Sensor-data-bridge: Difference between revisions
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You need the following: | You need the following: | ||
* a server that is always on and connected to the internet, can be Linux or Windows | * a server that is always on and connected to the internet, can be Linux or Windows | ||
* a Java installation (JDK to compile), at least version 8 | * a Java installation (<b>JDK</b> to compile), at least version 8 | ||
* some configuration on TheThingsNetwork side | * some configuration on TheThingsNetwork side | ||
* some configuration of my application (YAML file) | * some configuration of my application (YAML file) |
Revision as of 11:49, 2 August 2021
Project LoraLuftdatenForwarder | |
---|---|
LoRaWAN forwarder for particulate matter data | |
Status | In progress |
Contact | bertrik |
Last Update | 2021-08-02 |
What is this
This is a companion project of LoraWanDustSensor.
It takes airborne particulate matter measurement data transferred through TheThingsNetwork and forwards it to online databases:
- http://sensor.community (formerly Luftdaten),
- http://opensensemap.org and
- https://cayenne.mydevices.com
Project on Github: https://github.com/bertrik/LoraLuftdatenForwarder
Features
- Picks up particulate matter measurement data received through TheThingsNetwork, using their "v3" infrastructure
- Forwards measurement data to https://sensor.community
- Forwards measurement data to https://opensensemap.org, you can configure the opensense-id by adding a device attribute in TheThingsNetwork console
- Forwards measurement data to https://cayenne.mydevices.com, you configure the username/password/clientid by adding a device attribute in TheThingsNetwork console
- Supports Cayenne payload format for the data encoding, a custom payload format for SPS30 data (includes particle counts)
- Handles particulate matter data (PM10, PM4.0, PM2.5, PM1.0), temperature, humidity, barometric pressure
- Can be run as a systemd service, so it automatically restarts in case the software would crash
Next steps
- test support for forwarding of SPS30 data, including particle counts and particle size
- add support for auto-localization through a scan of surrounding WiFi access-points and a geolocation service (google, mozilla), see https://github.com/bertrik/LoraLuftdatenForwarder/tree/master/LoraLuftdatenForwarder/src/main/java/nl/bertriksikken/gls
- add support for NB-IOT modem with t-mobile backend, see my Sim7020 project
- add support for other backends, e.g. feinstaub-app?
Requirements
You need the following:
- a server that is always on and connected to the internet, can be Linux or Windows
- a Java installation (JDK to compile), at least version 8
- some configuration on TheThingsNetwork side
- some configuration of my application (YAML file)
Compilation
To compile the software:
- clone the software from my github archive
git clone https://github.com/bertrik/LoraLuftdatenForwarder.git
- enter the LoraLuftdatenForwarder directory
cd LoraLuftdatenForwarder
- run the gradle script to build the software (Linux):
./gradlew assemble
or (Windows):
gradlew assemble
- the application zip & tar is now available in LoraLuftdatenForwarder/LoraLuftdatenForwarder/build/distributions
To update to the latest version:
- Update software from github archive:
git pull
- perform the last two steps above again
Installation
Unzip the distribution file somewhere on your system. I put it in my home directory, for example
cd tar xvf code/LoraLuftdatenForwarder/LoraLuftdatenForwarder/build/distributions/LoraLuftdatenForwarder.tar
Configuration
Node configuration
The particulate matter measurement device needs to send data in the Cayenne format. I used the following conventions:
- PM10 is encoded as analog value on channel 1
- PM2.5 is encoded as analog value on channel 2
- PM1.0 is encoded as analog value on channel 0 (optional)
- PM4.0 is encoded as analog value on channel 4 (optional)
- Temperature is encoded using standard Cayenne encoding (optional)
- Humidity is encoded using standard Cayenne encoding (optional)
- Barometric pressure is encoded using standard Cayenne encoding (optional)
The SPS30 produces mass concentration data in 4 categories, particle count in 5 categories, plus particle size. Format:
- 16-bit (big endian) PM1.0 mass concentration (unit 0.1)
- 16-bit (big endian) PM2.5 mass concentration (unit 0.1)
- 16-bit (big endian) PM4.0 mass concentration (unit 0.1)
- 16-bit (big endian) PM10 mass concentration (unit 0.1)
- 16-bit (big endian) PM0.5 number concentration (unit 1)
- 16-bit (big endian) PM1.0 number concentration (unit 1)
- 16-bit (big endian) PM2.5 number concentration (unit 1)
- 16-bit (big endian) PM4.0 number concentration (unit 1)
- 16-bit (big endian) PM10 number concentration (unit 1)
- 16-bit (big endian) typical particle size (unit nm)
A total of 20 bytes. This is sent on LoRaWAN port 30. Temperature and humidity is not encoded.
