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Helium Gateway

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The Helium Gateway application is a service designed to run on Linux-based LoRaWAN gateways.

It's intended to run alongside a typical LoRa packet forwarder and to connect via Semtech's Gateway Messaging Protocol (GWMP, using JSON v1 or v2).

In turn, the Helium Gateway application does two things:

  • fetches blockchain context, such as routing tables and OUI endpoints, from a Gateway Service; this means the application does not need to maintain a full ledger of copy of the blockchain
  • connects and routes packets to the appropriates OUI endpoints (ie: Helium Routers)
                                                                 +-----------+
+-----------+                       +------------+               |  Gateway  |
|           |                       |            |<--- gRPC ---->|  Service  |
|  packet   |<--- Semtech GWMP ---->|   Helium   |               +-----------+
| forwarder |       over UDP        |   Gateway  |               +-----------+
|           |                       |            |<--- gRPC ---->|  Helium   |
+-----------+                       +------------+               |  Routers  |
                                                                 +-----------+

The current gateway project forwards packets to the router but does not yet use state channels which means forwarded packets are not yet rewarded by the blockchain.

Releases

The project builds ipk and deb packaged releases for Linux-based LoRa gateways. These packages attempt to be self-updating to be able to track improvements to the service. Updates are delivered through the following channels which a gateway can subscribe to by a channel setting in the update section of the settings file:

  • alpha - Early development releases. These will happen frequently as functionality is developed and may be unstable. Expect to need to log into your gateway to restart or manually fix your light gateway.
  • beta - Pre-release candidates which are considered to be stable enough for early access. Breaking issues can still happen but should be rare.
  • release - The main release channel. Updates are considered to be stable for all platforms.
  • semver - This is the default channel and selects the channel based on the installed package version identifier.

NOTE: Gateways should have at least 16Mb of available application file space to handle gateway installation and updates.

Linux Dependencies

This application requires a Linux-based environment for two big reasons:

  • tokio: the gateway-rs application, written in Rust, depends on Tokio for its runtime. Tokio binds to Linux interfaces such as epoll and kqeueue. It is technically possible to port Tokio to another OS or RTOS (this has been done for Windows), but it would be no simple undertaking.
  • curl: for fetching releases over SSL, curl is used. This was a simple way to use SSL without bloating the helium_gateway binary with additional libraries. Note that the updater may be disabled and thus this dependency may be removed.

Installing

If your supported LoRa gateway did not come with helium-gateway pre-installed, manual installation requires you to:

  1. Configure the packet forwarder on the gateway to forward to the helium-gateway application. This varies per gateway but the goal is to set the packet forwarder to forward to the (default) configured helium-gateway on 127.0.0.1 at udp port 1680

  2. Set up ssh acccess to the gateway. Depending on the gateway that may require going through a web interface, while others already have ssh configured.

  3. scp a downloaded release package for the supported platform to the gateway. e.g.

    scp helium-gateway-<version>-<platform>.ipk <gateway>:/tmp/
  4. ssh into the device and install the service using a command like:

    opkg install /tmp/helium-gateway-<version>-<platform>.ipk

    or

    dpkg --install /tmp/helium-gateway-<version>-<platform>.deb

    NOTE: Some platform have custom package installation requirements. Refer to the developer instructions for that platform on how to install a package.

    The default region of the gateway is US915, if your region is different you can set the right one in /etc/helium_gateway/settings.toml. Just add the following line at the beginning of the file:

    region = "<region>"

    Possible values are : US915| EU868 | EU433 | CN470 | CN779 | AU915 | AS923_1 | AS923_2 | AS923_3 | AS923_4 | KR920 | IN865. After updating the value you need to restart the service :

    /etc/init.d/helium_gateway restart

If this command succeeds the logs on the gateway will show the service starting and the local packet forwarder client connecting to the gateway service.

Supported Platforms

The following platforms have already been tested by Helium and our community. Our plan is to test this on all relevant hardware platforms used by the Helium Network. If your preferred platform isn't listed yet, here's how to get it added.

  • Review the open issues to see if it's already in progress. If not, file an issue.
  • Join the #gateway channel on Helium Discord and let us know what platform we're missing.

Note that platforms will be tested much faster if you join the development process!

