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The protocol is an implementation of the MQTT 3.1.1 standard (October 2014) and the MQTT 5.0 standard (March 2019). MQTT protocol is a client/server protocol of a subscribe/publish type. It is simple, has little overhead, and is easy to implement. It is used for M2M communication (Machine to Machine) and in the IoT context (Internet of Things). The MQTT server is also called the MQTT broker.
D2000 KOM implements the client part of the protocol. The protocol is implemented on a TCP/IP line. MQTTS (Secure MQTT, MQTT over TLS) is also supported - either directly in the D2000 KOM process (using TLS settings on TCP/IP-TCP line) or via the tunnel utility.
For the transfer of LoRaWAN data encapsulated within the MQTT protocol, see LoRaWan protocol description.

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The server responds with a return code that contains information about the success and the maximum QoS that was assigned to the requested topics.

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If the server does not send a message for longer than the Ping Interval seconds, the client sends the PING request message, to which the server must respond with the PING response message (within the time specified by the Reply Timeout parameter).
If parameters change on the line, the connection is closed and re-created.

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  • Edge Node - supports the MQTT protocol and connects to the MQTT server. It sends him data obtained from the Device or , its own or aggregated data
  • Device/Sensor - represents a physical or logical device connected to an Edge Node and providing data, process data, or metrics
  • Host Application - represents a data consumer (SCADA/MES system, Historian, analysis tool) that connects to the MQTT server and receives MQTT data from the Edge Node/Device and, if necessary, commands.

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  • If the MQTT server supports Topic aliases, use MQTT Version = MQTT 5.0, and set Topic Alias Maximum to a value greater than the number of stations on the line (for Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node) or greater than the number of topics expected from the MQTT broker (for Payload TypeText only / JSON). On the MQTT broker side, ensure that its Topic Alias ​​Maximum value is greater than the number of topics that will be sent to the D2000 KOM process, so that numeric aliases can be used instead of text topics.
    Note: the Topic Alias ​​Maximum value that the MQTT broker sends when connecting as a parameter of the CONNACK message is visible in the communication logs:
    09:31:12.086 13-05-2025|D|MQTT> CONNACK Property # 1 Topic Alias Maximum ( 34)
    09:31:12.087 13-05-2025|T|MQTT> Recv:<00><0A>
    09:31:12.088 13-05-2025|D|MQTT> CONNACK Property value= 10

  • Use aliases for metrics (for Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node): automatically using the Sparkplug Alias Mode=Automatic (HOBJ) parameter or manually using the SAL=alias item in the I/O tag address. If you use manual aliases, use low numbers (aliases 1-127 are encoded as 1 byte).

  • For Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node: if there are many changes to the output I/O tags, we recommend setting the Batch Size parameter to a larger value than the default (10) and possibly increasing the Delay parameter in the station's time parameters. This will cause fewer messages to be generated (and each will contain multiple metrics), which reduces the overhead required to transmit one metric. If specific I/O tags change frequently, the message may contain several values ​​for the same I/O tag (with timestamps). The disadvantage is the delay in the values.

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Note: The default port for the MQTT protocol is 1883 or 8883 for the SSL/TLS version. D2000 KOM contains an implementation of the SSL/TLS protocol variant; it is also possible to configure it by using the stunnel utility http://www.stunnel.org working in a client mode (client = yes). Stunnel running on the same computer as the D2000 KOM should listen to the 1883 local port, and after connecting of the D2000 KOM process to the port, it should encrypt the communication using SSL/TLS and send it to the target MQTT server (typically on port 8883).

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ParameterDescriptionUnit/sizeDefault value

Kotva
fd
fd
Full Debug

Activates detailed debug information about sending and receiving values.YES/NONO

Kotva
mv
mv
MQTT Version

The version of the MQTT protocol that will be used to connect to the MQTT server. It is possible to use the older MQTT 3.1.1 standard (October 2014) or the newer MQTT 5.0 standard (March 2019). MQTT brokers usually support both standards; the older standard is simpler and more economical. On the other hand, MQTT 5.0 allows message size reduction by using Topic Aliases.

