Connect Edge Devices to Azure* IoT

ID 标签 659212
已更新 8/9/2022
版本 2022.4
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Overview

Install a web-based application that provides an Out of Box Experience to securely connect your Intel device to Azure* IoT Hub or Azure* IoT Central†. The web application creates Azure IoT Resources and enables configuration and monitoring of Edge AI and use case deployments.

Select Configure & Download to download the use case.  

Configure & Download


Icon for Cloud Connectors

 

 


Target System Requirements 

  • Intel® CPU Processors 
    • Intel® Atom* processor with Intel® SSE4.1 support 
    • Intel® Pentium® processor N4200/5, N3350/5, N3450/5 with Intel® HD Graphics 
    • 6th - 12th generation Intel® Core™ processors 
    • Intel® Xeon® processor E3, E5, and E7 family  
    • 2nd Generation Intel® Xeon® Scalable Processors  
    • 3rd Generation Intel® Xeon® Scalable Processors 
  • At least 4 GB RAM. 
  • At least 64 GB hard drive. 
  • An Internet connection. 
  • Ubuntu* 18.04.3 LTS Kernel 5.0 
  • Microsoft Windows* 10 IoT Enterprise Version 10.0.19044 or above [if using Azure IoT Edge for Linux on Windows* (EFLOW)]

NOTE:  If you want to run the Out-of-Band Manageability application, you must use an Intel vPro® Platform. Refer to the OOB-specific Target System Requirements in this article for details. 

 

 

Knowledge/Experience 

You should be or you are expected to be familiar with executing Linux* commands. 


How It Works 

 

The primary goal of the use case is to demonstrate the Connectivity to Azure IoT module, which provides several methods of connecting to Azure IoT. The use case also includes a collection of solutions you can use with Azure IoT. 

The below diagram lists the use case examples in the ESH Application column and shows how they interact with the Connectivity to Azure IoT module. 

Collection of solutions

 

The Connect Intel Devices to Azure IoT* web application deploys Azure IoT Edge modules to edge devices with the following steps: 

  1. Setup Device. 
  2. Create and setup Azure IoT Resources:  
    • Resource Group (RG): A new approach to group a collection of assets in logical groups for easy, or even automatic provisioning, monitoring, and access control, and for more effective management of their costs. 
    • Azure IoT Central: Microsoft* IoT application development platform that connects IoT devices to the cloud. Provides basic pre-integrated Azure Services such as device provisioning, streaming analytics and time series insights. Use Microsoft’s Software-as-a-Service Azure IoT Central platform to quickly connect an Intel device to visualize, maintain and deploy your IoT solution.  
    • Azure IoT Hub: Microsoft’s IoT connector to the cloud. It enables reliable and secure bi-directional communications between millions of IoT devices and a solution back end. If you have your own Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS), use an Intel device connected to Azure IoT Hub to complete the edge-to-cloud IoT Solution.  
    • IoT Edge Device: An IoT Edge is a smart device equipped with compute power and designed to execute services in the field.  
  3. Configure config.yaml for secure connection with connection string. 
  4. Restart the IoT Edge daemon. 
  5. Set module in Azure portal and then deploy. 

Once the above-mentioned steps are complete, the Edge device is ready to deploy IoT modules. 

How to Navigate this Guide

If you are a beginner user, we recommend that you follow all the steps in the Get Started section and run the People Counter Example to use a GUI-based approach: 

  • SimulatedTemperature, an Azure Marketplace application. 
  • PeopleCounter, an OpenVINO™ toolkit reference application. 

If you are an experienced user, follow Step 1 through Step 6 in the Get Started section. Then you can use the connect scripts in any of the reference implementations in the Additional Examples section of this guide:

  • Automated Checkout Reference Implementation.
  • Intelligent Traffic Management Reference Implementation.
  • Social Distancing Detection for Retail Settings Reference Implementation.
  • Rotor Bearing Defect Detector Reference Implementation.

 

Connecting to Azure IoT Hub or Azure IoT Central 

If you have your own Platform-as-a-Service, use the Intel Device connected to IoT Hub to complete the edge-to-cloud IoT Solution. 

If you do not know where to start on the Cloud, you can use the Microsoft* aPaaS Azure IoT Central platform to quickly connect Intel device to visualize, maintain and deploy your IoT solution. 

Read the 8 attributes of successful IoT solutions for more information on when to use Azure IoT Hub or Azure IoT Central. 

 


Get Started 

Step 1: Install the Use Case

Select Configure & Download to download the use case and then follow the steps below to install it. 

Configure & Download 

During installation, you will be prompted to enter your Product Key. This key is in the email you would have received from the Intel® Registration Center. Contact Support Forum if you do not have this email message. 

The steps below explain how to: 

  • Prepare your target system. 
  • Copy the package. 
  • Complete the installation steps. 

Step 2: Prepare the Target System 

Make sure your target system has a fresh installation of Ubuntu, if you need help installing Ubuntu follow these steps: 

  1. Download the Ubuntu Desktop ISO file to your developer workstation. 

  1. Create a bootable flash drive using an imaging application, such as Startup Disk Creator, available on Ubuntu. 

  1. After flashing the USB drive, power off your target system, insert the USB drive, and power on the target system. 
    If the target system doesn't boot from the USB drive, change the boot priority in the system BIOS. 

  1. Follow the prompts to install Ubuntu with default configurations. For detailed instructions, see the Ubuntu guide

  1. Power down your target system and remove the USB drive. 

  1. Power up the target system. You will see Ubuntu Desktop is successfully installed. 

Step 3: Copy the connect_devices_to_azure_iot.zip File to the Target System 

In this step you copy the connect_devices_to_azure_iot to your Target System. 

1. Copy the connect_devices_to_azure_iot.zip file from the developer workstation to the Home directory on your target system. You can use a USB flash drive to copy the file. The icon looks like this: 

Screenshot of zip file in folder

Step 4: Extract the Software 

In this step you extract connect_devices_to_azure_iot.zip. You need to be on the target system to complete these steps. 

  1. Make sure you have a working Internet connection. 

  1. Open a new terminal. 

  1. Extract the package: 
    unzip connect_devices_to_azure_iot.zip 

NOTE: If you download the connect_devices_to_azure_iot.zip more than once, each download beyond the first will be appended by a number. 

Screenshot of extracted files

  1. (Optional) Use the link in the readme file to open this Get Started Guide on the target system for an easy way to copy and paste commands. 

Step 5: Install the connect_devices_to_azure_iot 

You will now run a script that will download components and install connect_devices_to_azure_iot on your target system. 

The software installation will take approximately 30 mins. The completion time depends on your target system and Internet connection. 

  1. Run these commands: 

    cd connect_devices_to_azure_iot / 
    
    chmod 775 edgesoftware 
    
    ./edgesoftware install 

     

  1. Type the product key at the prompt:
    Screenshot of product key

 

  1. Based on components selected and system configuration, you might be prompted for additional actions. For example, if your system is behind a proxy, you are asked to enter proxy settings. 
    When the installation is complete, you see the message Installation of package complete and the installation status of each module. Screenshot of installation success

 

NOTE: Versions for Intel® Distribution of OpenVINO™ toolkit will vary from what is shown above. 

4. After successful installation, a shortcut will be available on the Desktop. 

Screenshot of desktop shortcut


 

Step 6: Create a Microsoft Azure Account 

1. If you do not have a Microsoft Azure account, click on the sign-up link provided in the web page and create an account. 

2. If you do have an account, or after you have created an account, click Next to proceed and follow the below steps:

NOTE: Make sure your subscription is registered to “Microsoft.Devices”. Please follow this Azure link

 3. Follow as mentioned in the screen below: 

 Screenshot of account setup 

4. Copy the code from the terminal as shown below and proceed with the steps in the browser. 

Screenshot of entering code

5. After signing in, close the page and return to the Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT page to proceed with Azure login.

Screenshot of Azure login

 

 

If you are a beginner user, continue to the People Counter example. 

NOTE: If you are an experienced user, you can use the connect scripts in any of the reference implementations in the Additional Examples section of this guide.