Platform Target Products
ramips_24kec mipsel-unknown-linux-musl RAK833 EVB Kit
RAK7258 (WisGate Edge Lite)
RAK7249 (WisGate Edge Max)
RAK7240 (WisGate Edge Prime)
smartharvest mipsel-unknown-linux-musl ❔ Smart Harvest Instruments Light Gateway
klkgw armv7-unknown-linux-musleabihf ✅ Kerlink Wirnet iFemtoCell Evolution
dragino mips-unknown-linux-musl ✅ Dragino LPS8
❔ Dragino DLOS8
mtcdt armv5te-unknown-linux-musleabi ✅ Multitech Conduit MTCDT (mLinux)
resiot armv7-unknown-linux-gnueabihf ✅ ResIOT X gateways resiot
cotx aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu ✅ Cotx gateways cotx
x86_64 x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu ✅ Debian x86_64
raspi01 arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf ✅ Raspberry Pi 0 or 1 running Raspian / Raspberry Pi OS or another Debian-based Linux distro
raspi234 armv7-unknown-linux-gnueabihf ✅ Raspberry Pi 2, 3, or 4 running Raspian / Raspberry Pi OS or another Debian-based Linux distro
raspi_64 aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu ✅ Raspberry Pi 3 or 4 running Raspian / Raspberry Pi OS 64 bit or another 64 bit Debian-based Linux distro

Building

Use one of the existing releases if you can, or build your own by hand using the instructions below.

If you want to support a new platform, please consider submitting a PR to get the package as part of the supported matrix of gateway platforms!

  1. Install rust
    curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
  2. Install cargo cross, cargo-make, and, if needed, cargo-deb. The cross command allows for cross compiling to hardware targets using docker images, while the cargo-make command is used to package up. If creating a deb package, cargo-deb is also needed.
    cargo install cross
    cargo install cargo-make
    cargo install cargo-deb
  3. Build the application or package using one of the following:
    1. Build the application binary using the target triplet from the supported targets. Note the use of the --release flag to optimize the target binary for size. Debug builds may be to large to run on some targets.

      cross build --target <target> --release

      The resulting application binary is located in

      target/<target>/release/helium_gateway
      
    2. Build an application package using one of the target system profile names

      cargo make --profile <platform> pkg

      The resulting ipk or deb will be located in

      target/ipk/helium-gateway-<version>-<platform>.<ipk or deb>
      

Additional usage info

The Helium Gateway application can be configured to suit your hardware/software environment in a variety of ways - either from the command line, using customizations to the settings.toml file or with environment variables. The following sections describe this functionality in more detail as well as more general information on how to use the application.

Settings file

The Helium Gateway application is configured using TOML files for your settings. The defaults can be found in the default.toml file in this repo. You should not edit this file directly, rather you should create a settings.toml file and store it either at the default expected locaton /etc/helium_gateway/settings.toml or at a custom location of your choosing by passing the -c flag to the helium_gateway application as shown below in the general usage section.

You can customize any of the fields shown in the default.toml file, however it is important to make sure that when editing you maintain the same ordering as shown in the default file. You do not need to include all fields in the settings.toml file - only the ones you want to change from default values - however maintaining the correct sections is highly recommended to avoid any unexpected behaviour.

For example, this config will not work correctly as it all ends up in the update section:

[update]
platform = "ramips_24kec"

[log]
method = "stdio"
level = "info"
timestamp = false

region = "EU868"

Whereas this one will:

region = "EU868"

[log]
method = "stdio"
level = "info"
timestamp = false

[update]
platform = "ramips_24kec"

By maintaining the same layout as the default.toml file you can avoid any unexpected errors.

The following are the settings that can be changed and their default and optional values:

# can be any file location where you store the gateway_key.bin file
keypair = "/etc/helium_gateway/gateway_key.bin"
# can be any ip address and port combination
listen_addr = "127.0.0.1:1680"
# possible values are : US915| EU868 | EU433 | CN470 | CN779 | AU915 | AS923_1 | AS923_2 | AS923_3 | AS923_4 | KR920 | IN865
region = "US915"

[log]
# either stdio or syslog
method = "stdio"
# possible values are: debug | info | warn
level = "info"
# either true or false
timestamp = false

[update]
# either true or false
enabled = true
# this setting must be overriden to get updates. choose from the supported platforms listed here https://github.com/helium/gateway-rs#supported-platforms
platform = "unknown"
# update channel to use: alpha | beta | release | semver - more details can be found at https://github.com/helium/gateway-rs#releases
channel = "semver"
# Interval in minutes between update checks
interval = 10
# The github release stream to check for updates
uri = "https://api.github.com/repos/helium/gateway-rs/releases"
# The command to run to install the update.
command = "/etc/helium_gateway/install_update"

[cache]
# The location of the cache store for the great gateway service
store = "/etc/helium_gateway/cache"

The default gateways / router uri and public_key parameters can be changed, but this is only if you are using non-Helium routers. For general use with Helium you should leave these the same.

