Setup the Mosquitto Ubuntu Appliance in a virtual machine
Installation instructions
We will walk you through the steps of setting up your Mosquitto Ubuntu Appliance in a vm with Multipass and get logged in.
What you'll need
- A PC running Ubuntu 18.04 LTS or later
-
Install Multipass
sudo snap install multipass
-
Launch your Ubuntu Appliance
Launch your appliance image. Multipass gives your appliance an instance name like
happy-frog
. To name it yourself add--name <name>
.multipass launch appliance:mosquitto
-
Find your appliance
Find your appliance VM's IP address:
multipass list
-
That's it
Your appliance is now running in a virtual machine. Start and stop it with
multipass start <name>
andmultipass stop <name>
. To access the command-line:multipass shell mosquitto
We will walk you through the steps of setting up your Mosquitto Ubuntu Appliance in a vm with Multipass and get logged in.
What you'll need
- A PC running Windows 10 Pro/Enterprise/Education Update 1803 or later, or any version of Windows with VirtualBox.
-
Install Multipass
-
Make sure the network you're connected to is marked Private, otherwise Windows will prevent Multipass from starting.
-
Run the installer. You will need to allow the installer to gain Administrator privileges.
-
-
Launch your Ubuntu Appliance
Launch your appliance image. Multipass gives your appliance an instance name like
happy-frog
. To name it yourself add--name <name>
.multipass launch appliance:mosquitto
-
Find and connect to your appliance
Hyper-V instructions
On Hyper-V, find your virtual appliance IP address:
multipass list
VirtualBox instructions
On VirtualBox, forward the appliance port to the outside world with this command in an Administrator PowerShell:
env:USERPROFILE\Downloads\PSTools\PsExec.exe -s $env:VBOX_MSI_INSTALL_PATH\VBoxManage.exe controlvm "<instance name>" --natpf1 "mosquitto,tcp,,1883,,1883"
For more information about this command see the Multipass documentation.
-
That's it
Your appliance is now running in a virtual machine. Start and stop it with
multipass start <name>
andmultipass stop <name>
. To access the command-line:multipass shell mosquitto
We will walk you through the steps of setting up your Mosquitto Ubuntu Appliance in a vm with Multipass and get logged in.
What you'll need
- A Mac running macOS and VirtualBox. To use Multipass on macOS this is required.
-
Install Multipass
-
Activate the downloaded installer in an account with Administrator privileges.
-
To start Multipass with VirtualBox use this Terminal app command:
sudo multipass set local.driver=virtualbox
-
Launch your Ubuntu Appliance
Launch your appliance image. Multipass gives your appliance an instance name like
happy-frog
. To name it yourself add--name <name>
.multipass launch appliance:mosquitto
-
Find your appliance
To use VirtualBox's port forwarding run:
sudo VBoxManage controlvm "<instance name>" --natpf1 "mosquitto,tcp,,1883,,1883"
You can find more information about what this command means in the Multipass documentation.
-
That's it
Your appliance is now running in a virtual machine. Start and stop it with
multipass start <name>
andmultipass stop <name>
. To access the command-line:multipass shell mosquitto
Start using your Mosquitto Ubuntu Appliance
After installing the Mosquitto image, the Mosquitto broker will be running with the default configuration, listening for connections on port 1883. To test the broker, you can use the mosquitto-pub
and mosquitto-sub
command-line utilities. This is a basic test example to start using your appliance. If you want more information about Mosquitto and what to do next the best place to go is the Mosquitto website.
mosquitto_pub
allows you to publish messages to an MQTT broker, and mosquitto_sub
allows you to subscribe to messages from an MQTT broker. Both tools have options to control how they are used so they are useful for a wide variety of tasks. In this case, we will use them for some simple testing.
To subscribe to all messages being published to the MQTT broker on the snap/example
topic, run this command in your appliance:
mosquitto_sub -h localhost -t 'snap/example' -v
If your MQTT broker is not running on the same machine as mosquitto_sub
, you will need to change the localhost
argument to match your MQTT broker host or IP address.
The -t snap/example
option sets the topic to subscribe and can be provided multiple times. The -v
option means to print both the topic of the message as well as its payload. Now to publish a message to the same topic you use mosquitto_pub:
mosquitto_pub -h localhost -t 'snap/example' -m 'Hello from mosquitto_pub'
In this case, the -m
option provides the message payload to be published. If everything works as planned, you should see mosquitto_sub
print
snap/example Hello from mosquitto_pub
This is a very simple example but allows testing of the broker operation. Other things you may wish to try are subscribing to wildcard topics that include #
or , or subscribing to the
$SYS/#
topic to see the information the broker is publishing about itself.
Once you have finished your testing, you will want to configure your broker to have encrypted connections and use authentication, or possibly configuring bridges, which allow different brokers to share topics. or many other options. To do this, you need to provide a new configuration file. The snap provides an example configuration file at /var/snap/mosquitto/common/mosquitto_example.conf
.
This file contains all of the broker configurations, in a similar manner to the man page. To create your own configuration, copy the example file to /var/snap/mosquitto/common/mosquitto.conf
and edit according to your needs. Any additional files required by the configuration, such as TLS certificates and keys, must also be placed in /var/snap/mosquitto/common/
and have their full path provided in the configuration file.