MQTT 3.1.1

MQTT 5.0

MQTT 3.1.1
Kotva
un
un
User Name
User name used in a CONNECT message to connect to the MQTT server.-
Kotva
pw
pw
Password
Password used in a CONNECT message to connect to the MQTT server.-
Kotva
tc
tc
Topic Filter
The name of one topic or a multiple-topic filter sent within the SUBSCRIBE message. Using the filter, the MQTT client specifies topics for which it wants to receive messages.
Note: Topics are hierarchically sorted, a slash (/) is used as the separator, a plus (+) is used as a one-level mask, and a hash (#) character is used as a mask for multiple levels.
Examples of filter: a/b , level1/+ , # , +/+/+/up
Note: the change of the Topic Filter parameter will be reflected after restarting the communication, e.g., due to the breakdown of the TCP connection, as long as all stations on the line are switched off (StOff) and switched on again, or after a restart of the KOM process. In the first two cases, the message UNSUBSCRIBE is sent to the original Topic Filter and then SUBSCRIBE to the new Topic Filter (this can be important in so-called persistent sessions when the Client ID parameter is specified and the MQTT server remembers the state of the client even after the TCP connection is broken).
Note: for Payload Type = Sparkplug Host, the filter spBv1.0/# is sufficient to receive all Sparkplug messages. It is also possible to specify an empty filter, as by default, SUBSCRIBE is generated for BIRTH/DATA/DEATH messages derived from station addresses that are in Sparkplug format (group_id/edge_node_id/[device_id]) are sent.
Note: for Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node, a SUBSCRIBE message is automatically sent to all NCMD/DCMD topics derived from the addresses of Edge Node/Device stations configured on the line.

Example:

  • For an Edge Node station with the address myGroup/myEdgeNode, a SUBSCRIBE message is sent to the topic spBv1.0/myGroup/NCMD/myEdgeNode
  • For a Device station with the address myGroup/myEdgeNode/myDevice1, a SUBSCRIBE message is sent to the topic spBv1.0/myGroup/DCMD/myEdgeNode/myDevice1

Note: Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node, a SUBSCRIBE message is automatically sent to the topic spBv1.0/STATE/<primaryHostApplication> if the Sparkplug Host ID parameter is specified (<primaryHostApplication> is the value of this parameter), so that the D2000 KOM process is informed about the connection/disconnection of the Primary Host Application. If a STATE message about the Primary Host Application disconnection is received (STATE message with online=false) and multiple IP addresses are specified in the line configuration, the D2000 KOM process disconnects from the current MQTT server and tries other MQTT servers until it finds one to which the Primary Host Application is connected (STATE message with online=true).

-#

Kotva
sq
sq
Subscribe QoS

The desired maximum level of validation (QoS) sent within the SUBSCRIBE message.
The MQTT server can then send PUBLISH messages with such or lower levels of confirmation (but not higher). PUBLISH messages sent by the MQTT server will be confirmed by the D2000 KOM process according to the level of confirmation specified in them. The higher the level of confirmation, the more messages between the client and the server are exchanged (1 at QoS_0, 2 at QoS_1, and 4 at QoS_2).
Note: For Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node, QoS_1 is always used.
QoS_0
QoS_1
QoS_2
QoS_1
Kotva
ci
ci
Client ID

Unique client identifier (Client Identifier) sent within the CONNECT message.
Note: it is possible to enter a blank string - in which case the server can assign a unique name to the client (if it supports such functionality) or return an error. However, if the Client ID is not specified, the Clean Session Flag parameter settings will be ignored (as the server will assign a unique name each time).

The tested MQTT server (thethings.network) returned an error if the Client ID was blank and Clean Session Flag=NO.

Note: Some MQTT brokers (PIXII.COM, Eclipse Mosquitto) identified clients only by Client ID. In practice, this meant that two different D2000 systems that connected to the same broker were considered as one client, and the broker closed an existing connection that it considered old when a new connection was established, or it did not allow a new connection to be created and returned the error Connection Refused, identifier rejected (2).
After setting the Client ID to a unique value, the communications started to work without connection breakdowns.

-D2000kom
Kotva
cs
cs
Clean Session Flag

Parameter Clean Session Flag of the CONNECT message. The NO value means that the server uses the current session state (connection) - e. g. after the collapse and recovery of the TCP connection. This means that all unconfirmed PUBLISH messages with QoS_1 and QoS_2 are resent (optionally also QoS_0, depending on the implementation).
The YES value means that the session is re-created, and unconfirmed PUBLISH messages are not repeated.
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Host and the Sparkplug Host ID parameter is not empty, this parameter is ignored, and Clean Session Flag is set to YES (see the description of the Sparkplug Host ID parameter).
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node, this parameter is ignored, and Clean Session Flag is set to YES (see the description of the Sparkplug Host ID parameter).