TheThingsNetwork application/device configuration
You need to define an 'application' on TheTheThingsNetwork.
- Go the TTN console: https://console.cloud.thethings.network/ and log in
- You need an 'application', create a new one, or use an existing one
- Within the application you need a 'device', so create a new one, or use an existing one:
- Use OTAA, LoRaMac version 1.0.3
- Enter the device EUI as displayed on the display
- Use the application keys as specified in my LoraWanDustSensor page
- You need an API key
- Create this on the TTN console, grant individual rights as shown in the screenshot
- NOTE: you have only one chance to copy this key somewhere, so copy/paste it locally to a text file or something
LoraLuftdatenForwarder configuration
To configure the application:
- Start the application without a configuration file, this will create a default template, stop the application again
cd LoraLuftdatenForwarder bin/LoraLuftdatenForwarder (ctrl-C)
- Edit the loraluftdatenforwarder.yaml file, example:
--- ttn: mqtt_url: "tcp://eu1.cloud.thethings.network" identity_server_url: "https://eu1.cloud.thethings.network" identity_server_timeout: 20 apps: - name: "particulatematter" key: "NNSXS......." encoding: "CAYENNE" luftdaten: url: "https://api.sensor.community" timeout: 20 opensense: url: "https://api.opensensemap.org" timeout: 20
So:
- enter the name of your application
- enter the TTN API key you saved earlier
- other defaults are probably OK
Sensor.community
TODO
- Go to https://devices.sensor.community/ and log in
- Register a node with id 'TTN-<device-EUI-as-shown-on-display>' (without the spaces or hyphens, e.g. 'TTN-0000547AF1BF713C')
- Register it with the proper configuration, e.g. SDS011 with BME280
Opensensemap
- Go to opensensemap.org and log in
- Create an opensense node with the proper configuration
- Copy the opensensenmap 'box id', a long hexadecimal string
- Go the TTN console: https://console.cloud.thethings.network/ and log in
- Add an attribute for the device, under 'General settings', name = 'opensense-id', value = boxid that you copied from opensensemap.org
- The mapping from TTN-id to boxid is refreshed by the forwarder once an hour, so within an hour the forwarding to opensensemap.org starts
Cayenne myDevices
- Go to https://cayenne.mydevices.com/ and log in
- Add a new node, TODO
- Go to TTN console and log in
- Add attributes for the device, under 'General settings'
- attribute name = 'mydevices-username', value = MQTT username from cayenne mydevices dashboard
- attribute name = 'mydevices-password', value = MQTT password from cayenne mydevices dashboard
- attribute name = 'mydevices-clientid', value = Client ID from cayenne mydevices dashboard
- Add attributes for the device, under 'General settings'
Work in progress
Forwarding noise data
How it is encoded in the sensor.community firmware:
- Three values are sent in the JSON to sensor.community:
- "noise_LAeq", value in dB(A), meaning?
- "noise_LA_min", value in dB(A), some kind of minimum
- "noise_LA_max", value in dB(A), some kind of maximum
I think these can be encoded in Cayenne as a simple analog value (which has a range of approximately -327..327 with a resolution of 0.01. Just need to assign a channel number to it.
Values are read from the noise sensor as follows:
- call to dnms_calculate_leq()
- call to dnms_read_data_ready(&data_ready) returns 0 if OK and (data_ready != 0)
- call to dnms_read_leq(&dnms_values) returns 0 if OK
- firmware applies a "correction" by adding a fixed offset
Measurement values are encoded as 32-bit units, interpreted as 32-bit floats.
References:
- DNMS is read at https://github.com/opendata-stuttgart/sensors-software/blob/beta/airrohr-firmware/airrohr-firmware.ino#L3392
- DNMS is formatted in the JSON at https://github.com/opendata-stuttgart/sensors-software/blob/beta/airrohr-firmware/airrohr-firmware.ino#L3405
- DNMS I2C code is at https://github.com/opendata-stuttgart/sensors-software/blob/beta/airrohr-firmware/dnms_i2c.cpp