Envrionment variables

Instead of overriding paramaters in the default.toml file using a settings.toml file as described above, you can instead use environment variables. The environment variable name will be the same name as the entries in the settings file in uppercase and prefixed with "GW_". For example, following on from the above example where we change the region using region = "EU868" in the settings file, setting an environment variable of GW_REGION="EU868" will override the region setting. If the settings are in one of the lower sections such as the [update] or [log] sections then you need to also include that in the environment variable name such as GW_LOG_LEVEL or GW_UPDATE_PLATFORM.

The settings are loaded first from default.toml, then from a settings.toml file, and then from environment variables and any duplicates are overriden in the order. Therefore, please note that if you have a setting in all three locations, the environment variable will override the settings in the other two locations.

General usage info

Using the Helium Gateway application is pretty simple, and the vast majority of the information you will need to use it can be gleaned by using the --help flag which provides the following output:

Helium Light Gateway

USAGE:
    helium_gateway [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] <SUBCOMMAND>

FLAGS:
        --daemon     Daemonize the application
    -h, --help       Prints help information
    -V, --version    Prints version information

OPTIONS:
    -c <config>        Configuration folder to use. default.toml will be loaded first and any custom settings in
                       settings.toml merged in [default: /etc/helium_gateway]

SUBCOMMANDS:
    add       Construct an add gateway transaction for this gateway
    help      Prints this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
    key       Commands on gateway keys
    server    Run the gateway service
    update    Commands for gateway updates

As you can see, apart from the help command, there are four core subcommands that you can pass: add, key, server and update. The descriptions of what these subcommands do is shown in brief in the above help output, and are explained in more detail in the sections below.

The only option available is the config option using the -c flag. This tells the application where your configuration file is located and can be used as follows whilst passing any of the other commands such as server or add (default is /etc/helium_gateway):

./helium_gateway -c /location/of/config/folder server

Lastly you can check the version, read the help information or daemonize the application using the --version, --help and --daemon flags respectively.

Add gateway subcommand

As shown in the help output below, this subcommand is used to construct an add gateway transaction which can subsequently be used with the Helium Wallet application to onboard the gateway to the blockchain. More infomation on this process can be found on the docs article for Data Only Hotspots.

Construct an add gateway transaction for this gateway

USAGE:
    helium_gateway add [OPTIONS] --owner <owner> --payer <payer>

FLAGS:
    -h, --help       Prints help information
    -V, --version    Prints version information

OPTIONS:
        --mode <mode>      The staking mode for adding the light gateway [default: dataonly]
        --owner <owner>    The target owner account of this gateway
        --payer <payer>    The account that will pay account for this addition

So for example, to construct an add gateway transaction you would enter the following command at the terminal:

./helium_gateway add --owner WALLET_ADDRESS --payer WALLET_ADDRESS

You need to substitute WALLET_ADDRESS for the wallet address you will use for the owner of the hotspot and the payer of the transaction fees respectively...but please note that the --payer address must be the same as the one you will use to submit the transaction to the blockchain, or the transaction will fail.

The output of this command is a JSON object which looks like the following:

{
  "address": "11TL62V8NYvSTXmV5CZCjaucskvNR1Fdar1Pg4Hzmzk5tk2JBac",
  "fee": 65000,
  "mode": "dataonly",
  "owner": "14GWyFj9FjLHzoN3aX7Tq7PL6fEg4dfWPY8CrK8b9S5ZrcKDz6S",
  "payer": "14GWyFj9FjLHzoN3aX7Tq7PL6fEg4dfWPY8CrK8b9S5ZrcKDz6S",
  "staking fee": 1000000,
  "txn": "CrkBCiEBrlImpYLbJ0z0hw5b4g9isRyPrgbXs9X+RrJ4pJJc9MkSIQA7yIy7F+9oPYCTmDz+v782GMJ4AC+jM+VfjvUgAHflWSJGMEQCIGfugfLkXv23vJcfwPYjLlMyzYhKp+Rg8B2YKwnsDHaUAiASkdxUO4fdS33D7vyid8Tulizo9SLEL1lduyvda9YVRCohAa5SJqWC2ydM9IcOW+IPYrEcj64G17PV/kayeKSSXPTJOMCEPUDo+wM="
}