YES/NONO

Kotva
pq
pq
Publish QoS

Level of confirmation (QoS) used to send PUBLISH messages through the D2000 KOM process.
Sending the PUBLISH message is the outcome of writing into the output tag with the OUT_VALUE address. The higher the confirmation level, the more messages between the client and server are exchanged (1 for QoS_0, 2 for QoS_1, and 4 for QoS_2).
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Host or Sparkplug Edge Node, this parameter is ignored and QoS_0 is used.
QoS_0
QoS_1
QoS_2
QoS_0

Kotva
pr
pr
Publish Retain

Setting the Retain flag used when sending PUBLISH messages by the D2000 KOM process. Activating the Retain flag causes the last message sent by the D2000 KOM process to be available on the MQTT server to other clients immediately after they are connected, as well as after the D2000 KOM process is disconnected.
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Host or Sparkplug Edge Node, this parameter is ignored, and Retain=False is used.
YES/NONO

Kotva
ka
ka
Keep Alive

Parameter Keep Alive sent as part of a CONNECT message.
If it is non-zero, it indicates the interval in seconds in which the client must send a message (if it does not send it, the MQTT broker can disconnect the client). If it has no data to send, it will at least send a PING request. A zero value means that the MQTT broker does not require periodic messaging.

The recommended Keep Alive value is several minutes.

The D2000 KOM process sends PING requests according to the settings of the Keep Alive and Ping Interval parameters (whichever interval expires first).

0-65535 sec0

Kotva
pi
pi
Ping Interval

If the MQTT server did not send any message during the specified time interval, the D2000 KOM process sends a PING request and waits for a PING response (until time Reply Timeout).

A value of 0 turns off sending the PING request messages. The parameter allows detection of TCP connection failure.

0-3600 sec60

Kotva
pt
pt
Payload Type

The setting of message parsing:

  • Text only - the message is not parsed, it is assigned to the I/O tag with the address IN_TOPIC
  • JSON - the message is parsed as JSON data. If there is an I/O tag with the address IN_TOPIC, the whole message will be assigned to it.
    If there are I/O tags with addresses JA=json_address, they will be populated with the appropriate data from the JSON message. If no such addresses exist in the message, the I/O tags will be invalidated.
  • Sparkplug Host - the message is parsed as Sparkplug B payload (binary coded), The D2000 KOM process behaves as a Host Application (data consumer, sends CMD and STATE messages).
  • Sparkplug Edge Node- the message is parsed as Sparkplug B payload (binary coded), The D2000 KOM process behaves as an Edge Node (data producer, sends BIRTH and DATA messages).

Text only

JSON

Sparkplug Host

Sparkplug Edge Node

Text only

Kotva
tf
tf
Time Field Name

If Payload Type=JSON, the name of the field with a timestamp. If the field name is not specified or the field is not found, the current time is assigned to the values.
For more information on the field name format, see  I/O tags with addresses JA=json_address.
--
Kotva
tm
tm
Time Mask
If Payload Type=JSON, the mask for parsing a value in the JSON field with a timestamp. Special masks are:
  • UNIX - the numeric value represents the number of seconds from epoch 00:00:00 01.01.1970 UTC.
  • UNIXMS - the numeric value represents the number of milliseconds from epoch 00:00:00.000 01.01.1970 UTC.
  • ISO8601 - text format according to ISO 8601, equivalent to specifying the mask 'yyyy-mm-ddThh:mi:ss.mssZ' (e.g. 2025-05-28T05:51:10.112Z)

Note: Whether the time is interpreted as local or UTC with a configured offset depends on the time station parameters settings. This rule does not apply when using the special masks listed above, when UTC time with a zero offset is always used.

-yyyy-mm-dd hh:mi:ss.mss

Kotva
imt
imt
Ignore Missing Time

If Payload Type=JSON, ignoring a missing timestamp - if it is not present in the JSON payload, no warning will be issued.YES/NONO

Kotva
wf
wf
Will Flag

Parameter Will Flag of a CONNECT message. A value of Yes means that the server will send a Last Will message to interested parties if the connection to the D2000 KOM process is lost.
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Host and the Sparkplug Host ID parameter is not empty, this parameter is ignored and Last Will will be sent (see the description of the Sparkplug Host ID parameter).
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node, this parameter is ignored and Last Will will be sent (see the description of the Sparkplug Host ID parameter).
YES/NONO

Kotva
wq
wq
Will QoS

The acknowledgment level (QoS) used when sending a Last Will message in the event of a loss of connection to the D2000 KOM process.
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Host and the Sparkplug Host ID parameter is not empty, this parameter is ignored, and QoS_1 level will be set (see the description of the Sparkplug Host ID parameter).
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node, this parameter is ignored, and QoS_1 level will be set (see the description of the Sparkplug Host ID parameter).
QoS_0
QoS_1
QoS_2
QoS_0

Kotva
wr
wr
Will Retain

The setting of the Retain flag used when sending a Last Will message if the connection to the D2000 KOM process is lost.
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Host and the Sparkplug Host ID parameter is not empty, this parameter is ignored and Retain is set to YES (see the description of the Sparkplug Host ID parameter).
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node, this parameter is ignored and Retain is set to NO (see the description of the Sparkplug Host ID parameter).
YES/NONO

