client
AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.AWSIoTMQTTShadowClient.configureAutoReconnectBackoffTime(baseReconnectQuietTimeSecond, maxReconnectQuietTimeSecond, stableConnectionTimeSecond)
The auto-reconnect occurs with a progressive backoff, which follows this mechanism for reconnect backoff time calculation:
tcurrent = min(2n tbase, tmax)
where tcurrent is the current reconnect backoff time, tbase is the base reconnect backoff time, tmax is the maximum reconnect backoff time.
The reconnect backoff time will be doubled on disconnect and reconnect
attempt until it reaches the preconfigured maximum reconnect backoff
time. After the connection is stable for over the
stableConnectionTime
, the reconnect backoff time will be reset to
the baseReconnectQuietTime
.
If no configureAutoReconnectBackoffTime
is called, the following
default configuration for backoff timing will be performed on initialization:
baseReconnectQuietTimeSecond = 1
maxReconnectQuietTimeSecond = 32
stableConnectionTimeSecond = 20
If the client is temporarily offline and disconnected due to network failure, publish/subscribe/unsubscribe requests will be added to an internal queue until the number of queued-up requests reaches the size limit of the queue. This functionality is for plain MQTT operations. Shadow client contains time-sensitive data and is therefore not supported.
The following API is provided for configuration:
AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.AWSIoTMQTTClient.configureOfflinePublishQueueing(queueSize, dropBehavior)
After the queue is full, offline publish/subscribe/unsubscribe requests will be discarded or replaced according to the configuration of the drop behavior:
# Drop the oldest request in the queue
AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.DROP_OLDEST = 0
# Drop the newest request in the queue
AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.DROP_NEWEST = 1
Let's say we configure the size of offlinePublishQueue to 5 and we have 7 incoming offline publish requests.
In a DROP_OLDEST
configuration:
myClient.configureOfflinePublishQueueing(5, AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.DROP_OLDEST);
The internal queue should be like this when the queue is just full:
HEAD ['pub_req1', 'pub_req2', 'pub_req3', 'pub_req4', 'pub_req5']
When the 6th and the 7th publish requests are made offline, the internal queue will be like this:
HEAD ['pub_req3', 'pub_req4', 'pub_req5', 'pub_req6', 'pub_req7']
Because the queue is already full, the oldest requests pub_req1
and
pub_req2
are discarded.
In a DROP_NEWEST
configuration:
myClient.configureOfflinePublishQueueing(5, AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.DROP_NEWEST);
The internal queue should be like this when the queue is just full:
HEAD ['pub_req1', 'pub_req2', 'pub_req3', 'pub_req4', 'pub_req5']
When the 6th and the 7th publish requests are made offline, the internal queue will be like this:
HEAD ['pub_req1', 'pub_req2', 'pub_req3', 'pub_req4', 'pub_req5']
Because the queue is already full, the newest requests pub_req6
and
pub_req7
are discarded.
When the client is back online, connected, and resubscribed to all topics it has previously subscribed to, the draining starts. All requests in the offline request queue will be resent at the configured draining rate:
AWSIoTPythonSDK.MQTTLib.AWSIoTMQTTClient.configureDrainingFrequency(frequencyInHz)
If no configOfflinePublishQueue
or configureDrainingFrequency
is
called, the following default configuration for offline request queueing
and draining will be performed on the initialization:
offlinePublishQueueSize = 20
dropBehavior = DROP_NEWEST
drainingFrequency = 2Hz
Before the draining process is complete, any new publish/subscribe/unsubscribe request within this time period will be added to the queue. Therefore, the draining rate should be higher than the normal request rate to avoid an endless draining process after reconnect.
The disconnect event is detected based on PINGRESP MQTT packet loss. Offline request queueing will not be triggered until the disconnect event is detected. Configuring a shorter keep-alive interval allows the client to detect disconnects more quickly. Any QoS0 publish, subscribe and unsubscribe requests issued after the network failure and before the detection of the PINGRESP loss will be lost.
Device shadow operations are built on top of the publish/subscribe model for the MQTT protocol, which provides an asynchronous request/response workflow. Shadow operations (Get, Update, Delete) are sent as requests to AWS IoT. The registered callback will be executed after a response is returned. In order to receive responses, the client must subscribe to the corresponding shadow response topics. After the responses are received, the client might want to unsubscribe from these response topics to avoid getting unrelated responses for charges for other requests not issued by this client.
The SDK provides a persistent/non-persistent subscription selection on the initialization of a device shadow. Developers can choose the type of subscription workflow they want to follow.
