Cloud MQTT Mosquitto Broker - Access Anywhere Digital Ocean | Random Nerd Tutorials (2024)

Learn how to install Mosquitto Broker for MQTT communication on a Linux Ubuntu VM (Virtual Machine) using Digital Ocean. Running an MQTT Mosquitto Broker in the cloud allows you to connect several ESP32/ESP8266 boards and other IoT devices from anywhere using different networks as long as they have an Internet connection. We’ll also cover how to connect your ESP boards to the cloud MQTT broker using Arduino IDE.

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You might like: SMART HOME with Raspberry Pi, ESP32, and ESP8266—learn Node-RED and InfluxDB on a Raspberry Pi to build a Home Automation System with the ESP32 and ESP8266.

Introducing MQTT Protocol

MQTT stands for Message Queuing Telemetry Transport. It is a lightweight publish and subscribe system where you can publish and receive messages as a client. It is widely used in the home automation and IoT fields.

To learn more about MQTT, read our complete guide: What is MQTT and how it works.

An MQTT broker is primarily responsible for receiving all MQTT messages, filtering the messages, decide who is interested in each message and then, publishing the messages to all subscribed clients.

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There are several brokers you can use. In our Home Automation projects and tutorials we use the popular Mosquitto MQTT Broker. It is easy to install, configure and use.

In this tutorial, we’ll show you how to install Mosquitto MQTT broker on the cloud—a Linux Ubuntu VM (virtual machine) running on Digital Ocean hosting service.

Cloud MQTT Broker Overview

What’s the advantage of using a Cloud MQTT broker and how it works?

Using a Cloud MQTT broker allows several IoT devices (like ESP32 and ESP8266 boards) to communicate with each other using MQTT, even if they are on different networks (different locations connected to different routers). Here’s an overview.

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  • Mosquitto MQTT broker is running on the cloud (host service provided by Digital Ocean). So, it can receive messages from IoT devices all around the world.
  • You can have several ESP boards on different networks that connect to the same Cloud MQTT broker.
  • Each ESP board needs to be connected to a router that allows access to the internet in order to connect with the broker.
  • Because the boards use the same MQTT broker, they can communicate with each other by publishing and subscribing to the same topics.

The following diagram shows an example of a possible application:

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  • The previous image shows two ESP32 boards on different networks. Each board is connected to a different router with access to the internet.
  • Even though they are on different networks, they can communicate with each other via the Cloud MQTT broker by subscribing and publishing on the same topics.
  • ESP32 #1 publishes on a topic that ESP32 #2 is subscribed to (board2/output1). The message can indicate whether ESP32 #2 should turn an output on or off. So, ESP32 #1 can control the ESP32 #2 outputs.
  • Similarly, ESP32 #2 publishes temperature readings on the board2/temperature topic. ESP32 #1 is subscribed to that topic, so it receives board2 sensor readings.

You can also install Node-RED on the same cloud (Digital Ocean hosting account) to control and monitor your boards from anywhere in the world using your computer or your smartphone. You can follow this tutorial: Access Node-RED Dashboard from Anywhere using Digital Ocean

Hosting Service – Digital Ocean

To run your Cloud MQTT Mosquitto Broker, you need to use a hosting service that allows you to have access to the command line and install any software that you need. I recommend using Digital Ocean that offers an Ubuntu server that you can manage through a command line.

I’ve been using it since 2015 and I personally recommend it, but you can use any other hosting service. Any hosting service that offers a Linux Ubuntu VM with full console access should work.

If you don’t have a hosting account, I recommend signing up for Digital Ocean. When you sign up for Digital Ocean, you can try it for 60 days (they give you free credits to test the platform). You need to go to this link in order to claim the free credits: https://randomnerdtutorials.com/digitalocean.

Grab Linux Ubuntu VM on Digital Ocean »

If you like our projects, you might consider signing up to the recommended hosting service, because you’ll be supporting our work.

Note: you can also run Mosquitto MQTT Broker in your local network using a Raspberry Pi board. However, the purpose of this tutorial is to run an MQTT broker in the cloud to communicate with boards (or other IoT devices) across different networks.

