tree: 5f92d7e47de66db0c3bc359f3bcb4fc58f8b0b94 [path history] [tgz]
  1. include/
  2. third_party/
  3. .gn
  4. args.gni
  5. BUILD.gn
  6. main.cpp
  7. README.md
examples/air-purifier-app/linux/README.md

CHIP Linux Air Purifier Example

An example showing the use of CHIP on the Linux. The document will describe how to build and run CHIP Air Purifier Example on A Linux System. This doc is tested on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS.

The Air Purifier example demonstrates a fully functional Matter Air Purifier which is a composed device with Endpoint 1 being the Air Purifier. Endpoint 2 is an Air Quality Sensor, Endpoint 3 is a Relative Humidity Sensor, Endpoint 4 is a Temperature Sensor and Endpoint 5 is a Thermostat.

To cross-compile this example on x64 host and run on NXP i.MX 8M Mini EVK, see the associated README document for details.

Building

  • Install tool chain

      $ sudo apt-get install git gcc g++ python pkg-config libssl-dev libdbus-1-dev libglib2.0-dev ninja-build python3-venv python3-dev unzip
    
  • Build the example application:

      $ cd ~/connectedhomeip/examples/air-purifier-app/linux/
      $ git submodule update --init
      $ source third_party/connectedhomeip/scripts/activate.sh
      $ gn gen out/debug
      $ ninja -C out/debug
    
  • To delete generated executable, libraries and object files use:

      $ cd ~/connectedhomeip/examples/air-purifier-app/linux/
      $ rm -rf out/
    

Commandline arguments

  • --wifi

    Enables WiFi management feature. Required for WiFi commissioning.

  • --thread

    Enables Thread management feature, requires ot-br-posix dbus daemon running. Required for Thread commissioning.

  • --ble-device <interface id>

    Use specific bluetooth interface for BLE advertisement and connections.

    interface id: the number after hci when listing BLE interfaces by hciconfig command, for example, --ble-device 1 means using hci1 interface. Default: 0.

Running the Complete Example on Raspberry Pi 4

If you want to test Echo protocol, please enable Echo handler

gn gen out/debug --args='chip_app_use_echo=true'
ninja -C out/debug
  • Prerequisites

    1. A Raspberry Pi 4 board
    2. A USB Bluetooth Dongle, Ubuntu desktop will send Bluetooth advertisement, which will block CHIP from connecting via BLE. On Ubuntu server, you need to install pi-bluetooth via APT.
    3. Ubuntu 20.04 or newer image for ARM64 platform.
  • Building

    Follow Building section of this document.

  • Running

    • [Optional] Plug USB Bluetooth dongle

      • Plug USB Bluetooth dongle and find its bluetooth device number. The number after hci is the bluetooth device number, 1 in this example.

          $ hciconfig
          hci1:	Type: Primary  Bus: USB
              BD Address: 00:1A:7D:AA:BB:CC  ACL MTU: 310:10  SCO MTU: 64:8
              UP RUNNING PSCAN ISCAN
              RX bytes:20942 acl:1023 sco:0 events:1140 errors:0
              TX bytes:16559 acl:1011 sco:0 commands:121 errors:0
        
          hci0:	Type: Primary  Bus: UART
              BD Address: B8:27:EB:AA:BB:CC  ACL MTU: 1021:8  SCO MTU: 64:1
              UP RUNNING PSCAN ISCAN
              RX bytes:8609495 acl:14 sco:0 events:217484 errors:0
              TX bytes:92185 acl:20 sco:0 commands:5259 errors:0
        
      • Run Linux Air Purifier Example App

          $ cd ~/connectedhomeip/examples/air-purifier-app/linux
          $ sudo out/debug/chip-air-purifier-app --ble-device [bluetooth device number]
          # In this example, the device we want to use is hci1
          $ sudo out/debug/chip-air-purifier-app --ble-device 1
        
      • Test the device using ChipTool on your laptop / workstation etc.