For a non-persistent subscription, you will need to create a device shadow like this:
nonPersistentSubShadow = myShadowClient.createShadowHandlerWithName("NonPersistentSubShadow", False)
In this case, the request to subscribe to accepted/rejected topics will be sent on each shadow operation. After a response is returned, accepted/rejected topics will be unsubscribed to avoid getting unrelated responses.
For a persistent subscription, you will need to create a device shadow like this:
persistentSubShadow = myShadowClient.createShadowHandlerWithName("PersistentSubShadow", True)
In this case, the request to subscribe to the corresponding accepted/rejected topics will be sent on the first shadow operation. For example, on the first call of shadowGet API, the following topics will be subscribed to on the first Get request:
$aws/things/PersistentSubShadow/shadow/get/accepted
$aws/things/PersistentSubShadow/shadow/get/rejected
Because it is a persistent subscription, no unsubscribe requests will be sent when a response is returned. The SDK client is always listening on accepted/rejected topics.
In all SDK examples, PersistentSubscription is used in consideration of its better performance.
This example demonstrates a simple MQTT publish/subscribe using AWS IoT. It first subscribes to a topic and registers a callback to print new messages and then publishes to the same topic in a loop. New messages are printed upon receipt, indicating the callback function has been called.
Run the example like this:
# Certificate based mutual authentication
python basicPubSub.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath>
# MQTT over WebSocket
python basicPubSub.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -w
# Customize client id and topic
python basicPubSub.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -id <clientId> -t <topic>
# Customize the message
python basicPubSub.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -id <clientId> -t <topic> -M <message>
# Customize the port number
python basicPubSub.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -p <portNumber>
# change the run mode to subscribe or publish only (see python basicPubSub.py -h for the available options)
python basicPubSub.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -m <mode>
The example is available in samples/basicPubSub/
.
This example demonstrates a simple MQTT publish/subscribe using an Amazon Cognito Identity session token. It uses the AWS IoT Device SDK for Python and the AWS SDK for Python (boto3). It first makes a request to Amazon Cognito to retrieve the access ID, the access key, and the session token for temporary authentication. It then uses these credentials to connect to AWS IoT and communicate data/messages using MQTT over Websocket, just like the BasicPubSub example.
To run the example, you will need your Amazon Cognito identity pool ID and allow unauthenticated identities to connect. Make sure that the policy attached to the unauthenticated role has permissions to access the required AWS IoT APIs. For more information about Amazon Cognito, see here.
Run the example like this:
python basicPubSub_CognitoSTS.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -C <CognitoIdentityPoolID>
# Customize client id and topic
python basicPubsub_CognitoSTS.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -C <CognitoIdentityPoolID> -id <clientId> -t <topic>
The example is available in samples/basicPubSub/
.
This example demonstrates a simple MQTT publish/subscribe with asynchronous APIs using AWS IoT. It first registers general notification callbacks for CONNACK reception, disconnect reception and message arrival. It then registers ACK callbacks for subscribe and publish requests to print out received ack packet ids. It subscribes to a topic with no specific callback and then publishes to the same topic in a loop. New messages are printed upon reception by the general message arrival callback, indicating the callback function has been called. New ack packet ids are printed upon reception of PUBACK and SUBACK through ACK callbacks registered with asynchronous API calls, indicating that the the client received ACKs for the corresponding asynchronous API calls.
Run the example like this:
# Certificate based mutual authentication
python basicPubSubAsync.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath>
# MQTT over WebSocket
python basicPubSubAsync.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -w
# Customize client id and topic
python basicPubSubAsync.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -id <clientId> -t <topic>
# Customize the port number
python basicPubSubAsync.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -p <portNumber>
The example is available in samples/basicPubSub/
.
This example demonstrates the usage of asynchronous APIs within callbacks. It first connects to AWS IoT and subscribes to 2 topics with the corresponding message callbacks registered. One message callback contains client asynchronous API invocation that republishes the received message from <topic> to <topic>/republish. The other message callback simply prints out the received message. It then publishes messages to <topic> in an infinite loop. For every message received from <topic>, it will be republished to <topic>/republish and be printed out as configured in the simple print-out message callback. New ack packet ids are printed upon reception of PUBACK and SUBACK through ACK callbacks registered with asynchronous API calls, indicating that the the client received ACKs for the corresponding asynchronous API calls.
Run the example like this:
# Certificate based mutual authentication
python basicPubSub_APICallInCallback.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath>
# MQTT over WebSocket
python basicPubSub_APICallInCallback.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -w
# Customize client id and topic
python basicPubSub_APICallInCallback.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -id <clientId> -t <topic>
# Customize the port number
python basicPubSub_APICallInCallback.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -p <portNumber>
The example is available in samples/basicPubSub/
.
