This page is part of archived documentation for openHAB 3.4. Go to the current stable version

# Adding Things - Advanced

Some bindings and technologies simply do not support automatic discovery. These technologies tend to be the most complicated to understand, configure, and use. You the user will need to have at least a working understanding of the underlying technology in order to be successful. For example, if you wish to use the Exec binding with openHAB running on Linux, you will need a working understanding of shell commands, file permissions, users, etc.

This tutorial will use the MQTT binding as an example. Note that the MQTT Binding also supports automatic discovery of Things for devices that use the Homie or Home Assistant standards in their topic structure and messaging. In those cases, the MQTT binding works more like the Intermediate Thing example.

Scenario: You have a MQTT-enabled plant sensor (opens new window), and for the purpose of this tutorial let's assume it doesn't respect the Homie or Home Assistant convention, so it cannot be detected and configured automatically by the MQTT binding. Instead, it is publishing metrics regularly on a preconfigured MQTT topic in a simple JSON structure like the following:

{"light": 5424, "moisture": 30, "temperature": 21.4, "conductivity": 1020, "battery": 100}

# Prerequisites

  • A basic understanding of how MQTT works (HiveMQ provides a good tutorial (opens new window)
  • An installed and configured MQTT Broker (e.g. Mosquitto, which can be installed through openHABian if that is how you installed openHAB)
  • A MiFlora device configured to connect to the MQTT Broker, or an MQTT client application (e.g. MQTT Explorer (opens new window), MQTT.fx (opens new window) that allows one to publish and subscribe to MQTT topics

# Install the Binding and Transformation

This device publishes JSON formatted messages, so we need to install an add-on that can process JSON: the JSONPath Transformation. A Transformation takes incoming data and transformes it somehow. In this case it will extract certain fields from the JSON. From Settings, click on Transformations under Add-ons.

choose transformation

Click on the blue "+" button and find JSONPath Transformation. Click on it, then click Install.

install_jsonpath

Wait for it to disappear from the list, then click back twice to go back to Settings.

Next, install the MQTT binding: click on Bindings, then the "+" button and find the MQTT Binding. Click on it, then click Install. Wait for it to disappear from the list, then go back twice to return to the main Settings screen.

# Create the Bridge Thing

First we need to add the broker, which is a Bridge. Click on Things.

Click on the blue "+" button.

Choose "MQTT Binding", then choose "MQTT Broker".

mqtt things

Fill in the details to connect to the broker. You may also alter its ID and name. If you need credentials to connect to the broker, click on "Show advanced" to reveal additional options, including Username and Password.

mqtt bridge config

# Create the Generic MQTT Thing

Now we have to add the plant sensor itself as a generic Thing.

On the Things page, first verify that the broker is indeed present and online; if so, click on the blue "+" button then on the MQTT Binding.

Note that you might have results already appearing under "Discovered things" if you happen to have auto-discoverable devices publishing messages to the broker.

In our case, click on Generic MQTT Thing under "Add manually".

Change the ID and label if you wish.

The important setting is to choose the Bridge that the new Thing will work with. Click on Bridge and choose the broker that you configured above in the list. Then click "Add" in the top-right corner.

Back on the Things page, choose the Thing you created. It should be marked online, but it will not have any Channels on the Channel tab. You have to configure them yourself.

mqtt generic thing

Click on Add Channel.

Let's add the temperature first. Fill in the "channel identifier" and "Label" fields accordingly: for instance, temperature as the identifier and Air Temperature as the label.

This channel will provide numbers, therefore choose the Number value channel type for the new channel. Scroll down and enter the MQTT topic receiving the JSON message in the MQTT State Topic field. We don't want this channel to provide the whole message, only the temperature part. Extracting the temperature from the message can be done using a transformation.

Click on "Show advanced" above MQTT State Topic to reveal more settings.

Scroll down, find the "Incoming Value Transformations" setting, and specify the transformation to apply there:

JSONPATH:$.temperature

mqtt temp channel

Click Done in the title bar to add the channel. It should now be added to the Channels tab.

mqtt temp channel created

Repeat the procedure for the other channels:

Value Label Type Incoming value transformation
light Light Intensity Number value JSONPATH:$.light
moisture Soil Moisture Number value JSONPATH:$.moisture
conductivity Soil Conductivity Number value JSONPATH:$.conductivity
battery Battery Level Number value JSONPATH:$.battery

All channels should specify the MQTT topic where the JSON message is published.

If you want to check the configuration for a channel, or if you made a mistake while adding it, open the channel details by clicking on it, and choose Configure Channel.

mqtt config channel

Note that you cannot change the channel type if you picked the wrong one. In that case, remove the channel by clicking on Remove Channel and then add it again.

This concludes the Thing discovery and creation examples.