// This example uses an Arduino Yun or a Yun-Shield // and the MQTTClient to connect to shiftr.io. // // You can check on your device after a successful // connection here: https://shiftr.io/try. // // by Joël Gähwiler // https://github.com/256dpi/arduino-mqtt #include #include #include BridgeSSLClient net; MQTTClient client; unsigned long lastMillis = 0; void connect() { Serial.print("connecting..."); while (!client.connect("arduino", "try", "try")) { Serial.print("."); delay(1000); } Serial.println("\nconnected!"); client.subscribe("/hello"); // client.unsubscribe("/hello"); } void messageReceived(String &topic, String &payload) { Serial.println("incoming: " + topic + " - " + payload); } void setup() { Bridge.begin(); Serial.begin(115200); // Note: Local domain names (e.g. "Computer.local" on OSX) are not supported by Arduino. // You need to set the IP address directly. // // MQTT brokers usually use port 8883 for secure connections. client.begin("broker.shiftr.io", 8883, net); client.onMessage(messageReceived); connect(); } void loop() { client.loop(); if (!client.connected()) { connect(); } // publish a message roughly every second. if (millis() - lastMillis > 1000) { lastMillis = millis(); client.publish("/hello", "world"); } }