 

 

 


People Counter Example 

This section explains how to use the People Counter example, which is a simple example for beginners using the GUI interface. 

If you are an experienced user, you can use the connect scripts in any of the reference implementations in the Additional Examples section of this guide.

Build People Counter Docker Image

In the next series of steps, you are going to build the People Counter docker image. Once the image is created, it will be pushed into the Azure Container Registry. 

These steps assume you have completed Steps 1 through 6 in the Get Started section above.

 

1. For creating an Azure container registry, use the following link: Creating a container registry.

2. Go to ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT​/Cloud/People_Counter_App folder in your machine.

3. Build the People Counter docker images:

sudo docker build . -t <image URL>:<tag> 

[ Ex: docker build . -t  abc.azurecr.io/peoplecounter:1.0 ] 

     NOTE:
a. For creating image URL, you need login server details of your container registry. Go to Azure portal > container registry > choose your container registry > Access keys.  Make a note of 'Login Server' details to create image URL.
b. Image URL should correspond to your Azure container registry. For example, abc.azurecr.io/peoplecounter:1.0. Where abc.azurecr.io is the login server address of your container registry, peoplecounter is your repository and 1.0 is the image tag.
c. Make a note of your image URL for further steps.
d. Building Docker image will take 10-25 minutes depending on your internet connection speed.

 4. Login to your repository to pull the image:

sudo docker login -u <Azure CR username> -p <Azure CR password>  <Azure CR login>

NOTE: CR is the Container Registry.

Example: sudo docker login -u XXXXX -p XXXXXXXXXXXXXPb8l XXXXX.azurecr.io

5. Go to Azure portal > container registry > choose your container registry >  Access Keys. Enable Admin user and get the details of Container registry and please make a note of Username, password and Login server for further steps.

6. Push the application image to your Azure container registry:

sudo docker push <image URL>:<tag>

Example: sudo docker push abc.azurecr.io/peoplecounter:1.0

Prepare the Deployment Manifest 

In the next series of steps, you prepare the deployment manifest file. Deployment manifest is used to configure and deploy modules to IoT Edge device from Azure IoT Hub/IoT Central. 

1. Go to ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/Cloud/Deployment_Manifest in your target system and open the deployment.json file. 

2. Provide the People Counter Docker image URL (line no.8). 

Example: abc.azurecr.io/peoplecounter:1.0 

3. Replace container registry name (line no.32), login server (address: line no.33), password (line no.34) and username (line no.35) of your container registry created in previous step. 

NOTE:  Give full image url with tag. [ Example: abc.azurecr.io/peoplecounter:1.0

4. Go to Azure portal -> container registry -> choose your container registry ->   Access Keys. Get the details of container registry Username, login and password

5. Optional Steps: 

  • Change Video Source: Set the value of VIDEO_INPUT environment variable in line no. 20
Type Value Remark
Video FIle  /home/application1/resources/<video file> Make sure you have placed video file inside /application1/resources folder before building docker image.
USB Camera CAM Make sure physical camera is connected to system
RTSP Stream RTSP URL Example: rtsp://10.0.4.165:554/media/camera-300s.mkv

 

 

 

 

  • Change Inference Device: Set the value of DEVICE environment variable in line no. 23. Supported hardware devices are CPU, GPU, HDDL* and MYRIAD* 

NOTE: HDDL-R and MYRIAD are not tested and validated, so this may not work.  

  • Set Display Environment Variable: Value of DISPLAY environment variable (line no.17) of container should be same as that of host machine. 
  • Change Restart Policy:  Set restart policy (line no.13) of people counter module. Allowed values are always/never/on-failure/on-unhealthy.

Start the Web UI

1. Navigate to Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT in the folder on the desktop and run the commands in terminal as shown below:

chmod 777 trigger.sh 

./trigger.sh

Screenshot of trigger shell script

2. The application will start in the default browser and you will see the screen as shown below:

 Application start screen

 

 

Next, choose your platform: 

 

 


Connect to Azure IoT Hub

 

 

1. Choose IoT Hub. Click Next. If the root user has password then, go back to the terminal and enter the root user password. 

Choose IOT Hub platform

2. If you want to create a new resource group (RG), select Create new, or select Choose existing to proceed with an existing RG. 

Create new resource group

3. To create an RG, enter an RG Name choose a region from the dropdown. Click Create.   

Add name and region for resource group

4. Enter an IoT Hub Name. Click Create

Add IOT Hub name

5. Enter an IoT Edge Device Name. Click Create

Create IOT Edge Device Name

Your hardware is now configured with Resource group, IoT Hub and IoT Edge. A connection has been made between your hardware and Microsoft Azure.  

6. Click Exit to exit from the application or Next to proceed further to deploy a module. 

Device ready dialog with options

7. Select a module to deploy from the dropdown. Click Deploy

Choose deploy module

8. Once the module is deployed, follow the steps mentioned in the below screen to see the result in Azure shell. 

Choose run commands in shell

​Inference results on Edge device render onto display and you will see a screen like the below: 

NOTE: These are for CPU only. Performance is dependent on the generation of CPU. Overall performance will depend on the target hardware you choose. To offload CPU and run inference on iGPU or accelerator card, look for additional instructions. People counter application uses pedestrian-detection-adas-0002 from Intel® Distribution of OpenVINO™ toolkit zoo model for inference.   

Screenshot of inference results

Results in Azure shell will be like the screen below: 

Screenshot of results in Azure shell

 

Troubleshooting 

People Counter Module Failed 

People counter module with status failed after successful deployment. 

Try restarting people counter module by running command below: 

iotedge restart peopleCounter

If the people counter module is still failing, make sure of the following: 

  • Video source is working  
  • Inference device is enabled in the system 

Check the logs of container by running command below for details: 

lotedge logs peopleCounter

 

No Results in Azure Shell 

After deployment, if the module is in running state and if you are not able to see results in Azure shell. 

  • Reason: Your network would be blocking to send results to cloud. 
  • Solution: Connect to a different network and redeploy the module. 

 

Open Network Connection Failure 

When you are running the application in open network and after deployment, if you are unable to connect to https://shell.azure.com/.

  • Reason: Your account does not have access to login to Microsoft Azure from an open network. 
  • Solution: Use a different device that is connected to a required network to login to Microsoft Azure. 

Connect to Azure IoT Central

This section shows a simple example using the People Counter. 

To create an Azure IoT Central, after the Getting Started section above, choose the Azure IoT Central Platform. Click Next. If the root user has a password, go back to the terminal and enter the root password.  

Choose IOT Central platform

Step 1: Create Device Template 

This section will cover how to create a device template for People Counter application. In following steps, you are going to create a device template using provided DCM json file, create view for telemetry, upload deployment manifest and publish the device template. 

1. Go to IoT central application that you created in Step 1: Create IoT Central Application, then navigate to Device templates and choose +New

2. On the select template type page, choose the Azure IoT Edge tile. Then select Next:Customize

Select Azure IOT Edge tile

3. On the Upload an Azure IoT Edge deployment manifest page, provide a name to device template and select Next: Review

NOTE:
1. Skip uploading of deployment manifest file in this step
2. No need to select the check box for Gateway device with downstream devices

Upload a deployment manifest screen

4. On Review page, select Create

5. Click on Import a model and upload the capability model People_Counter_DCM.json (Available inside ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/Cloud/Device_Template folder). 

Import People Counter template

6. To create a view, click on ‘Views’ and choose ‘Visualizing the Device’

  • Under ‘Add a tile’ section, choose ‘Start with device’
  • For line graph: 
    • Choose ‘People Count’ under telemetry section.  
    • Click on Add tile and Save
  • For Last known value: 
    • Choose ‘People Count’ under telemetry section.  
    • Click on Add tile.  
    • On right panel, click on ‘Change Visualization’ icon and choose ‘Last Known Value’ from options. 
  • Click on Save button to save the views

Views and settings after saving

7. Click on ’Edit manifest’ and choose the replace option to upload the deployment.json (Available inside ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/Cloud/Deployment_Manifest folder). Click on Save to save the changes. 

