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1.2.0 (Neon)
Automatic reconnect and offline buffering (allowing publish to be called when the application is not connected) for the C, Java, JavaScript and Android clients.
WebSockets support for Java, Python.
First formal release of the Go client.
Unlike most other Eclipse projects, Paho is made up of a number of separate components that have no relation to each other apart from their focus on MQTT. The majourity of components in Paho are APIs for specific languages or runtime environments, however they are all goverend by the MQTT specification which defines the protocol between clients and servers, but not the APIs that implement it. In the case of the Paho client libraries, we are faced with two options; We could design the APIs to be very similar across all languages and platforms, or we could tailor them to the individual language they are written in so that consumers of the library feel more comforatable using them.
With Paho, we have chosen to follow the API styles set out by the individual languages that each component is written in / for.
In this release we will have 3 new components, one client library targeted at GoLang, and an MQTT monitorying utility; mqtt-spy. The GoLang library is band new code written in Go and mqtt-spy is written in Java and uses the Paho MQTT library.
MQTT uses TCP as its underlying transport. Each of the APIs allows the TCP connection to be secured with TLS/SSL using the facilities available on that platform. For example:
- Java - JDK standard TLS/SSL libraries
- .Net framework standard TLS/SSL libraries
- Python built-in TLS/SSL libraries
- C - OpenSSL
- Embedded C - no TLS support included, but supports the use of any TLS library
- GoLang - built-in TLS/SSL library: crypto/tls
- JavaScript - Web Browser built-in TLS/SSL library
No TLS/SSL support is directly included in the Paho components, they use what is available in the external environment. That external environment needs to be updated with recent TLS software to ensure TLS vulnerability fixes are included.
The Paho web pages have a separate getting started page for each component: http://www.eclipse.org/paho/.
All of the APIs have samples demonstrating the use of the API and reference documentation in a form suitable for that language (JavaDoc, Doxygen, etc). There are plans to improve the documentation and example code though as well as a snippets page that allows developers to quickly find short examples for common MQTT tasks using the language / client of their choice.
The mqtt.org community wiki has been updated with links to all the Paho components (https://github.com/mqtt/mqtt.github.io/wiki/libraries).
Each of the APIs in any of the languages has a similar look and feel, with one operation for each of the MQTT commands, connect, subscribe, unsubscribe, publish and disconnect. The success or failure of these operations is reported either synchronously via a return code, or asynchronously in a callback, depending on the API.
The basic styles of API have been developed over 8 years or more, from before Paho's existence, and continued within Paho, so we are confident of their basic usability.
We continue to get feedback and improve where necessary, for instance with the new embedded APIs, which were designed in consultation with experienced developers.
We have also looked to improve areas of functionality within the clients to make using Paho easier for developers. One such example is the introduction of Automatic Reconnect & Offline buffering functionality that is now in the Java, Android and C clients and is planned for other clients too. This means that developers no longer have to write their own code to handle lost connections in their applications or the buffering of messages whilst the client attempts to reconnect. We are always looking for new ways to reduce the amount of 'boilerplate code' that developers have to write especially if multiple developers have to write the same code in their applications.
Each of the MQTT components supports the MQTT v3.1.1 standard version of the protocol (https://www.oasis-open.org/standards#mqttv3.1.1). Some may also support the older 3.1 specification.
The MQTT-SN components implement version 1.2 of the MQTT-SN specification (http://mqtt.org/new/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/MQTT-SN_spec_v1.2.pdf).
This year, Paho migrated from the Eclipse Git / Gerrit / Bugzilla infrastructure to GitHub. With this there has been an increase in issues (bugs) being raised as well as an increase in code contributions in the form of Pull Requests. At the time of writing, the Paho components have been starred 246 times in total and users have forked the code 126 times.
There are currently 397 resolved/closed bugs for Paho and 128 unresolved for released components. Bug and mailing list activity has consistent external contributions and interest.
As of March 2016, Paho still has the second highest website traffic of any Eclipse IoT project. Mosquitto is highest -- (an MQTT server derived from RSMB). This means that the MQTT projects have over 50% of all Eclipse IoT measured website traffic.
Paho has second highest measured downloads of any Eclipse IoT project with over 130,000 in the last 12 months. This was in part due to making paho available in additional locations other than the eclipse download page and repositories. This statistic also omits many downloads of Paho which can be obtained in other ways (source, for instance). There have been some calls for some of the Paho clients to be made available in more package management services, and where possible and appropritate we will try to do this as it will make development significantly easier for some developers.
These figures show continuing increase in activity and interest around Paho and MQTT year on year. They are only a rough guide, but show that there is consistent interest in MQTT and Paho.
We are collaborating with the mbed (mbed.org) community on embedded MQTT clients: http://mbed.org/teams/mqtt/ The master source resides in the Paho project.
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