Kotva
wtp
wtp
Will Topic

The topic used to send the Last Will message if the connection to the D2000 KOM process is lost.
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Host and the Sparkplug Host ID parameter is not empty, this parameter is ignored (see the description of the Sparkplug Host ID parameter).
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node, this parameter is ignored, and Topic is set according to the Sparkplug standard (see the description of the Sparkplug Host ID parameter).
-

Kotva
wm
wm
Will Message

Contents of the Last Will report if the connection to the D2000 KOM process is lost.
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Host and the Sparkplug Host ID parameter is not empty, this parameter is ignored (see the description of the Sparkplug Host ID parameter).
Note: If Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node, this parameter is ignored, and Last Will is set according to the Sparkplug standard (see the description of the Sparkplug Host ID parameter).
-
Kotva
rt
rt
Reply Timeout

If the MQTT server does not respond to the SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE, and PING requests within the required time or the D2000 KOM process fails to read a complete message (and only part of it is read), the D2000 KOM process declares an error, closes the connection, and opens it again. Value 0 turns off the timeout.
The parameter enables the handling of problematic behavior of the MQTT server.

sec20
Kotva
wt
wt
Wait Timeout

A timeout of a single reading from a TCP connection. D2000 KOM repeats reading of spontaneous data Max. Wait Retry times and if no data is read, the reading is timeouted and finished (and may be followed by a further reading or writing). By lowering Wait Timeout and Max. Wait Retry parameters, it is possible to achieve a faster writing response of the D2000 KOM process at the expense of a higher CPU load when the MQTT server has no data.
Note: if a lot of messages come from the MQTT server and the D2000 KOM also needs to write values, we recommend setting a lower parameter value (e.g. 0.005 sec) so that writing is not blocked by reading (in any case, after 10 received messages, there is an interruption during which the accumulated writes can be performed).

sec0.100
Kotva
mwr
mwr
Max. Wait Retry
The number of repetitions of reading from the TCP connection. See the description of the Wait Timeout parameter.-3

Kotva
pe
pe
Payload Encoding

Payload field encoding. The MQTT protocol does not specify the content of the Payload field; the ISO-8859-1 standard encoding is suitable for both text and binary content, and UTF-8 is suitable if UTF-8 encoded texts are transmitted. Currently supported encodings are:

  • UTF-8

  • ISO-8859-1

  • Windows-1250

-

ISO-8859-1

MQTT 5.0 Parameters

Kotva
tam
tam
Topic Alias Maximum

Number of Topic Aliases that can be sent by the MQTT broker (parameter is sent in the CONNECT message). The value 0 (default) means that Topic Aliases are not used. The parameter is used only for MQTT Version = MQTT 5.0.

Topic Aliases are numeric identifiers from the interval <1 ... Topic Alias ​​Maximum>, which are sent by the D2000 KOM and the MQTT Broker instead of text identifiers.

Note: In the CONNACK message (response to CONNECT), the MQTT broker optionally sends its value "Topic Alias ​​Maximum", which has the meaning of the number of Topic Aliases that can be sent by the D2000 KOM process (e.g. test.mosquitto.org sends the value 10). D2000 KOM uses Topic Aliases only if the value of its configuration parameter Topic Alias ​​Maximum is non-zero.
Note: Topic Aliases are sent by the D2000 KOM process only when writing values ​​(NDATA/DDATA/NCMD/DCMD), it does not use them for NBIRT/DBIRTH/NDEATH/DDEATH messages (within MQTT Sparkplug) due to alias saving.

00 - 65535

Sparkplug parameters

Kotva
rot
rot
Reorder Timeout

For Payload Type = Sparkplug Host: Timeout (in seconds) for the arrival of a missing NDATA/DDATA message(s). NDATA/DDATA messages contain a sequence number (0..255), while the NBIRTH message contains a sequence number of 0 (resets the sequence). If the D2000 KOM detects a gap in the sequence and the missing message(s) do not arrive within the Reorder Timeout, it sends an NCMD command with the metric 'Node Control/Rebirth' to the corresponding station, which causes the corresponding Edge Node to send an NBIRTH message (and DBIRTH messages for all its Devices). This parameter is implemented on the recommendation of the Sparkplug specification.
Note: Setting Reorder Timeout=0.000 disables missing message detection.

05.0000-59.999

Kotva
rum
rum
Report Unknown Metrics

The parameter activates listings of unknown metrics and topics that do not have their own stations, but end up at a station with the address ".*" (if there is any). The listings will be in the line log as error messages even if the debug on the line is turned off (to facilitate the addition of I/O tags).

