The CHIP Echo example application shows you how to implement a CHIP application program using one of the supported CHIP protocols, namely the very simple CHIP Echo protocol. This protocol allows you to send a CHIP message to a peer and expect a CHIP response (similar to the ICMP Echo Request/Echo Response messages).
CHIP Protocols are, essentially, implementations of specific protocols over the CHIP transport. Furthermore, when two CHIP nodes are exchanging messages of a particular CHIP protocol, they do so over a construct called a CHIP Exchange which is a description of a CHIP-based conversation over a CHIP protocol. A CHIP Exchange is characterised by the ExchangeContext object, and every CHIP node must create an ExchangeContext object before initiating a CHIP conversation.
After constructing a CHIP ExchangeContext, CHIP messages are sent and received using the ChipMessageLayer class which sends the CHIP message over a chosen transport (TCP, UDP, or MRP).
source scripts/activate.sh gn gen out/debug ninja -C out/debug
out/debug/chip-echo-requester and out/debug/chip-echo-responder
As part of this example, we have a ChipEchoRequester program that acts as the client and sends echo requests to a ChipEchoResponder program that receives EchoRequests and sends back EchoResponse messages.
To start the Server in echo mode, run the built executable.
$ ./chip-echo-responder [--tcp]
To start the Client in echo mode, run the built executable and pass it the IP address of the server to talk to.
$ ./chip-echo-requester <Server's IPv4 address> [--tcp]
If valid values are supplied, it will begin to periodically send messages to the server address provided for three times.