You can also pass a --mode flag followed by the hotspot type (dataonly | light | full) as shown below:

./helium_gateway add --owner WALLET_ADDRESS --payer WALLET_ADDRESS --mode light

The output of this command will be mostly the same as if you used the default dataonly however you will see that the mode has changed to "mode": "light", and the staking fee amount has changed to "staking fee": 4000000.

The txn field from the JSON object needs to be used as the input to the wallet command helium-wallet hotspot add when you subsequently want to add it to the blockchain. For example, using the above JSON object as an example, you would use the following command:

helium-wallet hotspots add CrkBCiEBrlImpYLbJ0z0hw5b4g9isRyPrgbXs9X+RrJ4pJJc9MkSIQA7yIy7F+9oPYCTmDz+v782GMJ4AC+jM+VfjvUgAHflWSJGMEQCIGfugfLkXv23vJcfwPYjLlMyzYhKp+Rg8B2YKwnsDHaUAiASkdxUO4fdS33D7vyid8Tulizo9SLEL1lduyvda9YVRCohAa5SJqWC2ydM9IcOW+IPYrEcj64G17PV/kayeKSSXPTJOMCEPUDo+wM=

Gateway keys subcommand

This subcommand can be used to get the address and animal name of the gateway from the keys file as shown in the help output below.

Commands on gateway keys

USAGE:
    helium_gateway key <SUBCOMMAND>

FLAGS:
    -h, --help       Prints help information
    -V, --version    Prints version information

SUBCOMMANDS:
    help    Prints this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
    info    Commands on gateway keys

Using this is as simple as passing the following command in a terminal from wherever you installed the helium_gateway application:

./helium_gateway key info

The output of this is a JSON object containing the address and animal name of the hotspot as shown below:

{
  "address": "11TL62V8NYvSTXmV5CZCjaucskvNR1Fdar1Pg4Hzmzk5tk2JBac",
  "name": "wide-neon-kestrel"
}

Gateway server

The gateway server subcommand is used to start the gateway service on your device.

Run the gateway service

USAGE:
    helium_gateway server

FLAGS:
    -h, --help       Prints help information
    -V, --version    Prints version information

Running it is as simple as:

./helium_gateway server

However as discussed above you can also pass the -c option to tell the service that you are using a different location for your config files:

./helium_gateway -c /location/of/config/folder server

Gateway update

The gateway update subcommand pretty much does what it says on the tin - it is used to update the software version of the gateway. You can see the help output for this command shown below.

Commands for gateway updates

USAGE:
    helium_gateway update <SUBCOMMAND>

FLAGS:
    -h, --help       Prints help information
    -V, --version    Prints version information

SUBCOMMANDS:
    download    Download an updates. This does not install the update
    help        Prints this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
    list        List available updates

As you can see from the help output, there are essentially two functions of the update command - to list available updates and to download an update.

For basic usage of the list function you can simply use:

./helium_gateway update list

And this will give you an output similar to the following:

1.0.0-alpha.10
1.0.0-alpha.13 (*)
1.0.0-alpha.12
1.0.0-alpha.11
1.0.0-alpha.9
1.0.0-alpha.8

This takes the default update channel and platform from your environment variables, settings.toml or default.toml depending on whether you have set any overrides or not. The list will default to a total of 10 update versions, unless you pass a flag to tell it to output a different amount. However, if you want to be more specific you can use something like the following:

./helium_gateway update list --channel <channel> --platform <platform> -n <count>

Where:

  • <channel> is the channel to list updates for (alpha | beta | release | semver - more details can be found here - defaults to 'update.channel' setting)
  • <count> is the number of update entries to list (defaults to 10)
  • <platform> is the platform to list entries for (choose from the supported platforms listed here - defaults to 'update.platform' setting)

Lastly, we have the download function which can be used as follows:

./helium_gateway update download --path <path> <version>

Where:

  • <path> is the directory path to download the update to (defaults to your current directory)
  • <version> is the version you want to update to (which can be found from the list command described above - there is no default, so the version must be passed or this command will fail)

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