Replace deployment manifest

8. Click on ‘publish’ tab on top right corner and click on ‘publish’ button to publish your device template. 

Review and publish device template

Step 2: Add Device to Template 

In the next series of steps, you are going to attach an edge device to published people counter device template.To add a new device to your template, follow the steps below: 

1. In your IoT Central Application, navigate to Devices page and choose the template you created in the previous step. 

2. Click on ‘+ New’ to add new device to template. 

3. Provide the required details and click Create. (Refer to the screenshot below). 

  • Make sure you choose the right device template from drop-down box. 
  • Give a display name to your Device.  
  • Provide a Device ID and make of note of Device ID. 
  • Do not enable ‘Simulate this device’ option. 

Create a new device fields

Step 3: Generate API Token 

In next series of steps, you are going to generate API token. API token is used to fetch device connection parameters.  Please make a note of API token.

1. In your IoT Central Application, navigate to Administration page and choose API tokens

Generate API tokens

2. Click on ‘+ Generate token’. 

3. Provide the required details and click on Generate.  

4. Provide Token name and choose the ‘Administrator’ role.

API token fields

5. API token is generated. Please make sure you copy that token. 

Generated API Token

Step 4: Get IoT Central APP Sub-Domain Name 

In next series of steps, you are going to get subdomain URL of your Azure IoT Central dashboard.

1. In your IoT Central Application, navigate to Administration page and choose Your application. 

2. Make a note of subdomain URL (first part of Application URL) to configure OOBE app. 

Subdomain fields

Step 5: Configure Out Of Box Experience (OOBE) Application  

Once you have completed steps above, please provide the details below to OOBE application as shown in the image and click Next. If the root user has a password, then go back to the terminal and enter the root user password. 

  • App Name: Your IoT Central Application sub-domain name. 
  • API Token: API token of your IoT Central application. 
  • Device ID: Device ID of device you attached to device template. 

Out of box experience application fields

Step 6: Monitor Data 

The people counter application is now deployed in edge machine. Once the ‘peopleCounter’ start running as edge module, please go to your IoT Central dashboard (Dashboard link will be available in OOBE web page) and navigate to your Device then click View tab to monitor data.

Monitor data

Azure IoT Central Dashboard View

Azure IOT Central Dashboard

Inference Results on Edge 

NOTE: These are for CPU only and performance is dependent on the generation of CPU. Overall performance will depend on the target hardware you choose. To offload CPU and run inference on iGPU or accelerator card, look for additional instructions.  

Screenshot of People Counter inference results

 

Troubleshooting 

People Counter Module Failed

People counter module with status failed after successful deployment. 

Try restarting people counter module by running command below: 

iotedge restart peopleCounter

If the people counter module is still failing, make sure of the following: 

  • Video source is working  
  • Inference device is enabled in the system 

Check the logs of container by running command below for details: 

lotedge logs peopleCounter

 

No Results in Azure IoT Central Dashboard

After deployment, if the module is in running state and if you are not able to view results in Azure IoT Central Dashboard. 

  • Reason: Your network is blocking to send results to cloud. 
  • Solution: Connect to a different network and redeploy the module. 

 


Intel Out-Of-Band Manageability Application for Azure   

 

 

Overview

Out-Of-Band (OOB) Manageability allows administrators to remotely perform actions such as power up, power down, system updates and more on network assets or devices.

In this section, you will set up a User Out-Of-Band (UOB) Application from Azure IoT along with Open Active Management Technology Cloud Toolkit (Open AMT Cloud Toolkit) to remotely manage Intel vPro® Platform based edge devices for IoT use cases. This application provides an example on how to extend otherwise Cloud agnostic Open AMT Cloud Toolkit to be paired with existing Azure IoT Solutions to enable OOB to edge devices. You can add OOB Manageability functionality on top of other ESH applications. 

There are two components to this setup, a Cloud Server module (UOB App) and an Edge Client module. The Server application is deployed along with other Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Server modules in the Cloud and the Client module is co-located with Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Client Module on the Edge device.

The following terms are important for understanding how the application works:

  • Intel® vPro technology is a Platform (brand) that describes a set of hardware features.
  • Intel® Active Management Technology or Intel® AMT is a combination of hardware and firmware components available on Intel® vPro Platforms.
  • Open AMT Cloud Toolkit is an open source enabling software that allows device management solutions to easily add OOB capabilities to existing solutions. It provides open-source, modular microservices and libraries for the integration of Intel® AMT. 

 

The key components of the example are shown in the following diagram and described in the paragraphs below.

 

 

OOB Manageability Architecture Diagram

Open AMT Cloud Toolkit

Some of the key capabilities of the toolkit include remote power actions such as Power On, Reset, Power Cycle and Intel® AMT redirection use cases such as Keyboard, Video, Mouse (KVM) control. 

Open AMT Cloud Toolkit consists of the following major components: 

  • Management Presence Server (MPS): Microservice that runs in the Cloud. It maintains connectivity to the Edge Device.
  • Remote Provisioning Server (RPS): Microservice that runs in the Cloud. It activates Intel® AMT platforms to the MPS for manageability use cases.
  • Remote Provisioning Client (RPC): A lightweight client application that runs on the Edge Device. It communicates with the RPS server to activate Intel® AMT.
  • Sample Web UI: A web-based UI that demonstrates use cases of the UI Toolkit and the function and use of the toolkit's microservices. 

The User Out-of-Band (User OOB) Management Application is a microservice that runs in the Cloud and acts as the Server module. It acts as a bridge between Azure IoT and services and Open AMT Cloud Toolkit services, MPS, RPS and Web UI. This Cloud component is also called the UOB Application through the rest of this guide.

The Client Module runs on the Edge device and performs two functions. First, it helps the user to connect the edge device to Azure IoT. Second, it performs Client manageability functions as instructed by the UOB Server application. 

All communications between the UOB Cloud and the Edge modules are through Azure IoT Hub.

 

NOTE: All the above components are reference modules. For more information on Open AMT Cloud Toolkit, refer to GitHub documentation. 

 

Target System Requirements 

Edge: Intel vPro® Platforms

  • Intel® Active Management Technology (Intel® AMT) Version 8.0 or newer
  • Docker 20.10.16
  • Docker-compose 2.6.0
  • Windows 10 or Ubuntu* 18.04
  • Supported Configuration – Connect to Azure IoT Hub with IoT Device

Typically, most Intel® Core™ i5 and above devices. It is important to check before you make any purchases.

Secondary Device (Development System / Cloud)

 

User Out-of-Band (UOB) Application with Azure IoT

The User OOB (UOB) Cloud and Edge Modules are not part of the standard Open AMT Toolkit and are developed as user companion application to Azure IoT. This section provides details on how to deploy these modules along with Open AMT Cloud Toolkit modules for Azure IoT.

The UOB application uses Intel® AMT through RPC on the edge device, RPS, MPS, Sample Web UI features in conjunction with Azure IoT Services like Event Handler, Device Management SDK and SQLite* database on the Cloud. This application acts as server and the IoT edge device acts as remote device which will be monitored and managed by the UOB Application.

 

OOB Manageability Data Flow Diagram

 

 

The following steps provide an overview of the end-to-end flow:

  1. UOB Server Application subscribes to Event handler to listen to events on the IoT Hub. Each time a new device is connected to IoT Hub, it creates and entry and tracks the state of the device. 
    The Connect to Cloud Client module on the edge device not only serves to enable IoT Hub connectivity but also responds as a client to requests from server module.  
  2. UOB Application initiates device check after the device is connected to the IoT Hub to determine if the underlying hardware includes Intel vPro® technology. 
    UOB listens to device response and records if it is Intel® vPro device or non vPro device. 
    UOB takes follow-on actions to update the database, trigger the event for the event hub, send the data to the event hub, and update the Device dashboard. 
  3. UOB informs RPS of the OOB devices it can manage.
  4. RPS then activates and configures Intel® AMT on the device. RPC then establishes CIRA connection to Management Presence Server (MPS).
  5. The user can initiate actions to be performed on the device, such as power-up/reset etc., if the device is disconnected through Web UI.
  6. MPS performs OOB actions, through MPS REST APIs, to complete the user instructed actions on the Intel® AMT device.

