The Paho Java Client is an MQTT client library written in Java for developing applications that run on the JVM or other Java compatible platforms such as Android
The Paho Java Client provides two APIs: MqttAsyncClient provides a fully asynchronous API where completion of activities is notified via registered callbacks. MqttClient is a synchronous wrapper around MqttAsyncClient where functions appear synchronous to the application.
The Paho project has been created to provide reliable open-source implementations of open and standard messaging protocols aimed at new, existing, and emerging applications for Machine-to-Machine (M2M) and Internet of Things (IoT). Paho reflects the inherent physical and cost constraints of device connectivity. Its objectives include effective levels of decoupling between devices and applications, designed to keep markets open and encourage the rapid growth of scalable Web and Enterprise middleware and applications.
- Project Website: https://www.eclipse.org/paho
- Eclipse Project Information: https://projects.eclipse.org/projects/iot.paho
- Paho Java Client Page: https://eclipse.org/paho/clients/java/
- GitHub: https://github.com/eclipse/paho.mqtt.java
- Twitter: @eclipsepaho
- Issues: https://github.com/eclipse/paho.mqtt.java/issues
- Mailing-list: https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/paho-dev
Eclipse hosts a Nexus repository for those who want to use Maven to manage their dependencies. The released libraries are also available in the Maven Central repository.
Add the repository definition and the dependency definition shown below to your pom.xml.
Replace %REPOURL% with either https://repo.eclipse.org/content/repositories/paho-releases/
for the official releases, or https://repo.eclipse.org/content/repositories/paho-snapshots/
for the nightly snapshots. Replace %VERSION% with the level required .
The latest release version is 1.2.5
and the current snapshot version is 1.2.6-SNAPSHOT
.
** Dependency definition for MQTTv3 client **
<project ...>
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>Eclipse Paho Repo</id>
<url>%REPOURL%</url>
</repository>
</repositories>
...
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.eclipse.paho</groupId>
<artifactId>org.eclipse.paho.client.mqttv3</artifactId>
<version>%VERSION%</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
</project>
** Dependency definition for MQTTv5 client **
<project ...>
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>Eclipse Paho Repo</id>
<url>%REPOURL%</url>
</repository>
</repositories>
...
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.eclipse.paho</groupId>
<artifactId>org.eclipse.paho.mqttv5.client</artifactId>
<version>%VERSION%</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
</project>
If you find that there is functionality missing or bugs in the release version, you may want to try using the snapshot version to see if this helps before raising a feature request or an issue.
There are two active branches on the Paho Java git repository, master
which is used to produce stable releases, and develop
where active development is carried out. By default cloning the git repository will download the master
branch, to build from develop
make sure you switch to the remote branch: git checkout -b develop remotes/origin/develop
To then build the library run the following maven command: mvn package -DskipTests
This will build the client library without running the tests. The jars for the library, source and javadoc can be found in the following directories:
org.eclipse.paho.client.mqttv3/target
org.eclipse.paho.mqttv5.client/target
MQTTv3 reference documentation is online at: http://www.eclipse.org/paho/files/javadoc/index.html
Log and Debug in the Java Client: https://wiki.eclipse.org/Paho/Log_and_Debug_in_the_Java_client
The included code below is a very basic sample that connects to a server and publishes a message using the MQTTv3 synchronous API. More extensive samples demonstrating the use of the MQTTv3 and MQTTv5 Asynchronous API can be found in the org.eclipse.paho.sample
directory of the source.
import org.eclipse.paho.client.mqttv3.MqttClient;
import org.eclipse.paho.client.mqttv3.MqttConnectOptions;
import org.eclipse.paho.client.mqttv3.MqttException;
import org.eclipse.paho.client.mqttv3.MqttMessage;
import org.eclipse.paho.client.mqttv3.persist.MemoryPersistence;
public class MqttPublishSample {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String topic = "MQTT Examples";
String content = "Message from MqttPublishSample";
int qos = 2;
String broker = "tcp://iot.eclipse.org:1883";
String clientId = "JavaSample";
MemoryPersistence persistence = new MemoryPersistence();
try {
MqttClient sampleClient = new MqttClient(broker, clientId, persistence);
MqttConnectOptions connOpts = new MqttConnectOptions();
connOpts.setCleanSession(true);
System.out.println("Connecting to broker: "+broker);
sampleClient.connect(connOpts);
System.out.println("Connected");
System.out.println("Publishing message: "+content);
MqttMessage message = new MqttMessage(content.getBytes());
message.setQos(qos);
sampleClient.publish(topic, message);
System.out.println("Message published");
sampleClient.disconnect();
System.out.println("Disconnected");
System.exit(0);
} catch(MqttException me) {
System.out.println("reason "+me.getReasonCode());
System.out.println("msg "+me.getMessage());
System.out.println("loc "+me.getLocalizedMessage());
System.out.println("cause "+me.getCause());
System.out.println("excep "+me);
me.printStackTrace();
}
}
}