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Transmission is an MQTT module for Ignition that can publish files using MQTT Sparkplug to be processed by MQTT engine.
Files are transferred using Sparkplug over MQTT and which files get transferred and when they get transferred can be configured in a number of different ways. The file transfer configuration also defines how quickly a file transfer occurs and how long before a timeout will occur on failure to receive host side acknowledgements which can be adjusted as required based on the size of files you are sending and any bandwidth constraints that you may have.
This tutorial shows how to configure the MQTT modules to publish files using both the manual and auto publish methods.
Install the three MQTT modules listed in the pre-requisites onto your Ignition system following the Cirrus Link Module Installation guide.
By default, both MQTT Engine and MQTT Transmission are configured to connect to MQTT Distributor on tcp://localhost:1883 and will show as Connected under their respective Servers configuration setting in the Ignition UI. MQTT Transmission will also have an Example Transmitter configured pointing to a set of tags that are configured in the Ignition "default" tag provider.
This allows the three modules to automatically connect and provide a starting base for the tutorial.
Navigate to the MQTT Engine > Settings in the left side of the Ignition Gateway UI and select the General tab.
Set Primary Host Enabled and add a Primary Host ID as shown below:
Navigate to the MQTT Transmission > Settings in the side of the Ignition Gateway UI and select the Sets tab.
Edit the Default Set and add a Primary Host ID as shown below:
Now we can configure the MQTT Engine module to process the published files.
Navigate to the MQTT Engine > Settings in the left side of the Ignition Gateway UI and select the Namespaces tab. From the Default tab, edit the Sparkplug B namespace shown below:
Now select the 'Files' tab and set the following
When complete, it should look similar to the following. Save the changes after confirming.
Now we can configure the MQTT Transmission module to publish files using a configured Transmitter. Navigate to the MQTT Transmission > Settings in the left side bar of the Ignition Gateway UI and select the Transmitters tab.
Make note of the Sparkplug IDs configured for your transmitter. For our example we have the Group ID as My MQTT Group and the Edge Node ID as Edge Node faec7e
Now on the 'Files' tab, select the Create new Files... link and configure the following fields
When complete, it should look similar to the following. Save the changes after confirming.
After the configuration is saved, it should look similar to below:
With a File record created following the steps in Configure MQTT Transmission to publish files with the 'Enable Auto-Publish' unchecked and the Tag Folder Path set to "files_manual", everything should be configured to send files from MQTT Transmission to MQTT Engine.
Open Ignition Designer on the system running MQTT Transmission. You should see the control and information tags created in the specified tag provider and folder as shown below:
The control and information tags created in the folder are:
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
Last Published File | String | Name of last published file |
Last Published Sequence Number | Integer | Sequence number of last published file since last reset of metrics |
Percent Completed | Byte | Publish completion percent for file being published |
Publish File | Boolean | Manual trigger to publish file |
Publish File Count | Long | Number of files published since last reset of metrics |
Publish File in Transit | String | Name of current file being published |
Publish Files Path | String | Full path to the target file to publish over MQTT |
Publish Operation Status | String | Status description of current publish operation |
Publish Operation Status Code | Integer | Status code for current publish operation |
Reset | Boolean | Trigger to reset publish metrics |
At this point, we just need to tell MQTT Transmission which file to send. Download and unzip this sample file to some location and note that location.
This sample_file.zip contains two text files which are:
sample_file.txt
sample_file.txt.md5
The md5 sum file is only required when using the auto publish method. This is needed to ensure that the file to be transferred is complete and ready to be published.
If you are testing with a different file, certain characters have special meanings when used in filenames such as "*" for wildcards, and "\" in filename paths. If a file you are trying to publish contains any of the characters listed below, it will prevent files from being written to the file system.
" * : < > ? / \ |
Leading and trailing spaces in filenames and filenames ending in '.' are also not supported.
With the file to be transferred in place, we can now set the 'Publish File Path' tag.
This path must be the full path to the target file to publish over MQTT. In this example, we're using the path of '/tmp/transmission/sample_file.txt'. However, on a Windows system that would look something like 'C:\full\path\to\my\sample_file.txt'. When this is set, you should see something like this
Finally, click the 'Publish File' boolean tag. This will begin the file publish process which will cause the file to be published. After doing so, you should see something similar to what is shown below.
You should also now see the file to the location you set as the 'Base File Directory' in your MQTT Engine namespace configuration for Sparkplug B.
