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1title: Simple IOT application supported by real-time monitoring and data history
2date: 2017-08-11
3tags: experiment
4hide: false
5----
6
7## Initial thoughts
8
9I have been developing these kind of application for the better part of my last 5 years and people keep asking me how to approach developing such application and I will give a try explaining it here.
10
11IOT applications are really no different than any other kind of applications. We have data that needs to be collected and visualized in some form of tables or charts. The main difference here is that most of the times these data is collected by some kind of device foreign to developer that mainly operates in web domain. But fear not, it's not that different than writing some JavaScript.
12
13There are many devices able to transmit data via wireless or wired network by default but for the sake of example we will be using commonly known Arduino with wireless module already on the board → [Arduino MKR1000](https://store.arduino.cc/arduino-mkr1000).
14
15In order to make this little project as accessible to others as possible I will try to make it as inexpensive as possible. And by this I mean that I will avoid using hosted virtual servers and will be using my own laptop as a server. But you must buy Arduino MKR1000 to follow steps below. But if you would want to deploy this software I would suggest using [DigitalOcean](https://www.digitalocean.com) → smallest VPS is only per month making this one of the most affordable option out there. Please notice that this software will not run on stock web hosting that only supports LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, and PHP).
16
17_But before we begin please take notice that this is strictly experimental code and not well optimized and there are much better ways in handling some aspects of the application but that requires much deeper knowledge of technology that is not needed for an example like this._
18
19**Development steps**
20
211. Simple Python API that will receive and store incoming data.
222. Prototype C++ code that will read "sensor data" and transmit it to API.
233. Data visualization with charts → extends Python web application.
24
25Step 1. and 3. will share the same web application. One route will be dedicated to API and another to serving HTML with chart.
26
27Schema below represents what we will try to achieve and how different parts correlates to each other.
28
29![Overview](/files/iot-application/simple-iot-application-overview.svg)
30
31## Simple Python API
32
33I have always been a fan of simplicity so we will be using [Bottle: Python Web Framework](https://bottlepy.org/docs/dev/). It is a single file web framework that seriously simplifies working with routes, templating and has built-in web server that satisfies our need in this case.
34
35First we need to install bottle package. This can be done by downloading ```bottle.py``` and placing it in the root of your application or by using pip software ```pip install bottle --user```.
36
37If you are using Linux or MacOS then Python is already installed. If you will try to test this on Windows please install [Python for Windows](https://www.python.org/downloads/windows/). There may be some problems with path when you will try to launch ```python webapp.py``` so please take care of this before you continue.
38
39### Basic web application
40
41Most basic bottle application is quite simple. Paste code below in ```webapp.py``` file and save.
42
43```python
44# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
45
46import bottle
47
48# initializing bottle app
49app = bottle.Bottle()
50
51# triggered when / is accessed from browser
52# only accepts GET → no POST allowed
53@app.route("/", method=["GET"])
54def route_default():
55 return "howdy from python"
56
57# starting server on http://0.0.0.0:5000
58if __name__ == "__main__":
59 bottle.run(
60 app = app,
61 host = "0.0.0.0",
62 port = 5000,
63 debug = True,
64 reloader = True,
65 catchall = True,
66 )
67```
68
69To run this simple application you should open command prompt or terminal on your machine and go to the folder containing your file and type ```python webapp.py```. If everything goes ok then open your web browser and point it to ```http://0.0.0.0:5000```.
70
71If you would like change the port of your application (like port 80) and not use root to run your app this will present a problem. The TCP/IP port numbers below 1024 are privileged ports → this is a security feature. So in order of simplicity and security use a port number above 1024 like I have used port 5000.
72
73If this fails at any time please fix it before you continue, because nothing below will work otherwise.
74
75We use 0.0.0.0 as default host so that this app is available over your local network. If you find your local ip ```ifconfig``` and try accessing this site with your phone (if on same network/router as your machine) this should work as well (example of such ip ```http://192.168.1.15:5000```). This is a must have because Arduino will be accessing this application to send it's data.
76
77### Web application security
78
79There is a lot to be said about security and is a topic of many books. Of course all this can not be written here but to just establish some basic security → you should always use SSL with your application. Some fantastic free certificates are available by [Let's Encrypt - Free SSL/TLS Certificates](https://letsencrypt.org). With SSL certificate installed you should then make use of HTTP headers and send your "API key" via a header. If your key is send via header then this key is encrypted by SSL and send encrypted over the network. Never send your api keys by GET parameter like ```http://example.com/?api_key=somekeyvalue```. The problem that this kind of sending presents is that this key is visible in logs and by network sniffers.
80
81There is a fantastic article describing some aspects about security: [11 Web Application Security Best Practices](https://www.keycdn.com/blog/web-application-security-best-practices/). Please check it out.
