Provisioning is a process of configuration of an IoT platform in which system operator creates and sets-up different entities used in the platform - users, channels and things.

Users management#

Account creation#

Use the Mainflux API to create user account:

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" https://localhost/users -d '{"email":"john.doe@email.com", "password":"123"}'

Note that when using official docker-compose, all services are behind nginx proxy and all traffic is TLS encrypted.

Obtaining an authorization key#

In order for this user to be able to authenticate to the system, you will have to create an authorization token for him:

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" https://localhost/tokens -d '{"email":"john.doe@email.com", "password":"123"}'

Response should look like this:

{
      "token": "eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJleHAiOjE1MjMzODg0NzcsImlhdCI6MTUyMzM1MjQ3NywiaXNzIjoibWFpbmZsdXgiLCJzdWIiOiJqb2huLmRvZUBlbWFpbC5jb20ifQ.cygz9zoqD7Rd8f88hpQNilTCAS1DrLLgLg4PRcH-iAI"
}

System provisioning#

Before proceeding, make sure that you have created a new account, and obtained an authorization key.

Provisioning things#

Things are provisioned by executing request POST /things with a JSON payload. Note that you will also need user_auth_token in order to provision things that belong to this particular user.

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -H "Authorization: <user_auth_token>" https://localhost/things -d '{"name":"weio"}'

Response will contain Location header whose value represents path to newly created thing:

HTTP/1.1 201 Created
Content-Type: application/json
Location: /things/81380742-7116-4f6f-9800-14fe464f6773
Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2018 10:02:59 GMT
Content-Length: 0

Retrieving provisioned things#

In order to retrieve data of provisioned things that is written in database, you can send following request:

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -H "Authorization: <user_auth_token>" https://localhost/things

Notice that you will receive only those things that were provisioned by user_auth_token owner.

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2018 10:50:12 GMT
Content-Length: 1105

{
  "total": 2,
  "offset": 0,
  "limit": 10,
  "things": [
    {
      "id": "81380742-7116-4f6f-9800-14fe464f6773",
      "name": "weio",
      "key": "7aa91f7a-cbea-4fed-b427-07e029577590"
    },
    {
      "id": "cb63f852-2d48-44f0-a0cf-e450496c6c92",
      "name": "myapp",
      "key": "cbf02d60-72f2-4180-9f82-2c957db929d1"
    }
  ]
}

You can specify offset and limit parameters in order to fetch specific group of things. In that case, your request should look like:

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -H "Authorization: <user_auth_token>" https://localhost/things?offset=0&limit=5

If you don't provide them, default values will be used instead: 0 for offset, and 10 for limit. Note that limit cannot be set to values greater than 100. Providing invalid values will be considered malformed request.

Removing things#

In order to remove you own thing you can send following request:

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -X DELETE -H "Authorization: <user_auth_token>" https://localhost/things/<thing_id>

Provisioning channels#

Channels are provisioned by executing request POST /channels:

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -H "Authorization: <user_auth_token>" https://localhost/channels -d '{"name":"mychan"}'

After sending request you should receive response with Location header that contains path to newly created channel:

HTTP/1.1 201 Created
Content-Type: application/json
Location: /channels/19daa7a8-a489-4571-8714-ef1a214ed914
Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2018 11:30:07 GMT
Content-Length: 0

Retrieving provisioned channels#

To retreve provisioned channels you should send request to /channels with authorization token in Authorization header:

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -H "Authorization: <user_auth_token>" https://localhost/channels

Note that you will receive only those channels that were created by authorization token's owner.

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2018 11:38:06 GMT
Content-Length: 139

{
  "total": 1,
  "offset": 0,
  "limit": 10,
  "channels": [
    {
      "id": "19daa7a8-a489-4571-8714-ef1a214ed914",
      "name": "mychan"
    }
  ]
}

You can specify offset and limit parameters in order to fetch specific group of channels. In that case, your request should look like:

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -H "Authorization: <user_auth_token>" https://localhost/channels?offset=0&limit=5

If you don't provide them, default values will be used instead: 0 for offset, and 10 for limit. Note that limit cannot be set to values greater than 100. Providing invalid values will be considered malformed request.

Removing channels#

In order to remove specific channel you should send following request:

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -X DELETE -H "Authorization: <user_auth_token>" https://localhost/channels/<channel_id>

Access control#

Channel can be observed as a communication group of things. Only things that are connected to the channel can send and receive messages from other things in this channel. things that are not connected to this channel are not allowed to communicate over it.

Only user, who is the owner of a channel and of the things, can connect the things to the channel (which is equivalent of giving permissions to these things to communicate over given communication group).

To connect thing to the channel you should send following request:

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -X PUT -H "Authorization: <user_auth_token>" https://localhost/channels/<channel_id>/things/<thing_id>

You can observe which things are connected to specific channel:

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -H "Authorization: <user_auth_token>" https://localhost/channels/<channel_id>/things

Response that you'll get should look like this:

{
  "total": 2,
  "offset": 0,
  "limit": 10,
  "things": [
    {
      "id": "3ffb3880-d1e6-4edd-acd9-4294d013f35b",
      "name": "d0",
      "key": "b1996995-237a-4552-94b2-83ec2e92a040",
      "metadata": "{}"
    },
    {
      "id": "94d166d6-6477-43dc-93b7-5c3707dbef1e",
      "name": "d1",
      "key": "e4588a68-6028-4740-9f12-c356796aebe8",
      "metadata": "{}"
    }
  ]
}

You can also observe to which channels is specified thing connected:

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -H "Authorization: <user_auth_token>" https://localhost/things/<thing_id>/channels

Response that you'll get should look like this:

{
  "total": 2,
  "offset": 0,
  "limit": 10,
  "channels": [
    {
      "id": "5e62eb13-2695-4860-8d87-85b8a2f80fd4",
      "name": "c1",
      "metadata": "{}"
    },
    {
      "id": "c4b5e19a-7ffe-4172-b2c5-c8b9d570a165",
      "name": "c0",
      "metadata":"{}"
    }
  ]
}

If you want to disconnect your thing from the channel, send following request:

curl -s -S -i --cacert docker/ssl/certs/mainflux-server.crt --insecure -X DELETE -H "Authorization: <user_auth_token>" https://localhost/channels/<channel_id>/things/<thing_id>