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Sparkplug SiteWise Bridge is not available but is coming October, 2020

Sparkplug SiteWise Bridge is configured with a configuration file on the filesystem of the EC2 instance. If you are unfamiliar with how to access the instance see this page for access instructions. The path to the configuration file is:

/opt/ssb/conf/ssb.properties

Once you open the file, you will see the following options.

# The AWS access key with the ability to access AWS SiteWise
# If the MQTT Server that Sparkplug SiteWise Bridge is connecting              
# to is AWS IoT Core, then this key must also grant access to AWS
# IoT Core
#aws_access_key =

# The AWS secret key associated with the AWS access key above
#aws_secret_key =

# The AWS Region where SiteWise is located
aws_sitewise_region = us-east-1

# The MQTT Server URL
mqtt_server_url = tcp://localhost:1883

# The MQTT Server name
mqtt_server_name = Chariot SCADA

# The MQTT username (if required by the MQTT Server)
mqtt_username = admin

# The MQTT password (if required by the MQTT Server)
mqtt_password = changeme

# The MQTT keep-alive timeout in seconds
mqtt_keepalive_timeout = 30

# The path to the TLS Certificate Authority certificate chain
#mqtt_ca_cert_chain_path =

# The path to the TLS certificate
#mqtt_client_cert_path =

# The path to the TLS private key
#mqtt_client_private_key_path =

# The TLS private key password
#mqtt_client_private_key_password =

# Whether or not to verify the hostname against the server certificate
#mqtt_verify_hostname = false

# Whether or not to block auto-rebirth requests
#block_auto_rebirth = false

# The primary host ID if this is the acting primary host
#primary_host_id =

# The MQTT Client ID
# It is recommend to not set this unless there is a specific reason to do so. If this is not set a random client ID will be automatically generated
#client_id =


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