The Arm Mbed OS All Clusters Example demonstrates device commissioning process and all available clusters control.
You can use this example as a reference for creating your own application.
The example is based on Matter and Arm Mbed OS, and supports remote access and control of device over a WiFi network.
The example behaves as a Matter accessory, in other words a device that can be paired into an existing Matter network and can be controlled by this network.
The Matter device that runs the All Clusters application is controlled by the Matter controller device over WiFi. By default, the Matter device is disconnected, and it should be paired with Matter controller and get configuration from it. Actions required before establishing full communication are described below.
To commission the device onto a Matter network, the device must be discoverable over BLE. The BLE advertising starts automatically after device boot-up.
In Matter, the commissioning procedure (called rendezvous) is done over BLE between a Matter device and the Matter controller, where the controller has the commissioner role.
To start the rendezvous, the controller must get the commissioning information from the Matter device. The data payload is encoded within a QR code, printed to the UART console.
The last part of the rendezvous procedure, provisioning involves sending the network credentials from the Matter controller to the Matter device. As a result, device is able to join the network and communicate with other devices in the network.
Before building the example, check out the Matter repository and sync submodules using the following command:
$ git submodule update --init
Building the example application requires the use of ARM Mbed-OS sources and the arm-none-gnu-eabi toolchain.
The Cypress OpenOCD package is required for flashing purpose. Install the Cypress OpenOCD and set env var OPENOCD_PATH
before calling the flashing script.
cd ~ wget https://github.com/Infineon/openocd/releases/download/release-v4.3.0/openocd-4.3.0.1746-linux.tar.gz tar xzvf openocd-4.3.0.1746-linux.tar.gz export OPENOCD_PATH=$HOME/openocd
Some additional packages may be needed, depending on selected build target and its requirements.
The VSCode devcontainer has these components pre-installed. Using the VSCode devcontainer is the recommended way to interact with Arm Mbed-OS port of the Matter Project.
Please read this README.md for more information about using VSCode in container.
To initialize the development environment, download all registered sub-modules and activate the environment:
$ source ./scripts/bootstrap.sh $ source ./scripts/activate.sh
If packages are already installed then you just need to activate the development environment:
$ source ./scripts/activate.sh
The All Clusters application can be built in the same way as any other Matter example ported to the mbed-os platform.
Command Palette (F1) => Run Task... => Run Mbed Application => build => all-clusters-app => (board name) => (build profile) => (build type)
${MATTER_ROOT}/scripts/examples/mbed_example.sh -c=build -a=all-clusters-app -b=<board name> -p=<build profile> -T=<build type>
Both approaches are limited to supported evaluation boards which are listed in Supported devices paragraph.
Mbed OS defines three building profiles: develop, debug and release. For more details please visit ARM Mbed OS build profiles.
There are also three types of built application: simple, boot and upgrade:
When using the building script, it is possible expand the list of acceptable targets; this may be useful for rapid testing of a new mbed-targets.
The All Clusters application can be flashed in the same way as any other Matter example ported to mbed-os platform.
The Open On-Chip Debugger is used to upload a binary image and reset the device.
Command Palette (F1) => Run Task... -> Run Mbed Application => flash => all-clusters-app => (board name) => (build profile)
${MATTER_ROOT}/scripts/examples/mbed_example.sh -c=flash -a=all-clusters-app -b=<board name> -p=<build profile>
Run and Debug (Ctrl+Shift+D) => Flash Mbed examples => Start Debugging (F5) => (board name) => all-clusters-app => (build profile)
The last option uses the Open On-Chip Debugger to open and manage the gdb-server session. Then gdb-client (arm-none-eabi-gdb) upload binary image and reset device.
It is possible to connect to an external gdb-server session by using a specific ‘Flash Mbed examples [remote]’ task.
Debugging can be performed in the same was as with any other Matter example ported to mbed-os platform.
The Open On-Chip Debugger is used to to open and manage the gdb-server session. Then gdb-client (arm-none-eabi-gdb) connect the server to upload binary image and control debugging.
Run and Debug (Ctrl+Shift+D) => Debug Mbed examples => Start Debugging (F5) => (board name) => all-clusters-app => (build profile)
It is possible to connect to an external gdb-server session by using specific ‘Debug Mbed examples [remote]’ task.
The application traces are streaming to serial output. To start communication open a terminal session and connect to the serial port of the device. You can use mbed-tools for this purpose (mbed-tools):
``` mbed-tools sterm -p /dev/ttyACM0 -b 115200 -e off ```
After device reset these lines should be visible:
``` [INFO][CHIP]: [-]Mbed all-clusters-app example application start ... [INFO][CHIP]: [-]Mbed all-clusters-app example application run ```
The all-clusters-app application launched correctly and you can follow traces in the terminal.
Read the MbedCommissioning to see how to use different CHIP tools to commission and control the application within a WiFi network.
Manufacturer | Hardware platform | Build target | Platform image | Status | Platform components |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cypress Semiconductor | CY8CPROTO-062-4343W | CY8CPROTO_062_4343W | ✔ | LEDsBoard has only one usable LED (LED4) which corresponds to USER LED from UI. ButtonsUnused SliderUnused |
all-clusters-app/mbed/mbed_app.json
. Information about this file syntax and its meaning in mbed-os project can be found here: Mbed-Os configuration system)This section lists the User Interface elements that you can use to control and monitor the state of the device. These correspond to PCB components on the platform image.
USER LED shows the overall state of the device and its connectivity. The following states are possible:
Short Flash On (50 ms on/950 ms off) — The device is in the unprovisioned (unpaired) state and is waiting for a commissioning application to connect.
Rapid Even Flashing (100 ms on/100 ms off) — The device is in the unprovisioned state and a commissioning application is connected through Bluetooth LE.
Short Flash Off (950ms on/50ms off) — The device is fully provisioned, but does not yet have full network or service connectivity.
Solid On — The device is fully provisioned and has full network and service connectivity.
Some of the supported boards may not have sufficient number PCB components to follow above description. In that case please refer to Supported devices section and check board's ‘Platform components’ column f-r additional information about the limitation.