Creating Digital Ocean Account

To create a Digital Ocean Account, go to Digital Ocean and sign up using one of the available options.

Create your account, and you’ll receive a $200 credit that you can use for 60 days to test the platform. You might need to enter a valid credit card, but you can cancel your account anytime if you’re no longer interested in using the service after the free 60 days trial.

Confirm your account and login. On the Project tab, click on your name. You should see a similar Dashboard.

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Create a Droplet (Linux Ubuntu VM)

To create a new VM, press the “Create” button on the top right corner and select the “Droplets” option. Digital Ocean calls Droplets to its VMs.

Important: if you’re already running a Droplet with Node-RED installed, you can skip these next steps (creating a Droplet). You can run both Node-RED and Mosquitto MQTT broker on the same server.

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Then, select the following options:

  • Distributions: Ubuntu
  • Choose a plan: Shared CPU Basic—we recommend choosing the $6/month option (the $4 plan will also work, but might be a bit slow).

Choose a datacenter region—choose the closest to your location.

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Create the root password that allows you to access your Droplet (save this password, because you’ll need it to access your server).

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Then, you can select any additional options you think might be useful for your project.

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Finally, choose a hostname to easily identify which Virtual Machine you are working with. I’ve named my Droplet home-automation-system.

That’s it, you just need to press the big green button Create Droplet to finish the process.

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Wait a few minutes and when the progress bar ends, your Droplet is ready.

Accessing Your Linux Ubuntu VM Console

Now, if you click on the Droplets tab, your newly created droplet should be there.

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Click on the droplet name. A new page will open. At the top right corner, there’s a Console link. If you click there, it will open a new console/terminal window where you can type Linux commands to install software or run commands the same way you do on your Raspberry Pi via SSH.

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Type your login username (root) and the password defined earlier, press the Enter key to access your server.

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There’s an optional step, but it goes beyond the scope of this tutorial. It’s not required to make this project work: prepare your server with non-root, sudo-enabled user and basic firewall with this Initial Server Setup with Ubuntu 20.04.

Installing Mosquitto MQTT Broker on Linux Ubuntu VM Digital Ocean

Let’s install theMosquitto Broker on Digital Ocean.

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1) Run the following command to upgrade and update your system:

sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade -y

2) When asked, press Y and Enter. It will take some time to update and upgrade.

3) To install the Mosquitto Broker enter the next command:

sudo apt install -y mosquitto mosquitto-clients

That’s it! Mosquitto MQTT broker is installed.

4) To make Mosquitto auto start when the server boots, you need to run the following command (this step is optional, but it ensures that as long as the server is running, Mosquitto will be running even after a server restart):

sudo systemctl enable mosquitto.service

5) Now, test the installation by running the following command:

mosquitto -v

This returns the Mosquitto version that is currently running on your server. It will be 2.0.11 or above.

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You can ignore the error message “Error: Address already in use”.

Enable Remote Access/ Authentication

To enable remote access so that we can communicate with IoT devices, we need to edit/create a configuration file.

We’ll add authentication with user and password.

1) Run the following command, but replace YOUR_USERNAME with the username you want to use:

sudo mosquitto_passwd -c /etc/mosquitto/passwd YOUR_USERNAME

I’ll be using the MQTT user sara, so I run the command as follows:

sudo mosquitto_passwd -c /etc/mosquitto/passwd sara

When you run the preceding command with the desired username, you’ll be asked to enter a password. No characters will be displayed while you enter the password. Enter the password and memorize the user/pass combination, you’ll need it later in your projects to make a connection with the broker.

This previous command creates a password file called passwd on the /etc/mosquitto directory. Now, we need to edit the mosquitto configuration file so that it only allows authentication with the username and password we’ve defined.