NOTE: Even though both Intel vPro® devices and other types of devices are displayed on the device dashboard, OOB actions can only be performed on Intel vPro® Platforms. 

 

To summarize, the UOB application will be deployed in Azure Cloud Virtual Machine (VM) along with MPS, RPS, Sample Web UI from Open AMT Toolkit and the Client module will be deployed onto Intel vPro® based IoT device. When an IoT device experiences an unplanned downtime, the IT Administrator can remotely manage that device using the UOB application from the Azure Cloud.

You can use the UOB application with any of the reference implementations in the Additional Examples section of this guide.

 

Azure Prerequisites

  1. Azure subscription. 
    If your subscription is not registered for the following Resource providers, please follow the below steps to register.
    1. Choose your subscription in the portal, select Resource providers within your subscription dashboard.
    2. Click the Register link to register the resource provider of the type you are trying to deploy from the list of resource providers.
  2. Create an Azure IoT Hub. 
    If you have a preexisting Azure IoT Hub, you can use it and set up the rest of the steps. 
    Screenshot of Azure IoT Hub
     
  3. Add Device to IoT Hub, make a note of the primary connection string. 

  4. Create Event Hub Namespace under the same resource group where IoT Hub is created.

  5. Create an Event Hub under the same name space. Select Shared access policies under Event Hub instance and add SAS policy by providing policy name and select manage, send, and listen options.

  6. Create an Event/Event Grid System Topic Subscription under IoT Hub - Events with below options.
    Name > Any name of your choice 
    Event Schema > Select Event Grid schema, event types
    Event Types > Select device connected, device disconnected
    For Endpoint > Select Event Hub

  7. Create a second Event Hub within the same namespace that was created before and follow step 5.

  8. Create an Event Grid Topic for custom event.
    Add Event Subscription to the Event grid topic that was just created, provide name, and select second Event Hub as Endpoint.    

  9. Create a Power BI account and then Create Azure Stream Analytics Job. Keep the Job within the same resource group where the Azure IoT Hub was created.

  10. To add input: Open the Stream Analytics Job, under Job topology, select Input, choose Add stream input and then select Event Hub from the drop-down list. On the new input pane, enter the following information:
    Input alias: Enter a unique alias
    Select Event Hub from your subscription and give your Azure subscription.
    Event Hub Namespace and Event Hub: Select these you have created for Event Grid custom event.
    Event Hub consumer group: Choose use existing and select the $Default consumer group.
    Authentication mode: Select Connection string from the drop-down.
    Event Hub policy name: Choose use existing and select the Shared Access Policy you created in the above section.
    Leave all other fields as default and save it.

  11. To add Power BI output: Open the Stream Analytics Job, under Job topology, select Output, choose Add, and then select Power BI from the drop-down list. On the Power BI - New output pane, select Authorize and sign into Power BI account.

  12. After you signed into Power BI, enter the following information:
    Output alias: A unique alias
    Group workspace: Select your target group workspace.
    Dataset name: Enter a dataset name
    Table name: Enter a table name
    Authentication mode: Leave at the default and save it.

  13. Configure the query of the Stream Analytics Job by replacing it with the input and output alias of the job:
     

    SELECT data.hostname ,data.isvPro, data.guid, data.amtmode, data.PowerState, data.ActionState, eventType as status, eventTime
    INTO
         [YourOutputAlias]
    FROM
         [YourInputAlias]
    WHERE eventType IN ('Connected','Disconnected')


     

  14. To run the Stream Analytics Job, select Overview and choose Start > Now > Start.
    Once the job starts successfully, the job status changes from Stopped to Running.

Refer to the Azure links in the Learn More section for additional information. 

 

Deploy Server Module on the Cloud VM

 

This section will walk you through the process of deploying Open AMT Cloud Toolkit containers, UOB application on an Azure Virtual Machine (VM). Let’s start with creating an Azure Linux VM which will act as server machine. Follow the Create a virtual machine instructions to create a Linux VM and keep the VM within the same resource group where the IoT Hub has been created.

NOTE: Advanced users can refer to Azure documentation on Create multi-container groups to create and deploy multi-container groups to handle all the cloud containers instead of single steps as explained below.    

 

Deploy Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Microservices

For experienced users, to quickly deploy Open AMT Cloud Toolkit on Azure, follow the steps below until step 7, or new users can skip to step 8 for a deployment on a local system.

  1. Create an Azure container registry (ACR).

  2. Go to Azure portal > container registry > choose your container registry > Access Keys. 
    Enable Admin user and get the details of Container registry and make a note of username, password, and login server for further steps. 
  3. Login to your Azure container registry:
    sudo docker login -u <ACR username> -p <ACR password> <ACR login server> 
  4. Pull the Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Docker images from the Intel Docker Hub repository
    sudo docker pull intel/oact-mps:latest
    sudo docker pull intel/oact-rps:latest
    sudo docker pull intel/oact-webui:latest 

     
  5. Tag the Open AMT Cloud Toolkit docker images.
    sudo docker tag intel/oact-mps:latest <ACR login server>/oact-mps:latest  
    sudo docker tag intel/oact-rps:latest <ACR login server>/oact-rps:latest 
    sudo docker tag intel/oact-webui:latest <ACR login server>/oact-webui:latest 
    

     

  6. Push the Open AMT Cloud Toolkit docker images to ACR.

    sudo docker push <ACR login server>/oact-mps:latest 
    sudo docker push <ACR login server>/oact-rps:latest 
    sudo docker push <ACR login server>/oact-webui:latest 

     

  7. Next, deploy the stack on Azure using the Deploy to Azure button from Open AMT Cloud Toolkit GitHub link.  

    NOTE: This requires ACR login server (Registry), Registry username, and password details. Also update the MPS, RPS, and Sample Web UI image names from the ACR.  

    Once the deployment is done, go to Azure portal > container instances > choose your container instances and get the FQDN for the further steps. 

    Under container instance, Go to Settings > Containers > MPS > properties and get the details of MPS_COMMON_NAME, MPS_WEB_ADMIN_USER, MPS_WEB_ADMIN_PASSWORD for further steps.
    Follow the Open AMT Cloud Toolkit configuration guide and complete the setup until you reach the section where you will be creating Client Control Mode (CCM) profile.

    NOTE: Refer to the below command while logging into Sample Web UI and choose FQDN while creating CIRA configuration.

    https://<Open AMT Cloud Toolkit-container-instance-fqdn>:8443/ 

    If Open AMT Cloud Toolkit is deployed on Azure stack, need to use port 8443. 

  8. Optionally, deploy Open AMT Cloud Toolkit microservices on a local development system as Docker* containers by following the Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Get Started instructions. Complete the setup until you reach the section where you will be creating Client Control Mode (CCM) profile.

    NOTE: If any of the Open AMT containers are not running or docker-compose pull command is not working while doing step 8, use the below commands to build the containers instead of pulling the Docker images from Intel's Docker Hub repository.

    cd open-amt-cloud-toolkit
    sudo docker-compose build 

     

 

Deploy UOB Application on Azure VM

Follow the below steps to deploy the UOB Application.

  1. Pull the UOB Application Image from the Azure Marketplace or from the Docker Hub and deploy it on Azure VM. Choose one of the following options: 
    1. Option 1: Azure Marketplace: Click Get It Now and choose the "User App for Out-of-Band Manageability with Azure IoT" option under Software plan to pull the image. Follow the instructions to subscribe User OOB Module for Azure IoT. Deploy it on Azure VM by entering the following commands:  
      sudo docker login -u <ACR username> -p <ACR password> <ACR login server>
      sudo docker pull <ACR login server>/intel_corporation/uobappserver:latest
    2. Option 2: Docker Hub: Pull the image from the Intel Docker Hub repository
      sudo docker pull intel/user-oob-server-app-for-azure:latest
  2. Create the .env file, uob_setup.sh and docker-compose.yaml in Desktop of the VM and set up the environment variables. Update the yaml file before running the UOB Application in the .env file.
    Refer to the following .env template in order to configure the environment variables required by the server module. 

