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You're reading from  ESP8266 Home Automation Projects

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2017
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781787282629
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (2):
Catalin Batrinu
Catalin Batrinu
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Catalin Batrinu

Catalin Batrinu graduated from the Politehnica University of Bucharest in Electronics, Telecommunications, and Information Technology. He has been working as a software developer in telecommunications for the past 16 years. He has worked with old protocols and the latest network protocols and technologies, so he has experienced all transformations in the telecommunication industry. He has implemented many telecommunications protocols, from access adaptations and backbone switches to high-capacity, carrier-grade switches on various hardware platforms from Wintegra and Broadcom. Internet of Things came as a natural evolution for him and now he collaborates with different companies to construct the world of tomorrow that will make our life more comfortable and secure. Using the ESP8266, he has prototyped devices such as irrigation controllers, smart sockets, window shutters, Digital Addressable Lighting Controls, and environment controls, all of them controlled directly from a mobile application over the cloud. An MQTT broker with bridging and a WebSockets server was even developed for the ESP8266. Soon, all those devices will be part of our daily life, so we will all enjoy their functionality.
Read more about Catalin Batrinu

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Enabling encryption on mosquitto


To enable encryption on mosquitto, you need first to have certificates. You can buy them from a company that is issuing certificates or you can generate them yourself as self-sign certificates.

Installing the openssl package

First, verify that you have the openssl package installed and it has a newer version (1.0.2g), as seen in the following screenshot:

If you don't have openssl installed you need to install it first, using the following command:

sudo apt install openssl on Ubuntu

Or use the following command:

yum install openssl on CentOS/Redhat

Generating your own certificates

First go to /etc/mosquitto/certs and issue the following command:

sudo openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:1024 -keyout ca.crt -out cert.crt -days 9999

You will then be invited to fill some details, as seen in the following screenshot, about the owner of the certificate, such as country of residence, state, company, city, email address, and the most important one is the Fully Qualified Domain Name...

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ESP8266 Home Automation Projects
Published in: Nov 2017Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781787282629

Authors (2)

author image
Catalin Batrinu

Catalin Batrinu graduated from the Politehnica University of Bucharest in Electronics, Telecommunications, and Information Technology. He has been working as a software developer in telecommunications for the past 16 years. He has worked with old protocols and the latest network protocols and technologies, so he has experienced all transformations in the telecommunication industry. He has implemented many telecommunications protocols, from access adaptations and backbone switches to high-capacity, carrier-grade switches on various hardware platforms from Wintegra and Broadcom. Internet of Things came as a natural evolution for him and now he collaborates with different companies to construct the world of tomorrow that will make our life more comfortable and secure. Using the ESP8266, he has prototyped devices such as irrigation controllers, smart sockets, window shutters, Digital Addressable Lighting Controls, and environment controls, all of them controlled directly from a mobile application over the cloud. An MQTT broker with bridging and a WebSockets server was even developed for the ESP8266. Soon, all those devices will be part of our daily life, so we will all enjoy their functionality.
Read more about Catalin Batrinu