2) Set the correct permissions in the passwd file:

sudo chown mosquitto /etc/mosquitto/passwd

3) Run the following command to edit the configuration file:

sudo nano /etc/mosquitto/mosquitto.conf

4) Add the following line at the top of the file (make sure it is at the top of the file, otherwise it won’t work):

per_listener_settings true

5) Also add the following three lines to allow connection for authenticated users and tell Mosquitto where the username/password file is located.

allow_anonymous falselistener 1883password_file /etc/mosquitto/passwd

Your configuration file will look as follows (the new lines are in bold):

# Place your local configuration in /etc/mosquitto/conf.d/## A full description of the configuration file is at # /usr/share/doc/mosquitto/examples/mosquitto.conf.exampleper_listener_settings truepid_file /run/mosquitto/mosquitto.pidpersistence true persistence_location /var/lib/mosquitto/ log_dest file /var/log/mosquitto/mosquitto.loginclude_dir /etc/mosquitto/conf.d allow_anonymous false listener 1883 password_file /etc/mosquitto/passwd
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6) Press CTRL-X, then Y, and finally press Enter to exit and save the changes.

7) Restart Mosquitto for the changes to take effect.

sudo systemctl restart mosquitto

8) Wait a few seconds. To check if Mosquitto is running, you can type the following command:

sudo systemctl status mosquitto

Now, you have Mosquitto MQTT broker installed on the cloud with authentication with username and password enabled.

On your ESP32/ESP8266 Arduino code, on the MQTT Host, you should use your droplet IP address.

Testing MQTT Mosquitto Broker Installation

To test your MQTT broker installation, you can use another terminal window (Terminal window #2) and establish an SSH communication with your server (you can use PuTTY or a similar SSH client). Enter the droplet IP address and try to establish an SSH connection.

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Login as root and enter your password.

Then, enter the following command to subscribe to the testTopic topic. Replace user with your username and pass with your password.

mosquitto_sub -h localhost -t testTopic -u user -P pass

In your Terminal window #1, use the next command to publish the message “Hello, world!” in the test topic. Replace user with your username and pass with your password.

mosquitto_pub -h localhost -t testTopic -m "Hello, world!" -u user -P pass

Terminal window #2 should receive the message.

You can use the next table as a reference for the parameters you can pass in mosquitto_sub and mosquitto_pub commands:

-hHostname
-tMQTT topic
-mMQTT message
-uMQTT username
-PMQTT Password

Connecting Your ESP32 to MQTT Mosquitto Broker

We often use our ESP32 and ESP8266 boards in our MQTT projects. So, we’ll show you how you can connect the ESP32 board to your Cloud MQTT Broker—it’s the same for an ESP8266 board, just make sure you use the ESP8266 specific functions.

Before proceeding with this tutorial, make sure you complete the following prerequisites.

Arduino IDE

We’ll program theESP32 board using Arduino IDE, so make sure you have the ESP32 add-on installed.

  • Installing the ESP32 Board in Arduino IDE (Windows, Mac OS X, Linux)

MQTT Libraries

To use MQTT with the ESP32 we’ll use theAsync MQTT Client Library.

Installing the Async MQTT Client Library

  1. Click here to download the Async MQTT client library. You should have a .zip folder in your Downloads folder
  2. Go toSketch>Include Library>Add . ZIPlibrary and select the library you’ve just downloaded.

Installing the Async TCP Library

To use MQTT with the ESP, you also need theAsync TCP library.

  1. Click here to download the Async TCP client library. You should have a .zip folder in your Downloads folder
  2. Go toSketch>Include Library>Add . ZIPlibrary and select the library you’ve just downloaded.

ESP32 MQTT Publish Messages to Cloud MQTT Broker

Copy the following code to your Arduino IDE. To make it work for you, you need to insert your network credentials as well as the MQTT broker details (your Digital Ocean Droplet’s IP Address, broker username and password).

