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Jeet Prakash
Jeet Prakash

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Getting Started with MQTT

MQTT is a light-weight publish and subscribe protocol which allows low energy devices to exchange messages among each other. It is a simple messaging protocol design for resource constrained devices having low bandwidth. And hence it has found wide adoption on devices for Internet of Things (IoT) as it enables the IoT devices to receive control commands to do various things like turning the lights on or off.

There are many brokers available that implement MQTT protocol. I will be using Mosquitto Broker for the purpose of this and future posts.

Setting up Mosquitto MQTT Broker

Head to the official Mosquitto Downloads page for installing MQTT broker on your Windows or Linux machine. Or if you are more comfortable with docker you can also download and run the official docker image from Docker Hub as well.

docker run -it -p 1883:1883 -p 9001:9001 eclipse-mosquitto:latest

This command will download the eclipse-mosquitto image and start the container which will listen on port 1883 for incoming connections.

Connecting to Mosquitto MQTT Broker

Now that we have set up the Mosquitto MQTT Broker we are ready to publish messages to it. When we install the Mosquitto broker from its official downloads page it installs the CLI based MQTT client as well which allows us to publish messages and subscribe to the Mosquitto MQTT Broker.

With the following command we can subscribe to the broker:

> mosquitto_sub -t mqtt/test

And to publish the message to broker we can use this command:

> mosquitto_pub -t mqtt/test -m "Hello MQTT"

In both of the above commands we have used -t flag to specify which of the topics to subscribe and publish to. By default both commands will try to find the broker at localhost, if we want the clients to connect to a broker located somewhere else we can use -h flag for that. Also the message to be published can be specified by -m flag.

And as soon as we publish a message on terminal running publish client we see the same message appear on the terminal running subscriber client.

Subscribing to Broker

Publishing to Broker

There is a lot more to MQTT that I have not covered in this post like Topic Levels, Message Encryption, Message Retention and much more. But these would surely be the topics for future posts. So stay tuned!

This article is already published on my personal blog.

Top comments (1)

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reservedzz profile image
reservedzz • Edited

It's a very good article! In fact, it's the clearest explanation of what MQTT is that I saw on the Internet.
Mosquitto broker is one of the most widely-used brokers. The Pro version also offers mqtt broker high availability. I use it to secure a stable and safe connection between the system's nods. I would like to make the probability of hacking as low as possible.
What are your MQTT security suggestions? Is it safer to have an isolated network?