    HOST_IP=azure_server_vm_ipaddress
    MPS_SERVER_ADDRESS=container_instance_fqdn:8443 or development_IP_address
    MPS_WEB_ADMIN_USER=mps_username
    MPS_WEB_ADMIN_PASSWORD=mps_password
    AMT_MODE_PROFILE_NAME=amt_mode_profile_name
    EVENTHUB_CONNECTION_STRING=event_hub_connection_string
    EVENTHUB_NAME=event_hub_name
    IOTHUB_SERVICE_CONNECTION_STRING=hub_service_connection_string
    CUSTOM_TOPIC_EVENTGRID_KEY=custom_topic_eventgrid_key
    CUSTOM_TOPIC_EVENTGRID_ENDPOINT=custom_topic_eventgrid_endpoint
    ENABLE_AUTOMATIC_POWER_ACTION=True/False
    ENABLE_SSL=no
    ## Required only if SSL is enabled
    SSL_CERT_PATH=<Path_to_SSL_certificate> 

 

NOTE: If you enable SSL, deploy own certificates (typically signed by a CA) and configure the Kong (API Gateway) with CA signed certs. Refer to Learn More for advanced features.

 

  1. Follow the instructions below to set up and replace the environment variable values inside the .env file. 

 

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLE NAME

VALUE

DESCRIPTION

HOST IP

<azure_server_vm_ipaddress>

Provide the Azure VM IP Address.

MPS_SERVER_ADDRESS
MPS_WEB_ADMIN_USER
MPS_WEB_ADMIN_PASSWORD
AMT_MODE_PROFILE_NAME

<azure_container_instance_fqdn:8443 
or development_IP_address>
<mps_username>
<mps_password>
<amt_mode_profile_name>

Fetch the details from azure container
instance or from the .env file inside the
open-amt-cloud toolkit directory based
on Open AMT Cloud Toolkit deployment. 
Fetch the amt_mode_profile_name from
OpenAMT Sample Web UI.

EVENTHUB_CONNECTION_STRING
EVENTHUB_NAME

<event_hub_connection_string>
<event_hub_name>

Navigate to event hub namespace
and use the event hub that you have 
created for event grid system topic in 
Azure Prerequisites section. 
Navigate to the event hub and click on 
Shared access policies under the
event hubs instance portal and use
the event hub’s primary connection string. 

IOTHUB_SERVICE_CONNECTION_STRING

<hub_service_connection_string>

Navigate to the hub portal and click on
Shared access policies, select service 
policy and use the service policy
connection string.

CUSTOM_TOPIC_EVENTGRID_KEY
CUSTOM_TOPIC_EVENTGRID_ENDPOINT

<custom_topic_eventgrid_key>
<custom_topic_eventgrid_endpoint>

Navigate to the Event Grid Topic
(custom) portal that was created
and use the Topic Endpoint 
for custom_topic_eventgrid_endpoint.
Click on Access Keys, use the 
Key1 as custom_topic_eventgrid_key.

ENABLE_AUTOMATIC_POWER_ACTION

<True/False>

To enable automatic mode, set the
value to “True”, else “False”.

ENABLE_SSL

no

Set the value to “yes”/”no”.
By default, it is no.

SSL_CERT_PATH

<Path_to_SSL_certificate>

Required only if SSL is enabled.
Copy the certificate into UOB App
container and provide the SSL 
certificate path.


 

 

  1. Create a docker-compose.yaml file to configure the services and to start the services by spinning up the container by following the below steps: 
     
    version: "3.9"
    services:
      uob-server:
        image: <update uob-server image url>
        user: "30000:30000"
        environment:
        -  MPS_SERVER_ADDRESS=$MPS_SERVER_ADDRESS
        -  MPS_WEB_ADMIN_USER=$MPS_WEB_ADMIN_USER
        -  MPS_WEB_ADMIN_PASSWORD=$MPS_WEB_ADMIN_PASSWORD
        -  EVENTHUB_CONNECTION_STRING=$EVENTHUB_CONNECTION_STRING
        -  EVENTHUB_NAME=$EVENTHUB_NAME
        -  IOTHUB_SERVICE_CONNECTION_STRING=$IOTHUB_SERVICE_CONNECTION_STRING
        -  AMT_MODE_PROFILE_NAME=$AMT_MODE_PROFILE_NAME
        -  CUSTOM_TOPIC_EVENTGRID_KEY=$CUSTOM_TOPIC_EVENTGRID_KEY
        -  CUSTOM_TOPIC_EVENTGRID_ENDPOINT=$CUSTOM_TOPIC_EVENTGRID_ENDPOINT
        -  ENABLE_AUTOMATIC_POWER_ACTION=$ENABLE_AUTOMATIC_POWER_ACTION
        -  ENABLE_SSL=$ENABLE_SSL
        -  SSL_CERT_PATH=$SSL_CERT_PATH
        read_only: true
        container_name: uob-server
        volumes:
          - /opt/manageability:/opt/manageability
        security_opt:
          - no-new-privileges
          - apparmor:docker-default
        cap_drop:
          - ALL 
  2. Create a uob_setup.sh script to create a directory to store the the SQLite database that contains the device information by following the below steps: 
    mkdir /opt/manageability/
    groupadd -g 30000 manageability
    useradd -u 30000 manageability_user
    usermod -g manageability manageability_user
    chown -R manageability_user:manageability /opt/manageability/ 
  3. Run the uob_setup.sh script with the following commands: 
    chmod +x uob_setup.sh
    sudo bash uob_setup.sh 

 

Deploy Client Module on the Edge Device

At this stage, UOB application deployment is done on Azure Linux VM which will act as a server for the edge devices.

The purpose of the client module is to connect the edge device to Azure IoT and perform client manageability functions as instructed by the Out-of-Band Server application.  

To set up the edge device, install the client module and enable the manageability feature. 

 

Deployment on Linux

Follow one of the approaches below to set up the edge device:

  • Method 1: Deploy the UOB Client Container. For quick deployment, use this approach and deploy the client module as a container for custom solutions, to enable the manageability feature. 
    NOTE: This approach is applicable for Linux only. 

  • Method 2: Deploy in native environment using the Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT module. If you have integrated with existing RIs or any other custom solutions in native environment, use this approach to enable the manageability feature. 

 

Method 1: Deploy the UOB Client Container
  1. Pull the UOB Client Image from the Azure Marketplace or from Docker hub and deploy it on the edge device. 
    Choose one of the following options: 
    1. Azure Marketplace: Click Get It Now and choose the "Client Module for User App for Out-of-Band Manageability with Azure IoT" option under Software plan to pull the image. Follow the instructions to deploy it on edge by entering the following commands: 
      sudo docker login -u <ACR username> -p <ACR password> <ACR login server>
      sudo docker pull <ACR login server>/intel_corporation/uob-client:latest 
    2. Docker Hub: Pull the image from Intel Docker Hub repository with the command:
      sudo docker pull intel/user-oob-client-for-azure
  2. Create the .env file, start_edge_uob_client.sh and docker-compose.yaml in Desktop of the VM and set up the environment variables. Update the yaml file before running the UOB Client. 
    Refer to the following .env template in order to configure the environment variables required by the client module.

    IOTHUB_DEVICE_CONNECTION_STRING=hub_device_connection_string


    NOTE: For the IoT Hub variable value, navigate to the IoT Hub portal that was created earlier and click on Device Management - Devices, select the device and use the primary device connection string. If you have already connected to the IoT Hub, use another logical IoT Device and its connection string.

  3. Create a docker-compose.yaml file to configure the services and to start the services by spinning up the container by following the below steps:

    version: "3.9"
    services:
      uob-client:
        image: <update uob-client image url>
        environment:
          - IOTHUB_DEVICE_CONNECTION_STRING=$IOTHUB_DEVICE_CONNECTION_STRING
        read_only: true
        container_name: uob-client
        network_mode: "host"
        devices:
          - /dev/mei0:/dev/mei0
        security_opt:
          - no-new-privileges
          - apparmor:docker-default
        cap_drop:
          - ALL  
        deploy:
          resources:
            reservations:
              #cpus: '0.5'
              memory: 1G
            #limits:
             # cpus: '4'
             # memory: 3G

     

  4. Create a start_edge_uob_client.sh script to check the existence of Intel Management Engine Interface (Intel MEI) Linux driver and to spin up the Docker container with docker-compose up command by following the below steps:

    #!/bin/sh
    #check and executes if mei0 driver exists
    if [ -e "/dev/mei0" ]; then
      sudo docker-compose up
    #executes if mei0 driver doesn't exists 
    else
      sed -i.bak '/devices/,$d' docker-compose.yaml
      sudo docker-compose up  
    fi
    exec "$@" 

     

Method 2: Install the Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT Module

To set up the edge device, install the Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT module by following the Get Started instructions in this guide through step 5.

