@clearblade/iot
v1.4.2
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Cloud IoT API client for Node.js
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ClearBlade IoT Core: Node.js Client
Node.js idiomatic client for ClearBlade IoT Core.
ClearBlade IoT Core is a fully managed service for securely connecting and managing IoT devices, from a few to millions. Ingest data from connected devices and build rich applications that integrate with the other big data services of the ClearBlade Platform or the Google Cloud Platform.
- ClearBlade IoT Core Node.js client API reference
- Clearblade IoT Core documentation
- github.com/clearblade/nodejs-iot
Table of contents:
Quickstart
Before you begin
- Select or create a Cloud Platform project.
- Enable billing for your project.
- Enable the ClearBlade IoT Core API.
- Set up authentication with a service account so you can access the API from your local workstation.
Installing the client library
npm install @clearblade/iot
Setting up service account credentials
Create a service account in your project and download the credentials .json file. Define an environment variable named CLEARBLADE_CONFIGURATION
, which represents the credentials .json file's path. Example:
export CLEARBLADE_CONFIGURATION=/path/to/file.json
As an alternative to using a filepath for your service account credentials, you can take the project
, systemKey
, token
, and url
values from your service account's .json file and supply them directly to the constructor:
const client = new DeviceManagerClient({
credentials: {
project: '<project>',
systemKey: '<systemKey>',
token: '<token>',
url: '<url>',
},
});
Use your service account credentials rather than those from the Registry API keys page. You can use one set of service account credentials to target all your project's registries.
BINARYDATA_AND_TIME_GOOGLE_FORMAT env variable (optional)
If you'd like to receive binaryData and timestamps in the same format that the Google IoT Node SDK supplies, you can define an environment variable named BINARYDATA_AND_TIME_GOOGLE_FORMAT
. If this env variable is set as true
, then it will give the binaryData object's response in byte array form and time in timestamp format, which will have seconds and nanos in it, following Google's structure. It's applicable on the get device state list, modify config, and device config versions methods. By default, this flag's value will be false.
export BINARYDATA_AND_TIME_GOOGLE_FORMAT=true
Using the client library
const iot = require('@clearblade/iot');
const client = new iot.v1.DeviceManagerClient();
async function quickstart() {
const projectId = await client.getProjectId();
const parent = client.locationPath(projectId, 'us-central1');
const [resources] = await client.listDeviceRegistries({parent});
console.log(`${resources.length} resource(s) found.`);
for (const resource of resources) {
console.log(resource);
}
}
quickstart();
Samples
Samples are in the samples/
directory. Each sample's README.md
has instructions for running its sample.
| Sample | Source code | Try it | | ---------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | Quickstart | source code | |
The ClearBlade IoT Core Node.js client API reference documentation also contains samples.
Supported Node.js versions
Our client libraries follow the Node.js release schedule. Libraries are compatible with all current active and maintenance versions of Node.js. If you are using an end-of-life version of Node.js, we recommend that you update it as soon as possible to an actively supported LTS version.
ClearBlade's client libraries support legacy versions of Node.js runtimes on a best-efforts basis with the following warnings:
- Legacy versions are not tested in continuous integration.
- Some security patches and features cannot be backported.
- Dependencies cannot be kept up-to-date.
Client libraries targeting some end-of-life versions of Node.js are available and can be installed through npm dist-tags.
The dist-tags follow the naming convention legacy-(version)
. For example, npm install @google-cloud/iot@legacy-8
installs client libraries for versions compatible with Node.js 8.
Versioning
This library follows semantic versioning.
This library is considered to be stable. The code surface will not change in backward-incompatible ways unless necessary (e.g., because of critical security issues) or with an extensive deprecation period. Issues and requests against stable libraries are addressed with the highest priority.
Contributing
Contributions welcome! See the Contributing guide.
License
Apache Version 2.0
See LICENSE