This example demonstrates the use of basic shadow operations
(update/delta). It has two scripts, basicShadowUpdater.py
and
basicShadowDeltaListener.py
. The example shows how an shadow update
request triggers delta events.
basicShadowUpdater.py
performs a shadow update in a loop to
continuously modify the desired state of the shadow by changing the
value of the integer attribute.
basicShadowDeltaListener.py
subscribes to the delta topic
of the same shadow and receives delta messages when there is a
difference between the desired and reported states.
Because only the desired state is being updated by basicShadowUpdater, a series of delta messages that correspond to the shadow update requests should be received in basicShadowDeltaListener.
Run the example like this:
First, start the basicShadowDeltaListener:
# Certificate-based mutual authentication
python basicShadowDeltaListener.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath>
# MQTT over WebSocket
python basicShadowDeltaListener.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -w
# Customize the port number
python basicShadowDeltaListener.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -p <portNumber>
Then, start the basicShadowUpdater:
# Certificate-based mutual authentication
python basicShadowUpdater.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath>
# MQTT over WebSocket
python basicShadowUpdater.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -w
# Customize the port number
python basicShadowUpdater.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -p <portNumber>
After the basicShadowUpdater starts sending shadow update requests, you should be able to see corresponding delta messages in the basicShadowDeltaListener output.
The example is available in samples/basicShadow/
.
This example demonstrates how a device communicates with AWS IoT, syncing data into the device shadow in the cloud and receiving commands from another app. Whenever there is a new command from the app side to change the desired state of the device, the device receives this request and applies the change by publishing it as the reported state. By registering a delta callback function, users will be able to see this incoming message and notice the syncing of the state.
Run the example like this:
# Certificate based mutual authentication
python ThingShadowEcho.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath>
# MQTT over WebSocket
python ThingShadowEcho.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -w
# Customize client Id and thing name
python ThingShadowEcho.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -id <clientId> -n <thingName>
# Customize the port number
python ThingShadowEcho.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -p <portNumber>
Now use the AWS IoT console or other MQTT client to update the shadow desired state only. You should be able to see the reported state is updated to match the changes you just made in desired state.
The example is available in samples/ThingShadowEcho/
.
This example demonstrates how a device communicates with AWS IoT while also taking advantage of AWS IoT Jobs functionality. It shows how to subscribe to Jobs topics in order to recieve Job documents on your device. It also shows how to process those Jobs so that you can see in the AWS IoT console which of your devices have received and processed which Jobs. See the AWS IoT Device Management documentation here for more information on creating and deploying Jobs to your fleet of devices to facilitate management tasks such deploying software updates and running diagnostics.
First use the AWS IoT console to create and deploy Jobs to your fleet of devices.
Then run the example like this:
# Certificate based mutual authentication
python jobsSample.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -n <thingName>
# MQTT over WebSocket
python jobsSample.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -w -n <thingName>
# Customize client Id and thing name
python jobsSample.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -id <clientId> -n <thingName>
# Customize the port number
python jobsSample.py -e <endpoint> -r <rootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -n <thingName> -p <portNumber>
The example is available in samples/jobs/
.
This example demonstrates how to perform a discovery process from a Greengrass Aware Device (GGAD) to obtain the required connectivity/identity information to connect to the Greengrass Core (GGC) deployed within the same group. It uses the discovery information provider to invoke discover call for a certain GGAD with its thing name. After it gets back a success response, it picks up the first GGC and the first set of identity information (CA) for the first group, persists it locally and iterates through all connectivity info sets for this GGC to establish a MQTT connection to the designated GGC. It then publishes messages to the topic, which, on the GGC side, is configured to route the messages back to the same GGAD. Therefore, it receives the published messages and invokes the corresponding message callbacks.
Note that in order to get the sample up and running correctly, you need:
- Have a successfully deployed Greengrass group.
- Use the certificate and private key that have been deployed with the group for the GGAD to perform discovery process.
- The subscription records for that deployed group should contain a route that routes messages from the targeted GGAD to itself via a dedicated MQTT topic.
- The deployed GGAD thing name, the deployed GGAD certificate/private key and the dedicated MQTT topic should be used as the inputs for this sample.
Run the sample like this:
python basicDiscovery.py -e <endpoint> -r <IoTRootCAFilePath> -c <certFilePath> -k <privateKeyFilePath> -n <GGADThingName> -t <RoutingTopic>
If the group, GGC, GGAD and group subscription/routes are set up correctly, you should be able to see the sample running on your GGAD, receiving messages that get published to GGC by itself.
You can find the API documentation for the SDK here.
This SDK is distributed under the Apache License, Version 2.0, see LICENSE.txt and NOTICE.txt for more information.
If you have technical questions about the AWS IoT Device SDK, use the AWS IoT Forum. For any other questions about AWS IoT, contact AWS Support.