YES/NONO

Kotva
nt
nt
Nonstandard Topic

For Payload Type = Sparkplug Host: Activation of parsing of non-standard SparkPlug topics.
The standard topic has the form 'namespace/group_id/message_type/edge_node_id/[device_id]' e.g. 'spBv1.0/Owner/DDATA/devicebase1/local_inputs'.
A non-standard topic has several levels instead of group_id, e.g., 'spBv1.0/Basel/Packaging/DDATA/Falcon11/plannedProductionQuantity'.
Note: writing to I/O tags on stations with a non-standard SparkPlug topic is not supported.

YES/NONO

Kotva
iuq
iuq
Ignore Unknown Quality

For Payload Type = Sparkplug Host: Within the metric, it is possible to define a property called Quality of type Int32. According to the Sparkplug standard, it must be one of the values ​​0=BAD, 192=GOOD, 500=STALE. Any other D2000 Kom process reports as an error. The Ignore Unknown Quality parameter can be used to suppress this error message.

YES/NONO

Kotva
bdm
bdm
Browse Dataset Mode

For Payload Type = Sparkplug Host:The parameter specifies which addresses of the Dataset metric are displayed when browsing:

  • Columns only: one address is displayed for each dataset column (e.g. Dataset[*]^ColA)
  • Items only: the address of each item is displayed (e.g. Dataset[1]^ColA, Dataset[2]^ColA, ...)
  • Columns + Items: addresses for both columns and items are displayed
-
Columns only

Kotva
is
is
Item Separator

For Payload Type = Sparkplug Host: Separator of individual levels in Templates used when entering the address of the I/O tag in Sparkplug mode.
The default value is "->", so the address of the I/O tag can be e.g. SA=Template1->SubTemplate2->Item. If the template name contains the pair "->", it is possible to replace this separator (e.g. "=>").


->

Kotva
hi
hi
Sparkplug Host ID

For Payload Type = Sparkplug Host:

Identifier of Host Application (D2000 is a Host Application). 
If specified, the D2000 KOM process will send a STATE message (with online=true) according to the MQTT Sparkplug standard after connecting to the MQTT server. This message announces that it is alive (equivalent to the NBIRTH and DBIRTH messages sent by Edge Nodes and Devices). At the same time, it sets the Will Topic/Will Message in the CONNECT message according to the Sparkplug standard (STATE message with online=false), with Will QoS=QoS_1, Will Retain=YES, Clean Session Flag=YES.
If the identifier is not specified, the D2000 KOM does not send the STATE message (and the Will parameters are configurable).
According to the MQTT Sparkplug standard, the identifier is mandatory for theSparkplug Host mode (without specifying it, the D2000 KOM process pretends to be an "anonymous" client and does not send a STATE message)..

For Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node:

Identifier of Primary Host Application (Identifier of the Host Application that is defined as primary - the most important - for this Edge Node).
If the identifier is specified, the D2000 KOM process waits for a STATE message after connecting to the MQTT server. When it is received and contains online=true, it sends an NBIRTH message with definitions and values ​​of all output I/O tags of the station corresponding to the Edge Node and optionally DBIRTH messages for stations corresponding to Device/Sensor devices (if such stations are configured). If the STATE message contains online=false (i.e., the Primary Host Application is not connected to the MQTT server), the D2000 KOM disconnects from the MQTT server and tries another MQTT server according to the communication line configuration, provided that multiple MQTT servers are configured. If a single MQTT server is configured, the D2000 KOM waits to receive a STATE message with online=true from the Primary Host Application and only then starts sending NBIRTH/DBIRTH/NDATA/DDATA messages. If the Store & Forward parameter is set and the Primary Host application is not connected to the MQTT server, changes to values are stored in memory (the same as when communication with the MQTT broker is not working).
If the identifier is not specified, the D2000 KOM process sends NBIRTH and possibly DBIRTH messages immediately after connecting to the MQTT server (and subsequently sends NDATA/DDATA messages with value changes).
According to the MQTT Sparkplug standard, the specification of the Primary Host Application is optional for theSparkplug Edge Node mode.
Note: Regardless of the value of the Sparkplug Host ID parameter, the D2000 KOM sets the Will Topic/Will Message in the CONNECT message according to the Sparkplug standard, with Will QoS=QoS_1, Will Retain=NO, Clean Session Flag=YES.

--

Kotva
sfl
sfl
Store & Forward

If Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node, the parameter enables Store & Forward functionality for all stations on the line. If communication with the MQTT broker is down, values ​​are stored in memory and sent with the is_historical flag when communication is restored.
Note: this setting can be changed for individual stations using the Store & Forward station parameter.

