This resin.io setup is based on the [Multi-protocol Packet Forwarder by Jac Kersing](https://github.com/kersing/packet_forwarder/tree/master/mp_pkt_fwd).
## Difference between Poly-packet-forwarder and Multi-protocol-packet-forwarder
mp-pkt-fwd uses the new protocolbuffers-over-mqtt-over-tcp protocol for gateways, as defined by TTN and used by the TTN kickstarter gateway. Using this protcol the gateway is authenticated, which means it is registered under a specific user and can thus be trusted. Because it uses TCP, the chance of packet loss is much lower than with the previous protocol that used UDP. Protocolbuffers packs the data in a compact binary mode into packets, using much less space than the plaintext json that was previously used. It should therefore consume less bandwidth.
When you use this repository, the settings you set on the TTN console are taken as the primary settings. The settings from the console are read and applied at gateway startup. If you for example change the location of the gateway on the console, that setting will only be applied when the gateway restarts.
Resin Dockerfile & scripts for [The Things Network](http://thethingsnetwork.org/) gateways based on the Raspberry Pi. This updated version uses the gateway connector protocol, not the old packet forwarder. See the [TTN documentation on Gateway Registration](https://www.thethingsnetwork.org/docs/gateways/registration.html).
Currently any Raspberry Pi with one of the following gateway boards, communicating over SPI, are supported, but not limited to these:
* [IMST iC880A-SPI](http://webshop.imst.de/ic880a-spi-lorawan-concentrator-868mhz.html). Preferable configured as described [by TTN-ZH](https://github.com/ttn-zh/ic880a-gateway/wiki). You **do not** need to follow the **Setting up the software** step, as the setup scripts in this repository does it for you.
* [LinkLabs Raspberry Pi "Hat"](http://link-labs.myshopify.com/products/lorawan-raspberry-pi-board)
2. Create a new gateway that uses `gateway connector` on the [TTN Console](https://console.thethingsnetwork.org/gateways). Also set the location and altitude of your gateway. We will come back to this console later to obtain the gateway ID and access key.
1. On resin.io, create an "Application" for managing your TTN gateway devices. I'd suggest that you give it the name "ttngw", select the appropriate device type (i.e. Raspberry Pi 2 or Raspberry Pi 3), and click "Create New Application". You only need to do this once, after which you'll be able to manage one or many gateways of that type.
2. You'll then be brought to the Device Management dashboard for that Application. Follow the instructions to "DOWNLOAD RESINOS" and create a boot SD-card for your Raspberry Pi. (Pro Tip: Use a fast microSD card and a USB 3 adapter if you can, because it can take a while to copy all that data. Either that, or be prepared to be very patient.)
3. When the (long) process of writing the image to the SD card completes, insert it into your Raspberry Pi, connect it to the network with Ethernet, and power it up.
4. After several minutes, on the resin.io Devices dashboard you'll now see your device - first in a "Configuring" state, then "Idle". Click it to open the Devices control panel.
5. If you like, enter any new Device Name that you'd like, such as "my-gateway-amsterdam".
## Configure the gateway device
Click the "Environment Variables" section at the left side of the screen. This will allow you to configure this and only this device. These variables will be used to pull information about this gateway from TTN, and will be used to create a "global_conf.json" and "local_conf.json" file for this gateway.
For example, for an IMST iC880A with no GPS, the MINIMUM environment variables that you should configure at this screen should look something like this:
GW_RESET_PIN can be left out if you are using Gonzalo Casas' backplane board, or any other setup using pin 22 as reset pin. This is because pin 22 is the default reset pin used by this resin.io setup.
Depending on the way you connect the concentrator board to the Raspberry Pi, the reset pin of the concentrator might be on a different GPIO pin of the Raspberry Pi. Here follows a table of the most common backplane boards used, and the reset pin number you should use in the `GW_RESET_PIN` environment variable.
Note that the reset pin you should define is the physical pin number on the Raspberry Pi. To translate between different numbering schemes you can use [pinout.xyz](https://pinout.xyz/).
after resin.io is finished downloading the application, or when restarting the gateway, it most likely means the `GW_RESET_PIN` you defined is incorrect.
There is a backward incomatibility between the Raspberry Pi 1 and 2 hardware, and Raspberry Pi 3. For Raspberry Pi 3, it is necessary to make a small additional configuration change.
2. Now, type the command that you'll see displayed in the edit control in the upper-right corner of the Resin devices dashboard for your device. This command "connects" your local directory to the resin GIT service, which uses GIT to "receive" the gateway software from TTN, and it looks something like this:
3. Add your SSH public key to the list at https://dashboard.resin.io/preferences/sshkeys. You may need to search the internet how to create a SSH key on your operating system, where to find it afterwards, copy the content, and paste the content to the resin.io console.
4. Type the following commands into your terminal to "push" the TTN files up to resin.io:
5. What you'll now see happening in terminal is that this "git push" does an incredible amount of work:
1. It will upload a Dockerfile, a "build script", and a "run script" to resin
2. It will start to do a "docker build" using that Dockerfile, running it within a QEMU ARM virtual machine on the resin service.
3. In processing this docker build, it will run a "build.sh" script that downloads and builds the packet forwarder executable from source code, for RPi+iC880A-SPI.
4. When the build is completed, you'll see a unicorn 🦄 ASCII graphic displayed in your terminal.
6. Now, switch back to your device dashboard, you'll see that your Raspberry Pi is now "updating" by pulling the Docker container from the resin.io service. Then, after "updating", you'll see the gateway's log file in the window at the lower right corner. You'll see it initializing, and will also see log output each time a packet is forwarded to TTN. You're done!
If you get the error below please check if your ssh public key has been added to you resin account. In addition verify whether your private key has the correct permissions (i.e. chmod 400 ~/.ssh/id_rsa).
- At some point if you would like to add a second gateway, third gateway, or a hundred gateways, all you need to do is to add a new device to your existing Application. You needn't upload any new software to Resin, because Resin already knows what software belongs on the gateway. So long as the environment variables are configured correctly for that new device, it'll be up and running immediately after you burn an SD card and boot it.
- Resin will automatically restart the gateway software any time you change the environment variables. You'll see this in the log. Also, note that Resin restarts the gateway properly after power failures. If the packet forwarder fails because of an error, it will also automatically attempt to restart.
- For devices without a GPS, the location that is configured on the TTN console is used. This location is only read at startup of the gateway. Therefore, after you set or changed the location, restart the application from the resin.io console.
* [Gonzalo Casas](https://github.com/gonzalocasas) on the [iC880a-based gateway](https://github.com/ttn-zh/ic880a-gateway/tree/spi)
* [Ruud Vlaming](https://github.com/devlaam) on the [Lorank8 installer](https://github.com/Ideetron/Lorank)
* [Jac Kersing](https://github.com/kersing) on the [Multi-protocol packet forwarder](https://github.com/kersing/packet_forwarder/tree/master/mp_pkt_fwd)
* [Ray Ozzie](https://github.com/rayozzie/ttn-resin-gateway-rpi) on the original ResinIO setup