After successful installation, UOB connector will be available inside the connect module directory on the Desktop.

The UOB connector acts as a client and performs client manageability functions as instructed by the UOB Server application and activates the device with Intel® AMT.

Integrate UOB Connector and do the setup to enable the manageability feature by using one of two methods:

  1. Using a Reference Implementation (RI) from Connect module:

    Deploy any RI following the instructions in the Additional Examples using Azure IoT section in this guide. Complete the setup until you reach the section Deployment in Linux Environment.

    NOTE: We have already integrated uob_connector with existing RIs to enable manageability actions on the edge devices.
     
  2. Any other custom solutions: 

    NOTE: You can also enable the manageability feature without any RIs.

    Go to the Manageability directory and do the setup using the below commands in a terminal in admin mode.

    sudo -s
    apt-get -y install python3-pip
    pip3 install azure-iot-device==2.9.0 

 

Deployment on Window EFLOW Environment

Follow the instructions in the Additional Examples using Azure IoT section in this guide to set up the edge device in a Windows EFLOW environment.

Once the Application deployment is done, the UOB connector module is used to perform client manageability functions as instructed by the UOB Server application and activate the device with Intel® AMT.

Note that this flow is different from the Linux setup due to container deployment constraints in Windows environment. The steps that are automated in the Linux flow are manual in the Windows flow.

Follow the steps below to do the Manageability Setup on the Windows environment of the EFLOW device:

  1. Copy UOB Connector windows script from the development machine to the Desktop directory of the Windows OS of EFLOW device.
  2. For RPC setup, install the following software on your system:
  3. Build and generate the RPC executable by following the instructions from Open AMT Cloud Toolkit guide until you reach the build RPC section. 

  4. After building the RPC, copy the executable to the Desktop directory of the device.
    NOTE:  Put it in the same directory as the UOB connector file.

  5. Install Python and navigate to the directory containing the RPC application, open a Command Prompt as Administrator, and run the following command:
    pip install azure-iot-device==2.9.0 

     

     

Perform Out-Of-Band Management

The UOB Application listens and triggers alerts to Open AMT Cloud Toolkit manageability engines for any corrective manageability actions.

In an earlier section of this guide, the UOB application was deployed but not started. To monitor the edge devices, first we need to start the UOB application and when the edge device goes down, we will perform the OOB management to make the device up and running from Azure Cloud without visiting the edge device place in person.

To start the UOB Application, follow the steps below:

  1. If Open AMT Cloud Toolkit microservices are deployed on a local system as Docker containers, follow the below steps.
    Otherwise, skip these steps if the Open AMT Cloud Toolkit is deployed on an Azure container instance.  

    • Add the IP address of Azure Server VM in Azure Server VM Network Security group. 

    • Add the IP address of Intel® AMT Edge devices in the Azure Server VM Network Security group. 

  2. Execute the below command on Azure VM that is created to start the UOB App.

    sudo docker-compose up 

    You will see output in the Azure VM terminal indicating that the application is connecting to Open AMT and it has received tokens.
    Screenshot of application connecting to Open AMT

    NOTE: The MPS, RPS and Web UI microservices were deployed as containers as part of the setup and are now up and healthy.
     

  3. Linux-only step: To enable manageability feature with UOB Client Container, execute the below commands on the edge device or skip to step 4.

    sudo -s
    chmod +x start_edge_uob_client.sh
    sudo bash start_edge_uob_client.sh


    You will see output similar to the image below in the edge device terminal.

    Screenshot of output using RI integration

    NOTE: If you have to reset the environment variables, stop the container, and rerun it. To stop the UOB Client, execute the below command:

    sudo docker-compose down


     

  4. Linux-only step: To enable manageability features with any reference implementation from connect module, run the application on the edge device or skip to step 5.
    For example, you can run the below command in a terminal to enable manageability feature with Automated Checkout Reference Implementation.
    sudo bash connect.sh -a “IOT_Hub” -c <IoT Hub connection String> -p <HOST_IP> -I <Interval> -m true

    NOTE: The -m option enables the manageability features.

    You may expect output like below in the edge device terminal with RI integration.
    Screenshot of output using RI integration

     
  5. Linux-only step: If you want to enable the management feature for your custom solutions, follow the below instructions.  
    NOTE: You can also enable the manageability feature without any RIs.

    Go to the Manageability directory and run the standalone UOB connector using the below commands in a terminal in admin mode.

    The start_uob_connector* module is a client module run on the edge device and it communicates with the User OOB application on Azure.
    sudo -s
    cd ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/Manageability/
    export IOTHUB_DEVICE_CONNECTION_STRING=”<conn-string>”
    python3 start_uob_connector_linux.py 

    NOTE: For the IoT Hub variable value, navigate to the IoT Hub portal that was created earlier and click on Device Management - Devices, select the device and use the primary device connection string. If you have already connected to the IoT Hub, use another logical IoT Device and its connection string.

    You will see output similar to the image below in the edge device terminal. 
    Screenshot of Enable Manageability on Linux
     

  6. Windows-only step: To enable the manageability feature, open a Command Prompt as Administrator and run the following command. 

    set IOTHUB_DEVICE_CONNECTION_STRING=conn-string
    python start_uob_connector_windows.py 


    For the IoT Hub variable value, navigate to the IoT Hub portal that was created earlier and click on Device Management - Devices, select the device and use the primary device connection string.

    You will see output similar to the image below in the edge device terminal. 
    Screenshot of Manageability on Windows

     

  7. After running the edge client application, you will see output similar to the following in the Azure VM (Server) terminal to see device getting connected.
    Screenshot of devices getting connected
     

    You can also see if the device is connected from a sample Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Web UI as below.

    Based on Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Deployment, open any modern web browser and navigate to the following link.

    https://Open AMT Cloud Toolkit_container_instance_fqdn:8443/ 
    or 
    https://Development-IP-Address/


    For example, the screenshot below shows a sample Web UI Page: 

    Screenshot of Open AMT Web UI
     

    NOTE: If Intel® AMT edge device is in disconnected state after the successful CIRA configuration, try the below possible solutions.
    Workarounds include a) Reboot device and b) Unplug and re-plug network cable.

    NOTE: If you have reset the environment variables, stop the container, and rerun it.
    To stop the UOB application, execute the command:

    sudo docker-compose down 


    NOTE: If you reset the Open AMT environment variables on the UOB App server, unprovision the edge device to reset the environment completely. Run the following command on the edge device to deactivate:
    For Linux, run: 

    sudo docker run --net host --device=/dev/mei0 intel/oact-rpc-go:latest deactivate -u wss://<hostipaddr or  container_instance_fqdn:8443>/activate -n --password <ccmprofilepassword>


    For Windows, run: 

    rpc deactivate -n -u wss://<hostipaddr or  container_instance_fqdn:8443>/activate --password <ccmprofilepassword>


     

 

Simulate Edge Device Down Scenario

Shut down the edge device manually and see the UOB application logs as well as Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Web UI. Device status can be found as disconnected.

 

Perform OOB Management by invoking MPS REST API Calls

The edge device went offline, and the device disconnected event got triggered. Now UOB Application performs the power state /power up actions, or you can execute all the manageability actions like power up, power cycle etc., from the Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Sample Web UI.
Screenshot of OOB Management using MPS REST API
 

 

NOTE: OOB Management is possible only for Intel vPro® enabled edge devices. Use the Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Sample Web UI to perform all the OOB actions like reset, power cycle, sleep etc.