82
83### Simple API for writing data-points
84
85We will now be using boilerplate code from example above and extend it to be able to write data received by API to local storage. For example use I will use SQLite3 because it plays well with Python and can store quite large amount of data. I have been using it to collect gigabytes of data in a single database without any corruption or problems → your experience may vary.
86
87To avoid learning SQLite I will be using [Dataset: databases for lazy people](https://dataset.readthedocs.io/en/latest/index.html). This package abstracts SQL and simplifies writing and reading data from database. You should install this package with pip software ```pip install dataset --user```.
88
89Because API will use POST method I will be testing if code works correctly by using [Restlet Client for Google Chrome](https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/restlet-client-rest-api-t/aejoelaoggembcahagimdiliamlcdmfm). This software also allows you to set headers → for basic security with API_KEY.
90
91To quickly generate passwords or API keys I usually use this nifty website [RandomKeygen](https://randomkeygen.com/).
92
93Copy and paste code below over your previous code in file ```webapp.py```.
94
95```python
96# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
97
98import time
99import bottle
100import random
101import dataset
102
103# initializing bottle app
104app = bottle.Bottle()
105
106# connects to sqlite database
107# check_same_thread=False allows using it in multi-threaded mode
108app.config["dsn"] = dataset.connect("sqlite:///data.db?check_same_thread=False")
109
110# api key that will be used in Arduino code
111app.config["api_key"] = "JtF2aUE5SGHfVJBCG5SH"
112
113# triggered when /api is accessed from browser
114# only accepts POST → no GET allowed
115@app.route("/api", method=["POST"])
116def route_default():
117 status = 400
118 ts = int(time.time()) # current timestamp
119 value = bottle.request.body.read() # data from device
120 api_key = bottle.request.get_header("Api_Key") # api key from header
121
122 # outputs to console received data for debug reason
123 print ">>> {} :: {}".format(value, api_key)
124
125 # if api_key is correct and value is present
126 # then writes attribute to point table
127 if api_key == app.config["api_key"] and value:
128 app.config["dsn"]["point"].insert(dict(ts=ts, value=value))
129 status = 200
130
131 # we only need to return status
132 return bottle.HTTPResponse(status=status, body="")
133
134# starting server on http://0.0.0.0:5000
135if __name__ == "__main__":
136 bottle.run(
137 app = app,
138 host = "0.0.0.0",
139 port = 5000,
140 debug = True,
141 reloader = True,
142 catchall = True,
143 )
144```
145
146To run this simply go to folder containing python file and run ```python webapp.py``` from terminal. If everything goes ok you should have simple API available via POST method on /api route.
147
148After testing the service with Restlet Client you should be able to view your data in a database file ```data.db```.
149
150![REST settings example](/files/iot-application/iot-rest-example.png)
151
152You can also check the contents of new database file by using desktop client for SQLite → [DB Browser for SQLite](http://sqlitebrowser.org/).
153
154![SQLite database example](/files/iot-application/iot-sqlite-db.png)
155
156Table structure is as simple as it can be. We have ts (timestamp) and value (value from Arduino). As you can see timestamp is generated on API side. If you would happen to have atomic clock on Arduino it would be then better to generate and send timestamp with the value. This would be particularity useful if we would be collecting sensor data at a higher frequency and then sending this data in bulk to API.
157
158If you will deploy this app with uWSGI and multi-threaded, use DSN (Data Source Name) url with ```?check_same_thread=False```.
159
160Ok, now that we have some sort of a working API with some basic security so unwanted people can not post data to your database can we proceed further and try to program Arduino to send data to API.
161
162## Sending data to API with Arduino MKR1000
163
164First of all you should have MKR1000 module and microUSB cable to proceed. If you have ever done any work with Arduino you should know that you also need [Arduino IDE](https://www.arduino.cc/en/Main/Software). On provided link you should be able to download and install IDE. Once that task is completed and you have successfully run blink example you should proceed to the next step.
165
166In order to use wireless capabilities of MKR1000 you need to first install [WiFi101 library](https://www.arduino.cc/en/Reference/WiFi101) in Arduino IDE. Please check before you install, you may already have it installed.
167
168Code below is a working example that sends data to API. Before you try to test your code make sure you have run Python web application. Then change settings for wifi, api endpoint and api_key. If by some reason code bellow doesn't work for you please leave a comment and I'll try to help.
169
170Once you have opened IDE and copied this code try to compile and upload it. Then open "Serial monitor" to see if any output is presented by Arduino.