/* Rui Santos Complete project details at https://RandomNerdTutorials.com/cloud-mqtt-mosquitto-broker-access-anywhere-digital-ocean/ Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files. The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.*/#include <WiFi.h>extern "C" { #include "freertos/FreeRTOS.h" #include "freertos/timers.h"}#include <AsyncMqttClient.h>#define WIFI_SSID "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_SSID"#define WIFI_PASSWORD "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_PASSWORD"// Digital Ocean MQTT Mosquitto Broker#define MQTT_HOST IPAddress(XXX, XXX, XXX, XXX)// For a cloud MQTT broker, type the domain name//#define MQTT_HOST "example.com"#define MQTT_PORT 1883#define MQTT_USERNAME "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_MQTT_USER"#define MQTT_PASSWORD "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_MQTT_PASSWORD"// Test MQTT Topic#define MQTT_PUB_TEST "test"AsyncMqttClient mqttClient;TimerHandle_t mqttReconnectTimer;TimerHandle_t wifiReconnectTimer;unsigned long previousMillis = 0; // Stores last time temperature was publishedconst long interval = 5000; // Interval at which to publish sensor readingsint i = 0;void connectToWifi() { Serial.println("Connecting to Wi-Fi..."); WiFi.begin(WIFI_SSID, WIFI_PASSWORD);}void connectToMqtt() { Serial.println("Connecting to MQTT..."); mqttClient.connect();}void WiFiEvent(WiFiEvent_t event) { Serial.printf("[WiFi-event] event: %d\n", event); switch(event) { case SYSTEM_EVENT_STA_GOT_IP: Serial.println("WiFi connected"); Serial.println("IP address: "); Serial.println(WiFi.localIP()); connectToMqtt(); break; case SYSTEM_EVENT_STA_DISCONNECTED: Serial.println("WiFi lost connection"); xTimerStop(mqttReconnectTimer, 0); // ensure we don't reconnect to MQTT while reconnecting to Wi-Fi xTimerStart(wifiReconnectTimer, 0); break; }}void onMqttConnect(bool sessionPresent) { Serial.println("Connected to MQTT."); Serial.print("Session present: "); Serial.println(sessionPresent);}void onMqttDisconnect(AsyncMqttClientDisconnectReason reason) { Serial.println("Disconnected from MQTT."); if (WiFi.isConnected()) { xTimerStart(mqttReconnectTimer, 0); }}/*void onMqttSubscribe(uint16_t packetId, uint8_t qos) { Serial.println("Subscribe acknowledged."); Serial.print(" packetId: "); Serial.println(packetId); Serial.print(" qos: "); Serial.println(qos);}void onMqttUnsubscribe(uint16_t packetId) { Serial.println("Unsubscribe acknowledged."); Serial.print(" packetId: "); Serial.println(packetId);}*/void onMqttPublish(uint16_t packetId) { Serial.print("Publish acknowledged."); Serial.print(" packetId: "); Serial.println(packetId);}void setup() { Serial.begin(115200); Serial.println(); mqttReconnectTimer = xTimerCreate("mqttTimer", pdMS_TO_TICKS(2000), pdFALSE, (void*)0, reinterpret_cast<TimerCallbackFunction_t>(connectToMqtt)); wifiReconnectTimer = xTimerCreate("wifiTimer", pdMS_TO_TICKS(2000), pdFALSE, (void*)0, reinterpret_cast<TimerCallbackFunction_t>(connectToWifi)); WiFi.onEvent(WiFiEvent); mqttClient.onConnect(onMqttConnect); mqttClient.onDisconnect(onMqttDisconnect); /*mqttClient.onSubscribe(onMqttSubscribe); mqttClient.onUnsubscribe(onMqttUnsubscribe);*/ mqttClient.onPublish(onMqttPublish); mqttClient.setServer(MQTT_HOST, MQTT_PORT); // If your broker requires authentication (username and password), set them below mqttClient.setCredentials(MQTT_USERNAME, MQTT_PASSWORD); connectToWifi();}void loop() { unsigned long currentMillis = millis(); // Every X number of seconds (interval = 5 seconds) // it publishes a new MQTT message if (currentMillis - previousMillis >= interval) { // Save the last time a new reading was published previousMillis = currentMillis; String testString = "Hello, world! #" + String(i); // Publish an MQTT message on topic test uint16_t packetIdPub1 = mqttClient.publish(MQTT_PUB_TEST, 1, true, String(testString).c_str()); Serial.printf("Publishing on topic %s at QoS 1, packetId: %i", MQTT_PUB_TEST, packetIdPub1); Serial.printf(" Message: %.2f \n", testString); i++; }}

View raw code

Type your network credentials on the following lines.

