This project is a BLE to MQTT bridge, i.e. expose BLE GATT characteristics as MQTT topics for bidirectional communication. It's developed for the ESP32 SoC and is based on ESP-IDF release 3.0.
Important: Please note that recent versions of ESP-IDF have proven to be very unstable for me with regards to both WiFi and BLE performance. From my experience, using commit 139d49894c473bd34ab6e9515e85d3f6871a30c7 of the ESP-IDF and compiling this project with it offer better performance. This will hopefully change in the future and I will re-evaluate new ESP-IDF releases when they're available.
For example, if a device with a MAC address of a0:e6:f8:50:72:53
exposes the
0000180f-0000-1000-8000-00805f9b34fb service
(Battery Service) which includes the
00002a19-0000-1000-8000-00805f9b34fb characteristic
(Battery Level), the a0:e6:f8:50:72:53/BatteryService/BatteryLevel
MQTT topic
is published with a value representing the battery level.
Characteristics supporting notifications will automatically be registered on and new values will be published once available. It's also possible to proactively issue a read request by publishing any value to the topic using the above format suffixed with '/Get'. Note that values are strings representing the characteristic values based on their definitions grabbed from http://bluetooth.org. For example, a battery level of 100% (0x64) will be sent as a string '100'.
In order to set a GATT value, publish a message to a writable characteristic
using the above format suffixed with /Set
. Payload should be of the same
format described above and will be converted, when needed, before sending to the
BLE peripheral.
In addition to the characteristic values, the BLE2MQTT devices also publish additional topics to help book-keeping:
<Peripheral MAC address>/Connected
- With a payload oftrue
/false
depicting if the peripheral is currently connected or not. Note that this topic is monitored by the BLE2MQTT instance currently connected to the peripheral so that if another instance publishesfalse
, the current instance will re-publishtrue
<Peripheral MAC address>/Owner
- The name of the BLE2MQTT instance currently connected to the peripheral, e.g.BLE2MQTT-XXXX
, whereXXXX
are the last 2 octets of the ESP32's WiFi MAC address
This application supports publishing all BLE advertisements over MQTT, When the advertisement section is set inside ble section. The push interval is the seconds between mqtt publications of advertisement messages.
- 0 means every message can be send
- -1 no message at all can be send
- other values the seconds between advertisements pusblished to mqtt.
{
"ble": {
"advertisement" : {
"publishinterval": 5
}
}
The message itself the hexadecimal string value of message.
This application supports publishing BLE beacon advertisements over MQTT. For each beacon, at-least two topics are published:
BLE2MQTT-XXXX/<Beacon MAC address>/Type
- The beacon type, e.g.iBeacon
BLE2MQTT-XXXX/<Beacon MAC address>/RSSI
- The RSSI value of the received advertisement
In addition, depending on the beacon type and payload, additional meta-data is published.
- For iBeacon:
UUID
,Major
,Minor
andDistance
- For Eddystone:
UID
frames:Namespace
,Instance
andDistance
URL
frames:URL
andDistance
TLM
frames:Voltage
,Temperature
,Count
andUptime
Note: Beacon topics are published without the retained flag regardless of what's defined in the configuration file.
Download the repository and its dependencies:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/shmuelzon/esp32-ble2mqtt
Modify the configuration file to fit your environment, build and flash (make sure to modify the serial device your ESP32 is connected to):
make flash
The configuration file provided in located at data/config.json in the repository. It contains all of the different configuration options.
The wifi
section below includes the following entries:
{
"wifi": {
"ssid": "MY_SSID",
"password": "MY_PASSWORD"
}
}
ssid
- The WiFi SSID the ESP32 should connect topassword
- The security password for the above network
The mqtt
section below includes the following entries:
{
"mqtt": {
"server": {
"host": "192.168.1.1",
"port": 1883,
"username": null,
"password": null,
"client_id": null
},
"publish": {
"qos": 0,
"retain": true
},
"topics" :{
"prefix": "",
"get_suffix": "/Get",
"set_suffix": "/Set"
}
}
}
server
- MQTT connection parameterspublish
- Configuration for publishing topicstopics
prefix
- Which prefix should be added to all MQTT value topics. OTA related topics are already prefixed and are not affected by this valueget_suffix
- Which suffix should be added to the MQTT value topic in order to issue a read request from the characteristicset_suffix
- Which suffix should be added to the MQTT value topic in order to write a new value to the characteristic
The ble
section of the configuration file includes the following default
configuration:
{
"ble": {
"//Optional: 'whitelist' or 'blacklist'": [],
"services": {
"definitions": {},
"//Optional: 'whitelist' or 'blacklist'": []
},
"characteristics": {
"definitions": {},
"//Optional: 'whitelist' or 'blacklist'": []
},
"passkeys": {}
}
}
-
whitelist
/blacklist
- An array of MAC addresses of devices. Ifwhitelist
is used, only devices with a MAC address matching one of the entries will be connected while ifblacklist
is used, only devices that do not match any entry will be connected"whitelist": [ "aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff" ]
-
services
- Add additional services or override a existing definitions to the ones grabbed automatically during build from http://www.bluetooth.org. Each service can include aname
field which will be used in the MQTT topic instead of its UUID. In addition, it's possible to define a white/black list for discovered services. For example:"services": { "definitions": { "00002f00-0000-1000-8000-00805f9b34fb": { "name": "Relay Service" } }, "blacklist": [ "0000180a-0000-1000-8000-00805f9b34fb" ] }
-
characteristics
- Add additional characteristics or override existing definitions to the ones grabbed automatically during build from http://www.bluetooth.org. Each characteristic can include aname
field which will be used in the MQTT topic instead of its UUID and atypes
array defining how to parse the byte array reflecting the characteristic's value. In addition, it's possible to define a white/black list for discovered characteristics. For example:"characteristics": { "definitions": { "00002f01-0000-1000-8000-00805f9b34fb": { "name": "Relay State", "types": [ "boolean" ] } }, "blacklist": [ "00002a29-0000-1000-8000-00805f9b34fb" ] }
-
passkeys
- An object containing the passkey (number 000000~999999) that should be used for out-of-band authorization. Each entry is the MAC address of the BLE device and the value is the passkey to use."passkeys": { "aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff": 000000 }
It is possible to upgrade both firmware and configuration file over-the-air once
an initial version was flashed via serial interface. To do so, execute:
make upload
or make upload-config
accordingly.
The above will upgrade all BLE2MQTT devices connected to the MQTT broker defined
in the configuration file. It is also possible to upgrade a specific device by
adding the OTA_TARGET
variable to the above command set to the host name of
the requested device, e.g.:
make upload OTA_TARGET=BLE2MQTT-470C
Note: In order to avoid unneeded upgrades, there is a mechanism in place to
compare the new version with the one that resides on the flash. For the firmware
image it's based on the git tag and for the configuration file it's an MD5 hash
of its contents. In order to force an upgrade regardless of the currently
installed version, run make force-upload
or make force-upload-config
respectively.