171
172```c
173#include <WiFi101.h>
174
175// wifi settings
176char ssid[] = "ssid-name";
177char pass[] = "ssid-password";
178
179// api server enpoint
180char server[] = "192.168.6.22";
181int port = 5000;
182
183// api key that must be the same as the one in Python code
184String api_key = "JtF2aUE5SGHfVJBCG5SH";
185
186// frequency data is sent in ms - every 5 seconds
187int timeout = 1000 * 5;
188
189int status = WL_IDLE_STATUS;
190
191void setup() {
192
193 // initialize serial and wait for port to open:
194 Serial.begin(9600);
195 delay(1000);
196
197 // check for the presence of the shield
198 if (WiFi.status() == WL_NO_SHIELD) {
199 Serial.println("WiFi shield not present");
200 while (true);
201 }
202
203 // attempt to connect to wifi network
204 while (status != WL_CONNECTED) {
205 Serial.print("Attempting to connect to SSID: ");
206 Serial.println(ssid);
207 status = WiFi.begin(ssid, pass);
208 // wait 10 seconds for connection
209 delay(10000);
210 }
211
212 // output wifi status to serial monitor
213 Serial.print("SSID: ");
214 Serial.println(WiFi.SSID());
215
216 IPAddress ip = WiFi.localIP();
217 Serial.print("IP Address: ");
218 Serial.println(ip);
219
220 long rssi = WiFi.RSSI();
221 Serial.print("signal strength (RSSI):");
222 Serial.print(rssi);
223 Serial.println(" dBm");
224}
225
226void loop() {
227
228 WiFiClient client;
229
230 if (client.connect(server, port)) {
231
232 // I use random number generator for this example
233 // but you can use analog or digital inputs from arduino
234 String content = String(random(1000));
235
236 client.println("POST /api HTTP/1.1");
237 client.println("Connection: close");
238 client.println("Api-Key: " + api_key);
239 client.println("Content-Length: " + String(content.length()));
240 client.println();
241 client.println(content);
242
243 delay(100);
244 client.stop();
245 Serial.println("Data sent successfully ...");
246
247 } else {
248 Serial.println("Problem sending data ...");
249 }
250
251 // waits for x seconds and continue looping
252 delay(timeout);
253
254}
255```
256
257As seen from example you can notice that Arduino is generating random integer between [ 0 .. 1000 ]. You can easily replace this with a temperature sensor or any other kind of sensor.
258
259Now that we have API under the hood and Arduino is sending demo data we can now focus on data visualization.
260
261## Data visualization
262
263Before we continue we should examine our project folder structure. Currently we only have two files in our project:
264
265_simple-iot-app/_
266
267* _webapp.py_
268* _data.db_
269
270We will now add HTML template that will contain CSS and JavaScript code inline for the simplicity reason. And for the bottle framework to be able to scan root application folder for templates we will add ```bottle.TEMPLATE_PATH.insert(0, "./")``` in ```webapp.py```. By default bottle framework uses ```views/``` subfolder to store templates. This is not the ideal situation and if you will use bottle to develop web applications you should use native behavior and store templates in it's predefined folder. But for the sake of example we will over-ride this. Be careful to fully replace your code with new code that is provided below. Avoid partially replacing code in file :) Also new code for reading data-points is provided in Python example below.
271
272First we add new route to our web application. It should be trigger when browser hits root of application ```http://0.0.0.0:5000/```. This route will do nothing more than render ```frontend.html``` template. This is done by ```return bottle.template("frontend.html")```. Check code below to further examine how exactly this is done.
273
274Now we will expand ```/api``` route and use different methods to write or read data-points. For writing data-point we will use POST method and for reading points we will use GET method. GET method will return JSON object with latest readings and historical data.
275
276There is a fantastic JavaScript library for plotting time-series charts called [MetricsGraphics.js](https://www.metricsgraphicsjs.org) that is based on [D3.js](https://d3js.org/) library for visualizing data.
277
278Data schema required by MetricsGraphics.js → to achieve this we need to transform data from database into this format:
279
280```json
281[
282 {
283 "date": "2017-08-11 01:07:20",
284 "value": 933
285 },
286 {
287 "date": "2017-08-11 01:07:30",
288 "value": 743
289 }
290]
291```
292
293Web application is now complete and we only need ```frontend.html``` that we will develop now. If you would try to start web app now and go to root app this will return error because we don't have frontend.html yet.
