The Things Network is a global open crowdsourced Internet of Things data network.
When you get started with The Things Network, you'll probably have some questions. Here are some things you can do to find the answer to them:
- Check out our website
- Read the official documentation
- Register on the forum and search around
- Join Slack and ask us what you want to know
- Read background information on the wiki
- Make sure you have Go installed (version 1.7 or later).
- Set up your Go environment
- Install the protobuf compiler (
protoc
) - Install
make
. On Linux installbuild-essential
. On macOS,make
comes with XCode or the developer tools. On Windows you can getmake
from https://gnuarmeclipse.github.io/windows-build-tools/ - Make sure you have Redis and RabbitMQ installed and running.
On a fresh installation you might need to install the MQTT plugin for RabbitMQ.
If you're on Linux, you probably know how to do that. On a Mac, just runbrew bundle
. The Windows installer will setup and start RabbitMQ as a service. Use theRabbitMQ Command Prompt (sbin dir)
to run commands, i.e. to enable plugins. - Declare a RabbitMQ exchange
ttn.handler
of typetopic
. Using the management plugin, declare the exchange in the web interfacehttp://server-name:15672
or using the management cli, runrabbitmqadmin declare exchange name=ttn.handler type=topic auto_delete=false durable=true
- Fork this repository
- Clone your fork:
git clone --branch v2-preview --recursive https://github.com/YOURUSERNAME/ttn.git $GOPATH/src/github.com/TheThingsNetwork/ttn
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/TheThingsNetwork/ttn
- Install the dependencies for development:
make dev-deps
- Run the tests:
make test
- Run
make build
to build bothttn
andttnctl
from source. - Run
make dev
to install the go binaries into$GOPATH/bin/
- Optionally on Linux or Mac you can use
make link
to link them to$GOPATH/bin/
(In order to run the commands, you should haveexport PATH="$GOPATH/bin:$PATH"
in your profile).
- Optionally on Linux or Mac you can use
- Configure your
ttnctl
with the settings in.env/ttnctl.yml.dev-example
by copying that file to~/.ttnctl.yml
.
You can check your ttnctl
configuration by running ttnctl config
. It should look like this:
INFO Using config:
config file: /home/your-user/.ttnctl.yml
data dir: /home/your-user/.ttnctl
auth-server: https://preview.account.thethingsnetwork.org
discovery-address: localhost:1900
router-id: dev
handler-id: dev
mqtt-address: localhost:1883
NOTE: From now on you should run all commands from the $GOPATH/src/github.com/TheThingsNetwork/ttn
directory.
- Set up the backend as described above.
- Run
forego start
to start all backend services at the same time. Make sure that Redis and RabbitMQ are running on your machine. - First time only (or when Redis is flushed):
- Run
ttn broker register-prefix 00000000/0 --config ./.env/broker/dev.yml
- Restart the backend services
- Run
- Set up the backend as described above.
- Add the following line to your
/etc/hosts
file:127.0.0.1 router handler
- Run
make docker
to build the docker image - Run
docker-compose up
to start all backend services in Docker. Make sure that Redis and RabbitMQ are not running on your local machine, because they will be started bydocker-compose
. - First time only (or when Redis is flushed):
- Run
docker-compose run broker broker register-prefix 00000000/0 --config ./.env/broker/dev.yml
- Restart the backend services
- Run
Source code for The Things Network is MIT licensed. We encourage users to make contributions on Github and to participate in discussions on Slack.
If you encounter any problems, please check open issues before creating a new issue. Please be specific and give a detailed description of the issue. Explain the steps to reproduce the problem. If you're able to fix the issue yourself, please help the community by forking the repository and submitting a pull request with your fix.
For contributing a feature, please open an issue that explains what you're working on. Work in your own fork of the repository and submit a pull request when you're done.
If you want to contribute, but don't know where to start, you could have a look at issues with the label help wanted or difficulty/easy.
Source code for The Things Network is released under the MIT License, which can be found in the LICENSE file. A list of authors can be found in the AUTHORS file.