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DEPRECATION NOTICE

NB: This repository is deprecated and here for historical purposes only. Please visit the new SDK: Breakout_Massive_SDK_Arduino

The updated SDK has a number of bug fixes and optimizations around the u-blox SARA-N410 cellular module abstraction layer, introduces initial beta support for the Quectel BG96 module, and includes samples that demonstrate leveraging MQTT.

The new SDK also makes use of the TLS stacks on the SARA-N410 and BG96 modules natively.

The commands/CoAP bridge which was the only communication mechanism shown in the examples in the legacy SDK below is replaced by MQTT.




Twilio Breakout SDK for Arduino

This page documents how to get started using the Breakout SDK and what it provides. Today, the Breakout SDK is built for the STM32F405RG MCU and U-Blox Sara-N410 cellular module in mind. This specific Developer Board was provided in Twilio's Alfa Developer Kit and distributed to SIGNAL 2018 attendees, and it came with Grove sensors โ€“ humidity, light, and ultrasonic.

Setting up your development environment

  1. Visit the Arduino IDE setup guide to learn how to set up your development environment.
  2. Visit the Alfa Developer Kit Quickstart to learn how to register and activate your Narrowband SIM in the Programmable Wireless Console.

Breakout SDK

Breakout SDK enables developers to exchange data between low-powered devices and IoT cloud services. Breakout makes it easy to adopt low power optimizations provided by the Narrowband network and cellular modem hardware.

Retrieve PSK from Console and assign PSK in client

A pre shared key (PSK) is required to be retrieved from the Programmable Wireless Console Narrowband SIM Resource. Your Narrowband SIM PSK will need to be copied into your application code.

PSKs are retrieved and set in hexadecimal and are unique per SIM.

static const char * psk_key = "00112233445566778899aabbccddeeff";

Your PSK can be found by navigating to the SIMs section of the Console, click on your Narrowband SIM, Click the Breakout SDK tab at the top. There you will see your ICCID and your PSK.

Retrieve the Breakout instance

Obtain an instance to the Breakout client singleton.

  • @returns breakout client instance
Breakout *breakout = &Breakout::getInstance();

Set log level

Owl log provides robust output and color coding to Serial output. Log verbosity from most critical to most verbose:

  • errors
    • L_ERR
  • warnings
    • L_WARN
  • information
    • L_INFO
  • debug
    • L_DBG
 owl_log_set_level(L_DBG);

When logging, the additional L_CLI level ensure that the output will always be visible, no matter the set level.

Set PSK in Breakout

PSK value is 16 bytes in hex or 32 characters.

breakout->setPSKKey(psk_key);

Set Polling Interval

Sets the interval (seconds) at which to poll for new Commands from the server. The default is 0, which indicates no automatic querying of the server. Value is specified in seconds, values < 60 will result in no polling. If last polling was far away in the past, a poll will follow. Otherwise (e.g. change of interval), the timer for the next poll is simply set to last_polling_time + interval_seconds.

breakout->setPollingInterval(10 * 60);

Polling

Checks for updates from server at defined interval.

Why we poll for Commands

In the non-Narrowband world, Commands are pushed to the device over SMS. Today, in the Narrowband world, the device must ask the server if there are any Commands waiting rather than the server telling the device that Commands are available.

Instead of the server sending a Command directly to the device, the device must ask the server if there are any Commands available to be sent to the device. This is why we have polling. Polling checks the server for a new Commands at a predefined interval no less than 60 seconds.

Heartbeats

Heartbeats are sent from Breakout to Twilio:

  • When the polling interval is fired
  • When checkForCommands() is manually fired
  • When you send a Command
  • When you receive a Command

Heartbeats are registered with Breakout service and visible under the Breakout SDK tab of your Narrowband SIM Resource in Console. Heartbeats are displayed in reverse chronological order. You will see the version of Breakout that your Developer Board is running and the date and time the Heartbeat was sent.

Set the device's purpose

Sets the "purpose" of the device. This defaults to "Dev-Kit" and is informational to the network for the purpose of your device's use. The maximum length for purpose string is 32 characters. Must be set before powering on the module or this call will return an error.

  • @param purpose - your developer kit's purpose.
  • @returns true is setting purpose was successful, false otherwise
setPurpose(char const *purpose);

Power on the cellular module

Powering the modem and starting up the SDK. Returns true if powered on, false otherwise.

breakout->powerModuleOn();

Handle all modem events

This is the main loop(), which will run forever. Keep breakout->spin() call such that the SDK will be able to handle modem events, incoming data, and trigger retransmissions.

void loop() {
 // Add here the code for your application, but don't block
 // Add in this loop calls to your own application functions. 
 // Don't block or sleep inside them.
 your_application_example();

 // The Breakout SDK checking things and doing the work
 breakout->spin();
 // The delay (sleep) here helps conserve power, hence it is advisable to keep it.
 delay(50);
}

Sending and receiving Commands from the device

Types

commands_status_code_e

Enumeration for connection status updates:

  • COMMAND_STATUS_OK
    • Returned if operation was successful
  • COMMAND_STATUS_ERROR
    • Returned if operation failed
  • COMMAND_STATUS_BUFFER_TOO_SMALL
    • Returned if provided buffer is too small for requested data
  • COMMAND_STATUS_NO_COMMAND_WAITING
    • Returned if no command is available for reading
  • COMMAND_STATUS_COMMAND_TOO_LONG
    • Returned if provided command is too long

command_receipt_code_e

Enumeration for command status results:

  • CONNECTION_STATUS_OFFLINE
    • The device is not registered on the mobile network - offline.
  • CONNECTION_STATUS_NETWORK_REGISTRATION_DENIED
    • The mobile network denied network registration - check SIM status - offline.
  • CONNECTION_STATUS_REGISTERED_NOT_CONNECTED
    • The device is registered to the mobile network but not yet connected to the Twilio Commands SDK - offline.
  • CONNECTION_STATUS_REGISTERED_AND_CONNECTED
    • The device is registered to the mobile network and connected to the Twilio Commands SDK - online.