294
295```python
296# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
297
298import time
299import bottle
300import json
301import datetime
302import random
303import dataset
304
305# initializing bottle app
306app = bottle.Bottle()
307
308# adds root directory as template folder
309bottle.TEMPLATE_PATH.insert(0, "./")
310
311# connects to sqlite database
312# check_same_thread=False allows using it in multi-threaded mode
313app.config["db"] = dataset.connect("sqlite:///data.db?check_same_thread=False")
314
315# api key that will be used in Arduino code
316app.config["api_key"] = "JtF2aUE5SGHfVJBCG5SH"
317
318# triggered when / is accessed from browser
319# only accepts GET → no POST allowed
320@app.route("/", method=["GET"])
321def route_default():
322 return bottle.template("frontend.html")
323
324# triggered when /api is accessed from browser
325# accepts POST and GET
326@app.route("/api", method=["GET", "POST"])
327def route_default():
328
329 # if method is POST then we write datapoint
330 if bottle.request.method == "POST":
331 status = 400
332 ts = int(time.time()) # current timestamp
333 value = bottle.request.body.read() # data from device
334 api_key = bottle.request.get_header("Api-Key") # api key from header
335
336 # outputs to console recieved data for debug reason
337 print ">>> {} :: {}".format(value, api_key)
338
339 # if api_key is correct and value is present
340 # then writes attribute to point table
341 if api_key == app.config["api_key"] and value:
342 app.config["db"]["point"].insert(dict(ts=ts, value=value))
343 status = 200
344
345 # we only need to return status
346 return bottle.HTTPResponse(status=status, body="")
347
348 # if method is GET then we read datapoint
349 else:
350 response = []
351 datapoints = app.config["db"]["point"].all()
352
353 for point in datapoints:
354 response.append({
355 "date": datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(int(point["ts"])).strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"),
356 "value": point["value"]
357 })
358
359 bottle.response.content_type = "application/json"
360 return json.dumps(response)
361
362# starting server on http://0.0.0.0:5000
363if __name__ == "__main__":
364 bottle.run(
365 app = app,
366 host = "0.0.0.0",
367 port = 5000,
368 debug = True,
369 reloader = True,
370 catchall = True,
371 )
372```
373
374And now finally we can implement ```frontend.html```. Create file with this name and copy code below. When you are done you can start web application. Steps for this part are listed below the code.
375
376```html
377<!DOCTYPE html>
378<html>
379
380 <head>
381 <meta charset="utf-8">
382 <title>Simple IOT application</title>
383 </head>
384
385 <body>
386
387 <h1>Simple IOT application</h1>
388
389 <div class="chart-placeholder">
390 <div id="chart"></div>
391 </div>
392
393 <!-- application main script -->
394 <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.2.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
395 <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/d3/4.10.0/d3.min.js"></script>
396 <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/metrics-graphics/2.11.0/metricsgraphics.min.js"></script>
397 <script>
398 function fetch_and_render() {
399 d3.json("/api", function(data) {
400 data = MG.convert.date(data, "date", "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S");
401 MG.data_graphic({
402 data: data,
403 chart_type: "line",
404 full_width: true,
405 height: 270,
406 target: document.getElementById("chart"),
407 x_accessor: "date",
408 y_accessor: "value"
409 });
410 });
411 }
412 window.onload = function() {
413 // initial call for rendering
414 fetch_and_render();
415
416 // updates chart every 5 seconds
417 setInterval(function() {
418 fetch_and_render();
419 }, 5000);
420 }
421 </script>
422
423 <!-- application styles -->
424 <style>
425 body {
426 font: 13px sans-serif;
427 padding: 20px 50px;
428 }
429 .chart-placeholder {
430 border: 2px solid #ccc;
431 width: 100%;
432 user-select: none;
433 }
434 /* chart styles */
435 .mg-line1-color {
436 stroke: red;
437 stroke-width: 2;
438 }
439 .mg-main-area, .mg-main-line {
440 fill: #fff;
441 }
442 .mg-x-axis line, .mg-y-axis line {
443 stroke: #b3b2b2;
444 stroke-width: 1px;
445 }
446 </style>
447
448 </body>
449
450</html>
451```
452
453Now the folder structure should look like:
454
455_simple-iot-app/_
456
457* _webapp.py_
458* _data.db_
459* _frontend.html_
460
461Ok, lets now start application and start feeding it data.
462
4631. ```python webapp.py```
4642. connect Arduino MKR1000 to power source
4653. open browser and go to ```http://0.0.0.0:5000```
466
467If everything goes well you should be seeing new data-points rendered on chart every 5 seconds.
468
469If you navigate to ```http://0.0.0.0:5000``` you should see rendered chart as shown on picture below.
470
471![Application output](/files/iot-application/iot-app-output.png)
472
473Complete application with all the code is available for [download](/files/iot-application/simple-iot-application.zip).
474
475## Conclusion
476
477I hope this clarifies some aspects of IOT application development. Of course this is a minimal example and is far from what can be done in real life with some further dive into other technologies.
478
479If you would like to continue exploring IOT world here are some interesting resources for you to examine:
480
481* [Reading Sensors with an Arduino](https://www.allaboutcircuits.com/projects/reading-sensors-with-an-arduino/)
482* [MQTT 101 – How to Get Started with the lightweight IoT Protocol](http://www.hivemq.com/blog/how-to-get-started-with-mqtt)
483* [Stream Updates with Server-Sent Events](https://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/eventsource/basics/)
484* [Internet of Things (IoT) Tutorials](http://www.tutorialspoint.com/internet_of_things/)
485
486Any comment or additional ideas are welcomed in comments below.