#define WIFI_SSID "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_SSID"#define WIFI_PASSWORD "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_PASSWORD"

Insert the Digital Ocean Droplet IP address, so that the ESP32 connects to your broker (in my case, it is 178.62.83.231).

#define MQTT_HOST IPAddress(178, 62, 83, 231)

If your broker requires authentication, type your MQTT username and MQTT password.

#define MQTT_USERNAME "YOUR_USER"#define MQTT_PASSWORD "YOUR_PASSWORD"

Testing ESP32 MQTT Publishing Messages

If you have your ESP32 running the uploaded code and you open your Arduino IDE Serial monitor, you’ll see that your ESP32 is publishing new messages every 5 seconds.

Establish an SSH connection with your cloud server (using PuTTY, for example) and type (replace user with your username and pass with your password.):

mosquitto_sub -h localhost -t test -u user -P pass

You should start receiving new MQTT messages published by your ESP32.

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Cloud MQTT Broker Publish Messages to ESP32

The next sketch makes the ESP32 subscribe to a cloud MQTT topic to receive messages. Copy it to your Arduino IDE, then insert your network credentials as well as the MQTT broker details (your Digital Ocean Droplet’s IP Address and the broker username and password).

/* Rui Santos Complete project details at https://RandomNerdTutorials.com/cloud-mqtt-mosquitto-broker-access-anywhere-digital-ocean/ Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files. The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.*/#include <WiFi.h>extern "C" { #include "freertos/FreeRTOS.h" #include "freertos/timers.h"}#include <AsyncMqttClient.h>#define WIFI_SSID "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_SSID"#define WIFI_PASSWORD "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_PASSWORD"// Digital Ocean MQTT Mosquitto Broker#define MQTT_HOST IPAddress(XXX, XXX, XXX, XXX)// For a cloud MQTT broker, type the domain name//#define MQTT_HOST "example.com"#define MQTT_PORT 1883#define MQTT_USERNAME "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_MQTT_USER"#define MQTT_PASSWORD "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_MQTT_PASSWORD"// Test MQTT Topic#define MQTT_SUB_TEST "test"AsyncMqttClient mqttClient;TimerHandle_t mqttReconnectTimer;TimerHandle_t wifiReconnectTimer;unsigned long previousMillis = 0; // Stores last time temperature was publishedconst long interval = 5000; // Interval at which to publish sensor readingsint i = 0;void connectToWifi() { Serial.println("Connecting to Wi-Fi..."); WiFi.begin(WIFI_SSID, WIFI_PASSWORD);}void connectToMqtt() { Serial.println("Connecting to MQTT..."); mqttClient.connect();}void WiFiEvent(WiFiEvent_t event) { Serial.printf("[WiFi-event] event: %d\n", event); switch(event) { case SYSTEM_EVENT_STA_GOT_IP: Serial.println("WiFi connected"); Serial.println("IP address: "); Serial.println(WiFi.localIP()); connectToMqtt(); break; case SYSTEM_EVENT_STA_DISCONNECTED: Serial.println("WiFi lost connection"); xTimerStop(mqttReconnectTimer, 0); // ensure we don't reconnect to MQTT while reconnecting to Wi-Fi xTimerStart(wifiReconnectTimer, 0); break; }}// Add more topics that want your ESP to be subscribed tovoid onMqttConnect(bool sessionPresent) { Serial.println("Connected to MQTT."); Serial.print("Session present: "); Serial.println(sessionPresent); // ESP subscribed to test topic uint16_t packetIdSub = mqttClient.subscribe(MQTT_SUB_TEST, 0); Serial.println("Subscribing at QoS 0");}void onMqttDisconnect(AsyncMqttClientDisconnectReason reason) { Serial.println("Disconnected from MQTT."); if (WiFi.isConnected()) { xTimerStart(mqttReconnectTimer, 0); }}void onMqttSubscribe(uint16_t packetId, uint8_t qos) { Serial.println("Subscribe acknowledged."); Serial.print(" packetId: "); Serial.println(packetId); Serial.print(" qos: "); Serial.println(qos);}void onMqttUnsubscribe(uint16_t packetId) { Serial.println("Unsubscribe acknowledged."); Serial.print(" packetId: "); Serial.println(packetId);}// You can modify this function to handle what happens when you receive a certain message in a specific topicvoid onMqttMessage(char* topic, char* payload, AsyncMqttClientMessageProperties properties, size_t len, size_t index, size_t total) { String messageTemp; for (int i = 0; i < len; i++) { //Serial.print((char)payload[i]); messageTemp += (char)payload[i]; } // Check if the MQTT message was received on topic test if (strcmp(topic, MQTT_SUB_TEST) == 0) { Serial.println("TRUE"); } Serial.println("Publish received."); Serial.print(" message: "); Serial.println(messageTemp); Serial.print(" topic: "); Serial.println(topic); Serial.print(" qos: "); Serial.println(properties.qos); Serial.print(" dup: "); Serial.println(properties.dup); Serial.print(" retain: "); Serial.println(properties.retain); Serial.print(" len: "); Serial.println(len); Serial.print(" index: "); Serial.println(index); Serial.print(" total: "); Serial.println(total);}/*void onMqttPublish(uint16_t packetId) { Serial.print("Publish acknowledged."); Serial.print(" packetId: "); Serial.println(packetId);}*/void setup() { Serial.begin(115200); Serial.println(); mqttReconnectTimer = xTimerCreate("mqttTimer", pdMS_TO_TICKS(2000), pdFALSE, (void*)0, reinterpret_cast<TimerCallbackFunction_t>(connectToMqtt)); wifiReconnectTimer = xTimerCreate("wifiTimer", pdMS_TO_TICKS(2000), pdFALSE, (void*)0, reinterpret_cast<TimerCallbackFunction_t>(connectToWifi)); WiFi.onEvent(WiFiEvent); mqttClient.onConnect(onMqttConnect); mqttClient.onDisconnect(onMqttDisconnect); mqttClient.onSubscribe(onMqttSubscribe); mqttClient.onUnsubscribe(onMqttUnsubscribe); //mqttClient.onPublish(onMqttPublish); mqttClient.onMessage(onMqttMessage); mqttClient.setServer(MQTT_HOST, MQTT_PORT); // If your broker requires authentication (username and password), set them below mqttClient.setCredentials(MQTT_USERNAME, MQTT_PASSWORD); connectToWifi();}void loop() { }

