100 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
100 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Set up and secure an MQTT broker on Ubuntu"
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date: 2021-01-01T18:18:10+02:00
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draft: false
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image: "uploads/raspi.png"
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categories: ['English']
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tags: ['monitoring', 'english']
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---
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I had some IoT devices that I wanted to integrate in my monitoring. For this I set up a MQTT broker as the MQTT protocol is a simple solution to send data from IoT devices to a server. This tutorial is focusing on setting up the server, but I also introduce a Python based MQTT client to test our installation.
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On your server, first install mosquitto, our MQTT server/broker.
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```bash
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sudo apt-get install mosquitto
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```
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Allow standard mqtt port in firewall (if you have ufw installed)
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```bash
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sudo ufw allow 1883
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```
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Now on the client side connect to the server and publish some fake sensor values.
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First install the mqtt client
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```bash
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sudo pip install phao-mqtt
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```
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and then use the following python code on your client side to send fake values to your server. You only need to change `mqtt.example.com` to your servers IP/domain.
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```python
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import time
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import paho.mqtt.client as mqtt
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import numpy
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import numpy as np
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def calc_temp():
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temp = np.sin(time.time()%(3600)*2*np.pi)*5+20
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return temp
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def on_connect(client, userdata, flags, rc):
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print("Connected with result code " + str(rc))
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client = mqtt.Client()
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#client.username_pw_set(username="username",password="my_super_secret_pw")
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client.on_connect = on_connect
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client.connect("mqtt.example.com", 1883, 60)
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client.loop_start()
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while True:
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time.sleep(2)
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client.publish("test/temperature", calc_temp())
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```
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You can check if the broker accepts the values by subscribing to the topic:
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```python
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#!/usr/bin/env python
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import paho.mqtt.client as mqtt
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def on_connect(client, userdata, flags, rc):
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print("Connected with result code " + str(rc))
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client.subscribe("test/#")
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def on_message(client, userdata, msg):
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print(msg.topic + " " + str(msg.payload))
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client = mqtt.Client()
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#client.username_pw_set(username="username",password="my_super_secret_pw")
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client.on_connect = on_connect
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client.on_message = on_message
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client.connect("mqtt.example.com", 1883, 60)
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client.loop_forever()
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```
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Now secure your broker by creating a user with a password
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```bash
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sudo mosquitto_passwd -c /etc/mosquitto/passwd <username>
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```
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and configure mosquitto to use it in `/etc/mosquitto/conf.d/default.conf`:
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```
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allow_anonymous false
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password_file /etc/mosquitto/passwd
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```
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Now restart mosquitto to enable the protection
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```bash
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sudo systemctl restart mosquitto
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```
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Test the installation by uncommenting `client.username_pw_set(username="username",password="my_super_secret_pw")` and filling in your credentials.
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The result code `0` indicates a valid connection. `5` indicates a authentication error.
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I hope this helps setting up a MQTT broker. Hopefully I will have the time to write how to connect such a broker to Grafana via Telegraf and Influx DB.
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{{< chat monitoring >}}
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