If you have many devices to monitor, control and visualize on a single dashboard view, go to the next section of visualization in Azure Power BI.

 

Visualization in Microsoft* Power BI*

Power BI is a collection of software services, apps, and connectors that work together to turn unrelated sources of data into coherent, visually immersive, and interactive insights. In the Power BI service, dashboards and reports connect to datasets that brings all the relevant data together in one place.

Run Visualization

In this section, we use Power BI service to view dashboards and reports and to create visuals based on the existing data model. Perform the OOB Actions on the Intel vPro® enabled edge devices by navigating to Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Sample Web UI if the device goes down/disconnects from the IoT Hub.

  1. Make sure the UOB application server and edge client applications are running.
  2. Sign in to your Power BI account and select Power BI service from the top menu.
  3. Select the workspace you used from the side menu, My Workspace.
  4. Under the All tab or the Datasets + dataflows tab, you should see the datasets that you specified when you created the outputs for the Stream Analytics job.
    NOTE: Due to performing sanity checks, please expect delay in event hub custom event data in Power BI.
  5. In My workspace, go to the Event Hub custom topic dataset you created, select More options menu (the three dots to the right of the dataset name), and then select Create report.
  6. Create a Table chart to show event hub data for vPro devices
    • On the Visualizations pane of the report creation page, select the Table icon to add a Table chart. Use the guides located on the sides and corners of the chart to adjust its size and position.
    • On the Fields pane, expand the table that you specified when you created the output for the Stream Analytics job.
    • Drag hostname, isvPro, status, eventTime, amtmode, guid to Values.
    • For eventTime, click the dropdown button and select Last filter.
    • In the Visualizations pane, click the Format button (looks like a paint roller).
    • Go down and find Totals and under Totals, switch to off.
    • For isvpro, select yes in filter type under Filters on this visual.
    • Under table chart, click on more options and select sort by > LasteventTime. Should be in descending order.
    • A table chart is created for Intel vPro® devices.
      Screenshot of Table Chart for Intel vPro® Devices
       
    • Select Save to save the report and click on the pin visual (pin to dashboard) icon, select the dashboard that was created, and select Pin.
    • Go to the dashboard and hover over the report you pinned and select More options menu from the report visual (the three dots to the right of the report).
      Provide the title and subtitle and select the Display title and subtitle.
      Select the Set custom link, LinkType - External Link and provide the Open AMT Web UI Link: 
      https://Open AMT Cloud Toolkit_Container_Instance_FQDN:8443/ or  https://Development-IP-Address/
      Select Apply
      Screenshot of List of vPro Devices
  7. Hover over the Event Hub custom topic dataset you created, select More options menu (the three dots to the right of the dataset name), and then select Create report.
  8. Follow the same steps to create a Table chart to show event hub data for non vPro devices but select no filter type for isvPro under Filters on this visual
    • A table chart is created for devices that are not based on Intel vPro® technology.
    • Select Save to save the report, click on the pin visual (pin to dashboard) icon,select the dashboard that was created, and select Pin.
    • Go to the dashboard and hover over the report you pinned and select More options menu from the report visual (the three dots to the right of the report)
      Provide the title and subtitle and select the Display title and subtitle and select Apply.
      Screenshot of List of other Devices

 

Device Logs

For Intel vPro® Devices with ActionState and PowerState:

  1. Hover over the Event Hub custom topic dataset you created, select More options menu and then select Create report.
  2. Follow the same steps in Create a Table chart to show event hub data for Intel vPro® devices but in addition to the existing fields, drag ActionState, PowerState to Values.
    • A table chart is created for Intel vPro® device logs with ActionState and PowerState. 
    • Select Save to save the report, click on the pin visual (pin to dashboard) icon, select the dashboard that was created, and select Pin.
    • Go to the dashboard and hover over the report you pinned and select More options menu from the report visual (the three dots to the right of the report).
      Provide the title and subtitle and select the Display title and subtitle and select Apply.

For Intel vPro® Device Logs:

  1. Hover over the Event Hub custom topic dataset you created, select More options menu and then select Create report.
  2. Follow the steps to Create a Table chart to show event hub data for Intel vPro® devices with ActionState and PowerState.   
    NOTE:
    Drag the fields to values and create a table chart but don’t select a filter for eventTime. 
    • A table chart is created for Intel vPro® device logs. 
    • Navigate to the Power BI dashboard that was created. Click Edit and Add a Tile, choose the Text Box, select the Display title, and provide the title and content.
    • Select the Set custom link, LinkType - Link to a Dashboard and choose the Intel vPro® devices log report. Select Apply.
      Screenshot of Intel vPro® Device Logs 
       

For other Device Logs:

  1. Hover over the Event Hub custom topic dataset you created, select More options menu and then select Create report.
  2. Follow the steps to Create a Table chart to show event hub data for other devices.
    NOTE: Drag the fields to values and create a table chart but don’t select a filter for eventTime. 
    • A table chart is created for logs of devices that are not based on Intel vPro® technology.
    • Navigate to the Power BI dashboard that was created.
    • Click the Edit and Add a Tile and choose the Text Box and select the Display title and provide the title and content. Select the Set custom link, LinkType-Link to a Dashboard and Choose the devices log report. Select Apply.Power BI Dashboard

 

NOTE: For Intel vPro® enabled edge devices, click on the List of vPro Devices Tile and navigate to Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Sample Web UI and perform the OOB management.

Data for Intel vPro® Devices and other Device types: 

Screenshot of data for Intel vPro® and other devices

 

 

For example, you can view the below telemetry data in Power BI for the Automated Checkout Reference Implementation:

Screenshot of Telemetry Data for Automated Checkout RI

 

Learn More  

Learn more about Open AMT by reading about Open AMT GitHub Documentation.

Learn more about Azure at the following links: 

 

Troubleshooting

This section lists possible errors that may occur.

  • For Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Microservices issues, refer to Troubleshooting guide.
  • If Open AMT Cloud Toolkit configuration becomes unworkable, it may be necessary to clean up the environment by: 
    1. Stop the UOB Server by running the following command.
      sudo docker-compose down 
    2. Reset your environment completely by unprovisioning, also known as deactivating, the managed device.
      To deactivate the Intel vPro® managed device, do the following steps:
      • Linux: Run the following command in a terminal: 
        sudo docker run --net host --device=/dev/mei0 intel/oact-rpc-go:latest deactivate -u wss://<hostipaddr or container_instance_fqdn:8443>/activate -n --password <ccmprofilepassword> 

         
      • Windows: Open the command prompt/terminal and navigate to the directory containing RPC Application.
        Run the following command in Administrative mode:
        rpc deactivate -n -u wss://<hostipaddr or container_instance_fqdn:8443>/activate --password <ccmprofilepassword> 
    3. Shut down Open AMT Cloud Toolkit Docker containers.
    4. After resetting the environment, rerun the Open AMT Cloud Toolkit and uob-server containers.

 

 

 


Additional Examples Using Azure IoT  

This section contains the following examples: 

 

Automated Checkout Reference Implementation

 

In this section, you will create an Azure IoT Central dashboard for the Automated Checkout reference implementation, run standalone Python code to fetch telemetry data using REST API client, and send data to the Azure IoT Central dashboard for visualizing telemetry data. You can utilize the rest of the Azure IoT Central services to meet your needs. You will be able to run this application in both the Ubuntu* Linux* and Azure IoT Edge for Linux on Windows* (EFLOW) environments.

 

Prerequisites

Before you continue, you must complete the following:

  • Complete the steps to install and run the Automated Checkout reference implementation. 

NOTE: These steps will result in building containers for the Linux environment. To build containers for the EFLOW environment, refer to the Deployment in Windows Environment section.

NOTE: You are not required to run the web app or any additional steps for the installation (i.e., you are just installing to access the scripts).

 

Deployment in Linux Environment 

This section provides details on running the Automated Checkout RI in the Linux environment and two methods of visualization.

NOTE: Be sure you complete the Prerequisites described above.