View raw code

Type your network credentials on the following lines.

#define WIFI_SSID "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_SSID"#define WIFI_PASSWORD "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_PASSWORD"

Insert the Digital Ocean Droplet IP address, so that the ESP32 connects to your broker (in my case, it is 178.62.83.231).

#define MQTT_HOST IPAddress(178, 62, 83, 231)

If your broker requires authentication, type your MQTT username and MQTT password.

#define MQTT_USERNAME "YOUR_USER"#define MQTT_PASSWORD "YOUR_PASSWORD"

Testing ESP32 Subscribe to MQTT Topic

To test if your ESP32 is receiving MQTT messages, in your Digital Ocean console start publishing different messages (for example “Hi #1!“, “Hi #2!“, etc). Replace user with your username and pass with your password.

mosquitto_pub -h localhost -t test -m "Hi #1!" -u user -P passmosquitto_pub -h localhost -t test -m "Hi #2!" -u user -P passmosquitto_pub -h localhost -t test -m "Hi #3!" -u user -P pass
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Your ESP32 should receive each message and print it in the Serial Monitor, as shown in the image below.

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In these quick examples, we’ve shown you how to publish and subscribe MQTT messages using the Cloud MQTT broker. The idea is to use several ESP32 or ESP8266 boards that publish and subscribe to the same topics to communicate with each other and/or use Node-RED on the cloud to interact with those boards.

(Optional) Taking It Further – MQTT Mosquitto Broker Encrypted Requests

The best method to add an SSL certificate to your server is by having a domain name pointed at your server and using Let’s Encrypt certificates.

Having a domain name and Let’s Encrypt SSL Certificates ready, follow the next instructions to secure your Mosquitto broker.