With a File record created following the steps in Configure MQTT Transmission to publish files with 'Enable Auto-Publish' checked and the Tag Folder Path set to "files_auto", everything should be configured to send files from MQTT Transmission to MQTT Engine.
Open Ignition Designer on the system running MQTT Transmission. You should see the control and information tags created in the specified tag provider and folder as shown below:
The control and information tags created in the folder are:
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
Last Published File | String | Name of last published file |
Last Published Sequence Number | Integer | Sequence number of last published file since last reset of metrics |
Percent Completed | Byte | Publish completion percent for file being published |
Publish File Count | Long | Number of files published since last reset of metrics |
Publish File in Transit | String | Name of current file being published |
Publish Files Folder | String | Full path to the target folder containing the files to publish over MQTT |
Publish Operation Status | String | Status description of current publish operation |
Publish Operation Status Code | Integer | Status code for current publish operation |
Reset | Boolean | Trigger to reset publish metrics |
At this point, we just need to tell MQTT Transmission which folder contains the file(s) to publish. Download and unzip this sample file to some location and note that location.
This sample_file.zip contains two text files which are:
sample_file.txt
sample_file.txt.md5
If you a testing with a different file, certain characters have special meanings when used in filenames such as "*" for wildcards, and "\" in filename paths. If a file you are trying to publish contains any of the characters listed below, it will prevent files from being written to the file system.
" * : < > ? / \ |
Leading and trailing spaces in filenames and filenames ending in '.' are also not supported.
When transferring files using auto_publish, MQTT Transmission requires two files to be present before it will transfer the target file. The first is the file itself. The second is a file that has the same name as the target file followed by a '.md5' extension. The file containing the md5 sum of the target file will not be transferred.
The contents of that file must contain the Message Digest Algorithm 5 (or MD5 sum) of the file. The MD5 sum can be calculated using command line utilities on most operating systems or through scripting in Ignition. Here are some examples:
Linux
ubuntu@linux-host:~$ md5sum myfile.bin 07180622a24ebf905cf5f770cd54197a myfile.bin # In the above example, the md5 sum is: 07180622a24ebf905cf5f770cd54197a
OSX
user@osxhost:~$ md5 sample_file.txt MD5 (sample_file.txt) = 85324ffbcc7d97c478adf53796aff787 # In the above example, the md5 sum is: 85324ffbcc7d97c478adf53796aff787
Windows
Get-FileHash -Algorithm MD5 .\some_file.iso Algorithm Hash Path --------- ---- ---- MD5 80FD169D3FDADBC97E66C168F796B1BF C:\temp\some_file.iso # In the above example, the md5 sum is: 80FD169D3FDADBC97E66C168F796B1BF
Ignition Script
import hashlib # File to create md5 sum file_name = "D:\MyFiles\test_file.txt" # Open,close, read file and calculate MD5 on its contents with open(file_name, 'rb') as file_to_check: # read contents of the file data = file_to_check.read() # pipe contents of the file through md5_returned = hashlib.md5(data).hexdigest() # Save md5 sum file f = open(file_name + ".md5", "w") f.write(md5_returned) f.close()
MQTT Transmission will scan the folder specified in the tag, with a frequency defined by the File Scan Rate, and publish all files that appear in this directory automatically.
The records published from MQTT Transmission can be be viewed in the Ignition Gateway logs by setting the com.cirruslink.mqtt.engine.gateway.sparkplug.SparkplugPayloadHandler logger to TRACE.
At this point you have a fully functional system which can be expanded or modified as required. Below are some addition configuration options to try:
By default, MQTT Transmission is configured to connect to MQTT Distributor on tcp://localhost:1883. As the MQTT Distributor is installed on a different server, we will need to edit the configuration to allow MQTT Transmission to connect to the host server.
The MQTT Server must be accessible to the Ignition system running MQTT Transmission. In order for this to work port 1883 must be open to outside connections. Make sure this is allowed via your operating system's firewall configuration and any anti-virus software you may have installed.
This configuration is not recommended for production systems. If running this in production, you should be using TLS encryption on port 8883. More information on how to configure TLS can be found here.
Navigate to the MQTT Transmission > Settings in the left side bar of the Ignition Gateway UI and select the Servers tab.
Change the server URL to point to the server IP address or domain name of the Ignition system running MQTT Distributor and save the configuration.
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