Updated readme.md.

This commit is contained in:
Roger A. Light 2016-07-05 21:38:57 +01:00
parent 50b26347d4
commit 3261b307e3
2 changed files with 62 additions and 7 deletions

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@ -11,8 +11,9 @@ separately in the case that they are not already available.
Capabilities
------------
The network support in Windows is severely limited. The broker is limited to approximately
1024 MQTT connections.
Some versions of Windows have limitations on the number of concurrent
connections. Non-server versions have been reported to be limited to
approximately 1024 connections.
Websockets
@ -20,7 +21,7 @@ Websockets
The broker executables provided in the installers do not have Websockets support enabled.
If you wish to have a version of the broker with Websockets support, you will need to compile
libwebsockets version v1.3-chrome37-firefox30 yourself and mosquitto version 1.4 yourself.
libwebsockets version v1.7 onwards because no Windows binaries are provided.
Please note that on Windows, libwebsockets limits connections to a maximum of 64 clients.

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@ -2,7 +2,11 @@ Mosquitto
=========
Mosquitto is an open source implementation of a server for version 3.1 and
3.1.1 of the MQTT protocol.
3.1.1 of the MQTT protocol. It also includes a C and C++ client library, and
the `mosquitto_pub` and `mosquitto_sub` utilities for publishing and
subscribing.
## Links
See the following links for more information on MQTT:
@ -12,10 +16,60 @@ See the following links for more information on MQTT:
Mosquitto project information is available at the following locations:
- Main homepage: <http://mosquitto.org/>
- Find existing bugs: <https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/buglist.cgi?product=Mosquitto>
- Submit a bug: <https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/enter_bug.cgi?product=Mosquitto>
- Source code repository: <http://git.eclipse.org/c/mosquitto/org.eclipse.mosquitto.git/>
- Bug reports: <https://github.com/eclipse/mosquitto/issues>
- Source code repository: <https://github.com/eclipse/mosquitto>
There is also a public test server available at <http://test.mosquitto.org/>
## Installing
See <http://mosquitto.org/download/> for details on installing binaries for
various platforms.
## Quick start
If you have installed a binary package the broker should have been started
automatically. If not, it can be started with a basic configuration:
mosquitto
Then use `mosquitto_sub` to subscribe to a topic:
mosquitto_sub -t 'test/topic' -v
And to publish a message:
mosquitto_pub -t 'test/topic' -m 'hello world'
## Documentation
Documentation for the broker, clients and client library API can be found in
the man pages, which are available online at <http://mosquitto.org/man/>. There
are also pages with an introduction to the features of MQTT, the
`mosquitto_passwd` utility for dealing with username/passwords, and a
description of the configuration file options available for the broker.
Detailed client library API documentation can be found at <http://mosquitto.org/api/>
## Building from source
To build from source the recommended route for end users is to download the
archive from <http://mosquitto.org/download/>.
On Windows and Mac, use `cmake` to build. On other platforms, just run `make`
to build. For Windows, see also `readme-windows.md`.
If you are building from the git repository then the documentation will not
already be built. Use `make binary` to skip building the man pages, or install
`docbook-xsl` on Debian/Ubuntu systems.
### Build Dependencies
* c-ares (libc-ares2-dev on Debian based systems) - disable with `make WITH_DNS_SRV=no`
* libuuid (uuid-dev) - disable with `make WITH_UUID=no`
* libwebsockets (libwebsockets-dev) - enable with `make WITH_LIBWEBSOCKETS=yes`
* openssl (libssl-dev on Debian based systems) - disable with `make WITH_TLS=no`
## Credits
Mosquitto was written by Roger Light <roger@atchoo.org>