To enable SSL encryption, we need to tell Mosquitto where our Let’s Encrypt certificates are stored. Open up the configuration file we previously started:

sudo nano /etc/mosquitto/mosquitto.conf

Add the next lines to make your default.conf add the Let’s Encrypt certificates.

allow_anonymous falsepassword_file /etc/mosquitto/passwdlistener 1883 localhostlistener 8883certfile /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/cert.pemcafile /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/chain.pemkeyfile /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/privkey.pem

Listener 1883 is the standard unencrypted MQTT port. The localhost instructs Mosquitto to only bind this port to the localhost interface, so it’s not longer accessible externally.

On the other hand, listener 8883 sets up an encrypted listener on port 8883. The next three lines point Mosquitto to the appropriate Let’s Encrypt files to set up the encrypted connections.

Save and exit the file (Ctrl+X, Y, Enter key), then restart Mosquitto to update the settings:

sudo systemctl restart mosquitto

Update the firewall to allow connections to port 8883.

sudo ufw allow 8883

Now, you subscribe to the test MQTT topic in the encrypted port (8883). Don’t forget to replace example.com with your domain name in the subscribe and publish commands.

mosquitto_sub -h example.com -t test -p 8883 --capath /etc/ssl/certs/ -u user -P pass

You can publish encrypted messages:

mosquitto_pub -h example.com -t test -m "Secure message" -p 8883 --capath /etc/ssl/certs/ -u user -P pass

With this setup, you’ll need to prepare your ESP32/ESP8266 to make encrypted MQTT requests on port 8883.

Wrapping Up

This complete guide was tested and it should work. There are many steps and they must be followed exactly as we describe in the right order. Otherwise, something might not work properly.

In all our guides and projects we always try to help if anyone gets stuck. However, in this particular case, there are so many steps that it can be tough to help you without having access to the server and testing it (of course, we don’t have the resources to help everyone personally).

If you have any problem installing Mosquitto MQTT broker, preparing your Linux Ubuntu server, running Node-RED, or installing an SSL certificate, contact Digital Ocean support and describe exactly what’s happening. I’ve been using their service since 2015 and they always have an extremely helpful support team (or just use their Forum).

Now, if you want to install Node-RED on Digital Ocean, follow the next tutorial: Access Node-RED Dashboard from Anywhere using Digital Ocean.

If you like this type of project, make sure you take a look at our SMART HOME course, where you’ll learn how to setup a home automation system using MQTT, Node-RED, InfluxDB, and much more:

  • SMART HOME with Raspberry Pi, ESP32, and ESP8266

Read the next guides to learn more about MQTT:

  • What is MQTT and How It Works
  • ESP32 MQTT – Publish and Subscribe with Arduino IDE
  • ESP32 MQTT – Publish BME280 Sensor Readings (Arduino IDE)

Thanks for reading.

Cloud MQTT Mosquitto Broker - Access Anywhere Digital Ocean | Random Nerd Tutorials (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between MQTT and MQTT broker? ›

MQTT is a lightweight protocol that supports the Internet of Things (IoT). An MQTT broker is an intermediary entity that enables MQTT clients to communicate.

Is MQTT and Mosquitto the same? ›

Eclipse Mosquitto is an open-source MQTT broker that uses the MQTT (Message Queuing Telemetry Transport) protocol.

What is the difference between MQTT bridge and MQTT broker? ›

An MQTT bridge lets you connect two MQTT brokers together. They are generally used for sharing messages between systems. A common usage is to connect and edge MQTT brokers to a central or remote MQTT network. A Mosquitto broker (server) can be configured to work as an MQTT bridge.

What is a cloud MQTT broker? ›

The MQTT broker is the backend system which coordinates messages between the different clients. Responsibilities of the broker include receiving and filtering messages, identifying clients subscribed to each message, and sending them the messages.

Why not to use MQTT? ›

Another disadvantage of MQTT is that it has limited features and standardization. The protocol is designed to be simple and lightweight, which means that it does not support some advanced features that may be useful for some IoT applications, such as message acknowledgement, message ordering, or message expiration.