YES/NONO

Kotva
ctt
ctt
Convert Datatype/Timestamp to Text

Adding a textual representation of the value type (e.g., Int32) and a timestamp to the text I/O tag with IN_SP2JS address used to convert the Sparkplug payload to JSON for optional parsing in an ESL script.

YES/NONO

...

Kotva
komunikacna_stanica_pozn
komunikacna_stanica_pozn
Note:
If Payload Type = Sparkplug Host and the station address is in abbreviated form, the station doesn't process commands (DCMD, NCMD). If it is in the form of a regular expression ('namespace/group_id/.*/edge_node_id/[device_id]'), the station also processes commands (including the command sent by the D2000 KOM process if Send Node Control/Rebirth=YES). Therefore, we recommend specifying the station address in abbreviated form. If it is also necessary to process commands (from other Host Applications), then create another station with an address in the form of a regular expression (e.g., spBv1.0/Sparkplug Devices/DCMD/MyDevice).
If Payload Type = Sparkplug Edge Node, the station processes commands (DCMD, NCMD) and ignores data messages (NDATA, DDATA, NBIRTH, DBIRTH).

...

  • Text mode: The original implementation of the MQTT protocol contained only input text I/O tags with the addresses IN_TOPIC, IN_DATA, and optionally a pair of I/O tags with the addresses IN_ID and ACK_ID. The first two I/O tags were used to publish the received Topic and Payload (which then needed to be parsed in the script), the second two points were used to publish the packet identifier and confirm the processing of the packet. Thus, it was possible to ensure that for data sent with QoS > QoS_0, confirmation was sent only after data processing in the script.
    Output I/O tags with the addresses OUT_TOPIC and OUT_VALUE are used for writing.
  • JSON mode: An extension for processing Payload with JSON data (Payload Type=JSON) was implemented with the help of input I/O tags with addresses JA=json_address. The D2000 KOM process directly parses the JSON payload and sets the values of I/O tags​​with JSON addresses. I/O tags with addresses IN_TOPIC, IN_DATA, IN_ID, and ACK_ID may not exist at all.
    Output I/O tags with the addresses OUT_TOPIC and OUT_VALUE are used for writing.
  • Kotva
    sparkplug_address
    sparkplug_address
    Sparkplug mode
    : An extension for Payload processing with Sparkplug data (Payload Type = Sparkplug Host/Edge Node) has been implemented using input I/O tags with addresses SA=sparkplug_address. The D2000 KOM process directly parses the Sparkplug payload and sets the values of I/O tags ​​with the Sparkplug addresses. I/O tags with addresses IN_TOPIC, IN_DATA, IN_ID, and ACK_ID may not exist at all.
    Writing simple values ​​is possible using output I/O tags with addresses ST=type;SA=sparkplug_address, where type is the Sparkplug definition of a data type (eg e.g., Int8, UInt16, DateTime, String, etc). The output I/O tags must be on the station with the the Sparkplug address since the Topic is derived from it when writing.
    Note: Messages of STATE type (generated by Host Application clients) with a JSON payload can be parsed using I/O tags with a JSON address (typically an I/O tag of Di type with an address of JA=online).

...

Type of  I/O tagAddressDescription
I/O tags for reading data sent by the MQTT server through a PUBLISH message (usually used in Text mode or JSON mode, rarely in Sparkplug mode).
Note: Values of I/O tags are set by the D2000 KOM process in the order IN_TOPIC, IN_DATA, and IN_ID. The configuration doesn't need to contain all three I/O tags.
TxtI
Kotva
in_topic
in_topic
IN_TOPIC
Topic (Topic) of the received PUBLISH message.
TxtI
Kotva
in_data
in_data
IN_DATA
Data (Payload) of the received PUBLISH message.
Ci
Kotva
in_id
in_id
IN_ID
Identifier of a packet (Packet Identifier) of a PUBLISH message that depends on the level of validation (QoS).
For messages sent with QoS_0, the identifier is zero; for QoS_1 and QoS_2, it is a positive 16-bit number. On the TCP/IP-TCP line, the identifier is monotonically increasing; on the TCP/IP-TCP Redundant line, values from two monotonically increasing sequences can alternate (so they can also be repeated), so the recommendation given in the following note applies:
Note: If the MQTT server also sends also messages with the QoS_0 level of validation and the ACK_ID I/O tag is configured, then we recommend activating the option New value when changing time in the Filter tab, so that repeated writing of the value 0 will cause a new value that differs only in a timestamp to be generated.
I/O tag to confirm the received data to the MQTT server.
Co
Kotva
ack_id
ack_id
ACK_ID
If an output I/O tag with the ACK_ID address is defined, the D2000 KOM expects confirmation of the processing of each message by writing a copy of the value of the IN_ID tag. Only after, it sets values from the next received PUBLISH message (if it was received in the meantime) into the IN_TOPIC, IN_DATA, and IN_ID I/O tags (in this order). 
In the case of the QoS_0 level of confirmation, it is, therefore, necessary to repeatedly set the value of the I/O tag ACK_ID to 0. 
If the I/O tag ACK_ID does not exist, the values are written into the IN_TOPIC, IN_DATA, and IN_ID I/O tags immediately after the PUBLISH message is received and processed.
Note: For messages received with a QoS_0 level of validation, no confirmation is sent to the MQTT server; only the values of the received PUBLISH message will be published. 
I/O tags for sending values to the MQTT server through a PUBLISH message.
Note: in order for the D2000 KOM process to send the PUBLISH messages to the MQTT server, both I/O tags must be defined within one station.
TxtO
Kotva
out_topic
out_topic
OUT_TOPIC
The topic of the PUBLISH message being sent.
Note: If the I/O tag with the OUT_TOPIC address does not exist, the station address will be used directly as the Topic (if it is empty, the writing will not be performed).
TxtO

