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Practical Python Programming for IoT

You're reading from  Practical Python Programming for IoT

Product type Book
Published in Nov 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838982461
Pages 516 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Gary Smart Gary Smart
Profile icon Gary Smart
Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section 1: Programming with Python and the Raspberry Pi
2. Setting Up your Development Environment 3. Getting Started with Python and IoT 4. Networking with RESTful APIs and Web Sockets Using Flask 5. Networking with MQTT, Python, and the Mosquitto MQTT Broker 6. Section 2: Practical Electronics for Interacting with the Physical World
7. Connecting Your Raspberry Pi to the Physical World 8. Electronics 101 for the Software Engineer 9. Section 3: IoT Playground - Practical Examples to Interact with the Physical World
10. Turning Things On and Off 11. Lights, Indicators, and Displaying Information 12. Measuring Temperature, Humidity, and Light Levels 13. Movement with Servos, Motors, and Steppers 14. Measuring Distance and Detecting Movement 15. Advanced IoT Programming Concepts - Threads, AsyncIO, and Event Loops 16. IoT Visualization and Automation Platforms 17. Tying It All Together - An IoT Christmas Tree 18. Assessments 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

The Paho JavaScript MQTT client

At line (4), we create our Paho-MQTT Client instance and assign it to the client variable.

The parameters to Paho.MQTT.Client() are the broker's hostname and port. We are serving this web page via Mosquitto, so the broker's host and port will be the same as web pages:

const client = new Paho.Client(location.hostname,        // (4)
Number(location.port),
CLIENT_ID);

You may have noticed in the http://localhost:8083 URL that the port is 8083, while in Python we used port 1883:

  • Port 1883 is the MQTT protocol port on the broker. Our Python program connects directly to the broker on this port.
  • We previously configured port 8083 as a Web Socket port on the Mosquitto broker. Web pages can speak HTTP and Web Socket protocols, not MQTT.

This raises an important point. While we're using the term MQTT in the context of our JavaScript code, we're really proxying the...

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