Is MQTT still being used? ›

MQTT protocol is widely used in IoT, Mobile Internet, Smart Hardware, Internet of Vehicles, Smart Cities, Telemedicine, Power, Oil, Energy, and other fields. MQTT was created by Andy Stanford-Clark of IBM, and Arlen Nipper (then of Arcom Systems, later CTO of Eurotech).

Is MQTT over wifi? ›

Message Queuing Telemetry Transport (MQTT)

It is particularly useful for devices with low-bandwidth, where we can send commands, sensor values or messages over the Internet with little effort. A basic explanation on how it works is that a node, for example and Arduino with a Wi-Fi module, sends a payload to a broker.

What language is MQTT written in? ›

MQTT is just a protocol and can be written in many languages. However, MQTT client libraries—which are used to communicate using the MQTT protocol—are available in multiple languages such as C/C++, Java, Python, and JavaScript—including Node.

Why use MQTT instead of HTTP? ›

Understanding the Differences Between MQTT and HTTP

They both run over TCP connections, and are both client-server in architecture, but MQTT allows messages to pass in both directions between clients and servers whereas HTTP servers only respond to requests from clients.

What is the fastest MQTT broker? ›

NanoMQ. NanoMQ, an open-source project released in 2020, is a lightweight and fast MQTT messaging broker designed for edge computing scenarios in the Internet of Things (IoT). NanoMQ is implemented in purely C, based on NNG's asynchronous I/O with a multi-threading Actor Model.

What is the best managed MQTT broker? ›

Best MQTT Brokers of 2024
  1. Open Automation Software. Open Automation Software. $495 one-time payment. ...
  2. Redis. Redis Labs. Free. ...
  3. Coreflux. Coreflux. €0. ...
  4. RabbitMQ. RabbitMQ. Free. ...
  5. EMQX. EMQ Technologies. $0.18 per hour. ...
  6. Pro Edition for Eclipse Mosquitto. Cedalo. €23 per month. ...
  7. Solace PubSub+ Solace. ...
  8. HiveMQ. HiveMQ.

What is Mosquitto used for? ›

Mosquitto is an open source MQTT message broker service. It uses MQTT protocol for device to communicate by sending and receiving messages. Among the message brokers that support MQTT, Mosquitto is a small and light weight implementation of MQTT v3.

What is the main purpose of MQTT? ›

MQTT stands for Message Queuing Telemetry Transport. It is a lightweight messaging protocol for use in cases where clients need a small code footprint and are connected to unreliable networks or networks with limited bandwidth resources.

How safe is MQTT? ›

An article from Avast explains that as a protocol, MQTT is secure; it's the way that it is implemented and configured that can cause issues. In some ways, this is the same as in any IT environment: if the configuration is insecure, then the entire environment is compromised.

What is a cloud broker example? ›

Best Cloud Brokers include:

Pax8, AppDirect Monetization Suite, interworks. cloud platform, IBM Cloud Broker, CIGNEX Mercado Enterprise Marketplace, AWS Service Catalog, AWS Service Broker, Azure Managed Applications, Jamcracker Cloud Services Brokerage (CSB) and CSP Control Center.

What does MQTT broker stand for? ›

What does MQTT stand for? MQTT stands for Message Queuing Telemetry Transport. It is an extremely simple and lightweight messaging protocol (subscribe and publish) designed for limited devices and networks with high latency, low bandwidth or unreliable networks.

What are the different types of MQTT? ›

The three main types of MQTT messages are CONNECT, PUBLISH and SUBSCRIBE.

Is MQTT broker the same as server? ›

Now, let's unveil the truth: there's basically no difference between an MQTT server and an MQTT broker. They're like Tweedledum and Tweedledee, two peas in a pod, or perhaps more accurately, two message-forwarding ninjas in the digital shadows.

What is the difference between MQTT broker and REST API? ›

4) MQTT communication is bidirectional, while HTTP REST API is unidirectional. After establishing a connection with the broker, a client can send and receive data in MQTT. In an HTTP REST API call, only the client sends a request to exchange data.

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