Kotva
out_value
out_value
OUT_VALUE

Data (Payload) of the PUBLISH message being sent.
Note: Sending the message is performed as a result of writing to the OUT_VALUE I/O tag (i.e., if the Topic does not change, then it is sufficient to set the OUT_TOPIC point once, e.g., by using the default value).
I/O tags for parsing JSON messages

TxtI, TxtO, Qi,
Ci, Co,
Ai, Ao,
Di, Do,
TiR, ToR

Kotva
ja
ja
JA=json_address

If Payload Type=JSON, the message is parsed as JSON data. The json_address value specifies the name of the JSON field whose value is to be assigned to the I/O tag
For JSON messages that can be structured, the syntax level1.level2.level3 ... is supported, e.g. rx.current, and if they contain fields (indexed from 1) also syntax level1[index1].level2[index2].level3 ... is possible, e.g. rx.gwrx[1].time.
Since the JSON message itself can be an array, the address can also start with an index, e.g. JA=[1].batt_cell_v_avg

For other examples, see the description of the LoRaWAN protocol's Envelope type I/O tags.


Writing to an I/O tag with a JSON address is also supported, but it must not have indexes. Examples of correct addresses for writing:

  • JA=myaddress
  • JA=mystruct.mylevel.myitem

When writing, the generated JSON contains the value itself and optionally a timestamp, if the station protocol parameter Time Field Name or the line parameter Time Field Name is set.
Note: Before writing to an I/O tag with a JSON address, a topic must first be set (an I/O tag with the OUT_TOPIC address). If the I/O tag with the OUT_TOPIC address does not exist, the station address will be used directly as the Topic (if it is empty, the writing will not be performed).

I/O tags for parsing Sparkplug messages

TxtI, TxtO, Qi,
Ci, Co,
Ai, Ao,
Di, Do,
TiR, ToR, TiA, ToA

Kotva
sa
sa

SA=sparkplug_address

SAL=alias;SA=sparkplug_address

ST=type;SA=sparkplug_address

ST=type;SAL=alias;SA=sparkplug_address

If Payload Type = Sparkplug Host/Edge Node, the message is parsed as Sparkplug data (a binary format built on Google Protocol Buffers). Sparkplug data contains metrics that have text identifiers (sparkplug_address) or possibly numeric aliases (alias).

Reading template items  is possible by specifying sparkplug_address in the format <TemplateName1><Separator><TemplateName2><Separator> ... <Separator><ItemName> where:

  • <TemplateNameX> is the name of the template/sub-template
  • <Separator> is the separator for individual levels (standard characters "->", which can be changed with the Item Separator parameter if this sequence occurs in template/item names)
  • <ItemName> is the item name of the deepest nested template

Examples of template item addresses:
SA=Template1->SubTemplate2->Item
SA=secUDT->sec

Reading dataset items (equivalent to structured variables in D2000) is possible by specifying sparkplug_address in the format <DatasetName>[<Row>]^<ColumnName> where:

  • <DatasetName> is the name of the dataset (it can also be part of a structure, e.g., Template1->SubTemplate2->Dataset3)
  • <Row> is the column number (1..N) or the "*" character. In the latter case, it is possible to configure the Destination column to which all rows are written (values ​​from the first row of the corresponding column are written to the I/O tag)
  • <ColumnName> is the name of the dataset column

Examples of dataset item addresses:
SA=Performance[3]^ActivePower
SA=Machine2->Parameters[1]^ActivePower
SA=DHS/Formation Data->Reservoir Parameter[*]^Gas density

For output I/O tags, the value type can be explicitly (ST=type). Simple types are supported (not template items/dataset items):

