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LoRaWAN to BACnet Bridge

The LoRaWAN to BACnet Bridge is a service to forward LoRaWAN messages from sensors to a BACnet BMS.

The service fetches the data form the LNS via MQTT, processes it and publishes it as BACnet objects on the specified LAN using BACnet/IP.

Configuration

The service gets the configuration information from a config.yml file in the config folder. You have an example of that file down below. Alternatively you can overwrite settings in the config.yml file with environment variables. This configuration file has the following options:

Section.Key Environment Description Default
bacnet.ip BACNET_IP IP of the local devices publishing the BACnet objects LAN IP
bacnet.port BACNET_PORT Port to listen to connections 47808
bacnet.mask BACNET_MASK IP mask to accepts whois queries from 24
bacnet.name BACNET_NAME Name of the device LBB
bacnet.id BACNET_ID ID of the device 0x200001
mqtt.server MQTT_SERVER IP or hostname of the MQTT broker to connect to localhost
mqtt.port MQTT_PORT Port of the MQTT server 1883
mqtt.username MQTT_USERNAME Username to use in the MQTT connection
mqtt.password MQTT_PASSWORD Password to use in the MQTT connection
mqtt.topic MQTT_TOPIC MQTT Topic to subscribe to v3/+/devices/+/up
logging.level LOGGING_LEVEL Logging level (10:debug, 20:info, 30:warning, 40:error) 20
datatypes.filename DATATYPES_FILENAME Default datatypes definition file datatypes.yml
devices.<device>.decode Force decoding payload instead of using existing decoded payload if any True
devices.<device>.decoder Decoder to use for the specific device_id (see decoders folder) cayenne.js
devices.<device>.objects.<name>.id BACnet object ID
devices.<device>.objects.<name>.type BACnet object type
devices.<device>.objects.<name>.name BACnet object name
devices.<device>.objects.<name>.value BACnet object last value
devices.<device>.objects.<name>.units BACnet object unit type

The Section.Key field in the table above is a flattened version of the YAML file. So if you have a YAML file with:

section:
    key: 10
    objects: 
        first: 20
        second: 30

section.key has a value of 10 and section.objects.first is 20.

The minimal configuration file is (basically the connection to the LNS via MQTT):

mqtt:
  password: NNSXS.Z6.....FF6YYQ
  port: 1883
  server: eu1.cloud.thethings.network
  topic: v3/+/devices/+/up
  username: my-app02@ttn

After running the service, it will connect to the LNS via MQTT and start receiving messages from actual sensors. If the payload of the messages is compatible (i.e. CayenneLPP) then it will populate new BACnet devices and objects in the config.yml file. If you now stop the service your config.yml file might look like this:

bacnet:
  ip: 192.168.1.132
  mask: 24
  port: 47808
  name: LBB
  id: 2097153
datatypes:
  filename: datatypes.yml
devices:
  wisblock-01:
    decode: true
    decoder: cayenne.js
    objects:
      field-001-temperature:
        id: 1
        name: wisblock-01-field-001-temperature
        type: AnalogInputObject
        units: degreesCelsius
        value: 24.3
      field-002-humidity:
        id: 2
        name: wisblock-01-field-002-humidity
        type: AnalogInputObject
        units: percentRelativeHumidity
        value: 49
      field-003-barometer:
        id: 3
        name: wisblock-01-field-003-barometer
        type: AnalogInputObject
        units: hectopascals
        value: 988.8
      rssi:
        id: 4
        name: wisblock-01-rssi
        type: AnalogInputObject
        units: decibels
        value: -53
      snr:
        id: 5
        name: wisblock-01-snr
        type: AnalogInputObject
        units: decibels
        value: 13.75
logging:
  level: 20
mqtt:
  password: NNSXS.Z6.....FF6YYQ
  port: 1883
  server: eu1.cloud.thethings.network
  topic: v3/+/devices/+/up
  username: my-app02@ttn

Of course you can start with a complete config.yml file upfront. Only remember not to edit the config.yml file while running the service since the changes will be overwritten.

Usage

Python virtual environment

The recommended way to run the script is by using a virtual environment to install the dependencies in requirements.txt. We provide a custom Makefile to help you run it in an isolated python environment by typing:

make run

This will create the virtual environment and install dependencies the first time it's run and then run the service.

Docker

You can also use docker to run the service isolated from your system. We provide a custom Dockerfile and docker-compose.yml files for this. Please check the docker-compose.yml file for an example on the different ways to configure the service (mount a config folder and/or use environment variables).

docker compose up

You can also build the image directly on your target machine by uncommenting the build option (and suboptions) from the provided docker-compose.yml file and do a docker compose build first.

How does it work

Default configuration

The service will look for the configuration files (config.yml, datatypes.yml and any *.js files under the decoders subfolder) under the config folder. If this folder does not exist, or any of the required files do not exist, it will get the default ones from the templates folder and copy them over the config folder. Files in the templates folder are never changed.

The config.yml file is populated with defaults on each run (does not overwrite existing settings). You can then stop the service and edit the config.yml file to check the default values.

Device discovery

The LoRaWAN to BACnet Bridge listens to messages from the LNS sent via MQTT. Currently, it understands The Things Stack v2 (TTN/TTI) and ChirpStack v3 and v4 payloads.

Similar to what different LNS do, the service decodes the raw payload using Javascript decoders in the decoders folder (alternatively you can set it to use the pre-decoded object from the LNS). Either way it expects a cayenne-like output to map new magnitudes from different sensors to BACnet objects.

These decoders are very similar to the ones in The Things Stack or ChirpStack. Check the templates/decoders/template.js file for an example of the input and output interface for the decoders.

Manually edit object list

After running the service, the config.yml file will contain all default values as well as information for discovered objects. You can edit this file manually with the service stopped. Make sure you define the object type and units correctly using the values from the BACNET.md file.

Copyright and license

Copyright (c) 2023-2024 RAKwireless, under MIT License.

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The LoRaWAN to BACnet Bridge is a service to forward LoRaWAN messages from sensors to a BACnet BMS

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