Handler for Commands with receipt requests

Handler function signature for Commands with receipt requests. Used in sendTextCommandWithReceiptRequest() and sendBinaryCommandWithReceiptRequest().

  • @param receipt_code - the receipt request
  • @param cb_parameter - a generic pointer to application data, as passed to the sendCommandWithReceiptRequest()
typedef void (*BreakoutCommandReceiptCallback_f)(command_receipt_code_e receipt_code, void *cb_parameter);

Methods

Send a text Command without a receipt request

The Command to send to Twilio - max 140 characters.

  • @param cmd - the command to send to Twilio - max 140 characters.
  • @returns command_status_code_e
sendTextCommand(const char *buf);

Send a binary Command without a receipt request

The Command to send to Twilio - max 140 characters.

  • @param cmd - the command to send to Twilio - max 140 characters.
  • @returns command_status_code_e
sendBinaryCommand(const char *buf);

Send a text Command with a receipt request

The text Command to send to Twilio - max 140 characters.

  • @param buf - the text command to send to Twilio - max 140 characters.
  • @param callback - command receipt callback.
  • @param callback_parameter - a generic pointer to application data.
  • @returns: command_status_code_e
sendTextCommandWithReceiptRequest(const char *buf, BreakoutCommandReceiptCallback_f callback, void *callback_parameter);

Send a binary Command with a receipt request

The binary Command to send to Twilio - max 140 characters.

  • @param buf - the text command to send to Twilio - max 140 characters.
  • @param callback - command receipt callback.
  • @param callback_parameter - a generic pointer to application data.
  • @returns: command_status_code_e
sendBinaryCommandWithReceiptRequest(const char *buf, BreakoutCommandReceiptCallback_f callback, void *callback_parameter);

Receive Commands

Pop a received Command, in case it was received locally (hasWaitingCommand() returns true.

  • @param maxBufSize - size of buffer being passed in.
  • @param buf - buffer to receive command into.
  • @param bufSize - output size of returned command in buf, will not exceed 141 bytes.
  • @param isBinary - output indicator if the command was received with Content-Format indicating text or binary.
  • @returns command_status_code_e
receiveCommand(const  size_t maxBufSize, char  *buf, size_t  *bufSize, bool *isBinary);

Check if Commands are waiting to be retrieved

Indicates the presence of a waiting command. @returns true if Commands waiting on server, false otherwise.

hasWaitingCommand();

Manually check for Commands

Manually initiate a check for waiting Commands. If setPollingInterval() is set to a valid interval, this is automatically called at an interval. If both polling interval is enabled, the polling timer is reset on manual calls to this method.

  • @returns true if the operation was successful.

Query hasWaitingCommands() for results.

checkForCommands(bool isRetry = false);

Sending Commands to the SIM

Commands to the SIM are sent via an HTTP request to Twilio. Visit the Commands API documentation to learn more.

Create a text Command

curl -X POST https://wireless.twilio.com/v1/Commands \
--data-urlencode "Sim=MyNarrowbandSim" \
--data-urlencode "Command=wakeup" \
-u ACXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX:your_auth_token

Create a binary Command

curl -X POST https://wireless.twilio.com/v1/Commands \
--data-urlencode "CommandMode=binary" \
--data-urlencode "Sim=MyNarrowbandSIM" \
--data-urlencode "Command=SGVsbG8sIE1hY2hpbmUh==" \
-u ACXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX:your_auth_token

Receive Command from SIM to your servers

To receive a Command from a SIM 'mobile-originated', you should create or update an existing SIM instance with a CommandsCallbackUrl property, and optionally a CommandsCallbackMethod property (defaults to POST).

Limitations and Workarounds

  1. U-Blox data size limitation
    • Problem: The U-Blox cellular module can receive up to 512 bytes of data in hex mode. Hence this is a limitation for UDP datagrams.
    • Solution: partial solution would be to switch from the hex mode to binary mode. This shall double the amount of data received, yet it makes the code much more complex. So far 512 was a good upper limit, especially given the NB-IoT targets here, hence this wasn't explored.
  2. Arduino Seeed STM32F4 Boards Package - USART buffer limitation
    • Problem: The Seeed STM32F4 Boards package, published through the Boards Manager system, has a limitation in the USART interface implementation which we're using to communicate with the modem. The default USART_RX_BUF_SIZE is set to 256 bytes. With overheads and hex mode, this reduces the maximum chunk of data which we can read from the modem quite significantly. The effect is that the modem data in the receive side is shifted over its beginning, such that only the last 255 bytes are actually received by OwlModem.
    • Solution: see Update USART buffer below.

Update USART buffer

This is required for Wio STM32F4 devices not on 1.2.3.

  1. Locate /libmaple/usart.h
    • OSX: /Users/{{UserNameHere}}/Library/Arduino15/packages/Seeeduino/hardware/Seeed_STM32F4/{{VersionHere}}/cores/arduino/libmaple/usart.h
    • Linux: ~/.arduino15/packages/Seeeduino/hardware/Seeed_STM32F4/{{VersionHere}}/cores/arduino/libmaple/usart.h
    • Windows: C:/Users/{{UserNameHere}}/Documents/Arduino/hardware/Seeed_STM32F4/{{VersionHere}}/cores/arduino/libmaple/usart.h
  2. Update USART_RX_BUF_SIZE to 1280
  3. Update USART_TX_BUF_SIZE to 1280

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