  • Int8
  • Int16
  • Int32
  • Int64
  • UInt8
  • UInt16
  • UInt32
  • UInt64
  • Float
  • Double
  • Boolean
  • String
  • DateTime
  • Text
  • Unknown
    (undefined type)

If the value type is not specified, the default value depends on the type of I/O tag:

I/O tag typeValue type
Dout

Boolean

CoInt64
Ao

Double

ToA

DateTime

ToRDouble
TxtO

String

Note: There is no difference between the String and Text types.
Note: for Payload Type = Edge Node, the D2000 KOM process sends DBIRTH/NBIRTH messages that contain only I/O tags (both input and output ones) with a defined value type. If we want to hide some (input) I/O tags, we need to set ST=Unknown in the address.

For Payload Type = Edge Node, it is also possible to specify a numerical alias (SAL=alias) as a natural number (0, 1, 2, ...) for both input and output I/O tags. The alias of the I/O tag within the station must be unique. Aliasing allows you to reduce the size of the transmitted data: in the NBIRTH/DBIRTH message, both the text identifier (sparkplug_address) and the alias are specified for each I/O tag; in the NDATA/DDATA messages, only aliases that are shorter than the text addresses are sent. Alias ​​is only used if Sparkplug Alias Mode = "Default (SAL=alias)".
Note: If aliases are used in the I/O tag address in Payload Type = Sparkplug Host mode, they will be replaced by aliases from the NBIRTH/DBIRTH message. However, if for some reason the Edge Node does not send these messages (and sends NDATA/DDATA with aliases), aliases can be useful for matching a text name with an alias.

The PUBLISH message created during writing contains a Topic derived from the station address. The message type depends on the station address:

  • for Payload Type = Sparkplug Host, depending on whether it is an Edge Node (NCMD) or Device/Sensor (DCMD)
  • for Payload Type = Edge Node, depending on whether it is an Edge Node (NDATA) or Device/Sensor (DDATA)

The Payload of the message contains a timestamp, a value type (type), a written value (encoded according to the specified value type), and a metric name (sparkplug_address) or an alias.

TxtI

Kotva
IN_SP2JS
IN_SP2JS
IN_SP2JS

The I/O tag is used to convert the Sparkplug payload into a JSON representation, which can then be processed, e.g., in an ESL script. Depending on the Convert Datatype/Timestamp to Text parameter, a textual representation of the value type and timestamp is also added. 
An example of value:

{"metrics":[{"datatype":3,"int_value":7338992,"name":"Corrected Vol Acc Stn","timestamp":1729664005479}],"seq":32,"timestamp":1729664005479}

After formatting into a readable form:

{
    "metrics": [
        {
            "datatype": 3,
            "int_value": 7338992,
            "name": "Corrected Vol Acc Stn",
            "timestamp": 1729664005479
        }
    ],
    "seq": 32,
    "timestamp": 1729664005479
}

An example of a more complex value containing properties and a dataset, and also displaying a textual representation of the data type (datatype_txt) and timestamp (timestamp_txt) as a result of the set parameter Convert Datatype/Timestamp to Text:

{
    "metrics": [
        {
            "datatype": 12,
            "datatype_txt": "String",
            "name": "Node Properties/Configuration",
            "string_value": "{}",
            "timestamp": 1730305529539,
            "timestamp_txt": "30-10-2024 17:25:29.539"
        },
        {
            "alias": 30064771073,
            "datatype": 5,
            "datatype_txt": "Uint8",
            "int_value": 0,
            "name": "Node Properties/Missing Param",
            "properties": {
                "keys": [
                    "usage"
                ],
                "values": [
                    {
                        "string_value": "technical information",
                        "type": 12,
                        "type_txt": "String"
                    }
                ]
            },
            "timestamp": 1730305529537,
            "timestamp_txt": "30-10-2024 17:25:29.537"
        },
        {
            "alias": 0,
            "dataset_value": {
                "columns": [
                    "topic_name",
                    "offset",
                    "length",
                    "crc"
                ],
                "num_of_columns": 4,
                "rows": [
                    {
                        "row": [
                            "N/A",
                            0,
                            0,
                            0
                        ]
                    }
                ],
                "types": [
                    12,
                    7,
                    7,
                    7
                ],
                "types_txt": [
                    "String",
                    "UInt32",
                    "UInt32",
                    "UInt32"
                ]
            },
            "datatype": 16,
            "datatype_txt": "DataSet",
            "name": "Node Control/FW Update",
            "timestamp": 1730305529537,
            "timestamp_txt": "30-10-2024 17:25:29.537"
        }
    ],
    "seq": 0,
    "timestamp": 1730305529536,
    "timestamp_txt": "30-10-2024 17:25:29.536"
}

...