 

Start the Automated Checkout RI

Follow the steps from the below documentation to build and start the Automated Checkout RI:

 

Visualization of Cooler

For visualization purposes, the Automated checkout serves the post-processed images over http. Open http://127.0.0.1:9005 on a web browser to observe how products are being added or removed from the cooler.

 

Deployment in Azure IoT Hub

To view the inference results in the Power BI dashboard, follow the instructions from Visualization of Azure IoT Hub instructions later in this guide. 

 

Deployment in Azure IoT Central

To view the inference results in the IoT Central dashboard, follow the Visualization in Azure IoT Central instructions later in this guide.

 

Deployment in Windows EFLOW Environment

Azure IoT Edge for Linux on Windows (EFLOW) works by running a Linux virtual machine on a Windows device. The Linux virtual machine comes pre-installed with the IoT Edge runtime. Any IoT Edge modules deployed to the device runs inside the virtual machine. Meanwhile, Windows applications running on the Windows host device can communicate with the modules running in the Linux virtual machine.

EFLOW enables users to run production Linux-based cloud-native workloads on Windows IoT device, while providing only server mode access to VM and no GUI support.

Prerequisites

 

Build Automated Checkout Docker Images

Since some container images are not readily available for Automated Checkout, this section will provide details to create and upload the container images to Azure Container Registry. To make the Automated Checkout reference implementation work with Microsoft EFLOW, two container images need to be modified.

  1. Go to the reference implementation installation folder by executing the command: 
    cd Automated_Checkout_<version>/Automated_Checkout/automated-checkout
  2. Run the command below to build the automated checkout services and create local Docker images:
    NOTE: This step can be skipped if the Automated Checkout RI images are built and already available.
    sudo make build 
  3. Create custom mqtt dockerfiles:
    NOTE: In the Automated Checkout RI, the edgex-device-mqtt and mqtt-broker Docker containers are mounting configuration files from the host machine filesystem at run time. For these containers to work on EFLOW, you must rebuild the images with the configuration files copied inside the image itself. 
    • Create a file named dockerfile.mqtt in the Automated_Checkout_<version>/Automated_Checkout/automated-checkout directory with the below content:
      FROM eclipse-mosquitto:1.6.3
      COPY res/mqtt/mosquitto.conf /mosquitto/config/mosquitto.conf
      CMD ["/usr/sbin/mosquitto", "-c", "/mosquitto/config/mosquitto.conf"] 
    • Create a file named dockerfile.edgex-mqtt in the Automated_Checkout_<version>/Automated_Checkout/automated-checkout directory with the below content:
      FROM edgexfoundry/docker-device-mqtt-go:1.2.0
      COPY res/device-mqtt /res 

       
  4. To build the mqtt docker images for the dockerfile created above, run the below commands:
    sudo docker build -t edgex-device-mqtt:latest -f dockerfile.edgex-mqtt .
    sudo docker build -t mqtt-broker:latest -f dockerfile.mqtt . 

 

Push Automated Checkout Docker Images to ACR

NOTE: Azure IoT requires container images of edge modules to be available on a public/private container registry. Azure Container Registry allows you to build, store, and manage container images and artifacts in a private registry for all types of container deployments.

Follow the steps below to push Automated Checkout Docker images to ACR.

 

  1. To create an Azure Container Registry (ACR), use the following link: Creating a container registry.
  2. Go to Azure portal > container registry > choose your container registry > Access keys
    Enable Admin user, get the details of container registry and please make a note of username, password, and login server for further steps. 
    Review Container Registry Details

     
  3. Open a terminal on your development machine.
  4. Set environmental variables as follows by running the following commands on the terminal.
    export ACR_USERNAME=<ACR username> 
    export ACR_LOGIN_SERVER=<ACR Login Server> 
  5. Login to your Azure container registry. Enter the Azure container registry password when prompted.

    sudo docker login -u $ACR_USERNAME $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER

     

  6. Tag all Automated Checkout Docker images:

    sudo docker tag mqtt-broker:latest $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/mqtt-broker:latest
    sudo docker tag edgex-device-mqtt:latest $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/edgex-device-mqtt:latest
    sudo docker tag automated-checkout/ds-card-reader:dev $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/ds-card-reader:latest
    sudo docker tag automated-checkout/ds-controller-board:dev $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/ds-controller-board:latest
    sudo docker tag automated-checkout/ds-cv-inference:dev $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/ds-cv-inference:latest
    sudo docker tag automated-checkout/as-controller-board-status:dev $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/as-controller-board-status:latest
    sudo docker tag automated-checkout/as-vending:dev $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/as-vending:latest
    sudo docker tag automated-checkout/ms-authentication:dev $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/ms-authentication:latest
    sudo docker tag automated-checkout/ms-inventory:dev $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/ms-inventory:latest
    sudo docker tag automated-checkout/ms-ledger:dev $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/ms-ledger:latest 

     

  7. Push all Automated Checkout Docker images to ACR:

    sudo docker push $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/mqtt-broker:latest
    sudo docker push $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/edgex-device-mqtt:latest
    sudo docker push $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/ds-card-reader:latest
    sudo docker push $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/ds-controller-board:latest
    sudo docker push $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/ds-cv-inference:latest
    sudo docker push $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/as-controller-board-status:latest
    sudo docker push $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/as-vending:latest
    sudo docker push $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/ms-authentication:latest
    sudo docker push $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/ms-inventory:latest
    sudo docker push $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/automated-checkout/ms-ledger:latest 

     

 

Build Docker Image for Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT Module

This section outlines sending Automated Checkout telemetry data to the cloud.

NOTE: If you have not done so already, install Connect Edge Devices to Azure* IoT (See Step 5: Install the connect_devices_to_azure_iot).

To make the Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT work with Azure EFLOW, build it as container. 


1. Go to Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT folder in Desktop:

cd ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT 


2. Build Docker image:

sudo docker build . -t connect-edge-devices-to-azure-iot:latest 

 

Push Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT Docker Images to ACR 

Follow the steps below to push Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT Docker images to ACR.
1. Tag Connect Edge devices to Azure IoT container:

sudo docker tag connect-edge-devices-to-azure-iot:latest $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/connect-edge-devices-to-azure-iot:latest 


2. Push the container to ACR:

sudo docker push $ACR_LOGIN_SERVER/connect-edge-devices-to-azure-iot:latest 

 

Set Up Azure Resources for Deployment  

Before deploying the Automated Checkout Reference Implementation and Connect Edge devices to Azure IoT modules on EFLOW, you must complete the following steps. 

Create Azure IoT Hub

1. Follow the Create an IoT hub using the Azure portal instructions.
2. In your Azure Portal, go to your IoT Hub.
3. Under Device Management from the menu on the left, select IoT Edge.
Add IOT Edge Device to IOT Hub

4. Click on Add IoT Edge Device to create a new edge device for EFLOW VM. Provide a device ID and click the Save button.

Create a device

5. Select the device ID of the target device you just created. Make a note of primary connection string for future reference.

 

Create Microsoft EFLOW device

To create an EFLOW device, follow the Microsoft installation guide
During the provisioning step, choose manual provisioning and provide the connection string of your IoT hub.

Deploy Reference Solution in EFLOW

NOTE: The following step assumes that all Docker images related to Automated Checkout RI and Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT RI are pushed to Azure Container Registry. If not completed, follow the Build Automated Checkout Docker Images for the steps to be followed.

 

Set Up Microsoft Visual Studio Code and Extensions

In this section we will be using the Azure IoT Extensions for Visual Studio Code to develop IoT Edge Modules. 

Azure IoT Tools for VS Code is an extension pack for Visual Studio Code that lets you get all you need for Azure IoT development with 1-click installation. Microsoft Azure IoT support for Visual Studio Code is provided through a rich set of extensions that make it easy to discover and interact with Azure IoT Hub that power your IoT Edge and device applications.

  1. Install Visual Studio Code on your development machine.
  2. Once the installation is finished, select View > Extensions.
  3. Search for Azure IoT Tools, which is actually a collection of extensions that help you interact with IoT Hub and IoT devices, as well as developing IoT Edge modules.
  4. Select Install. Each included extension installs individually.
  5. In Explorer of VS Code, click Azure IoT Hub Devices in the bottom left corner.
    Azure IOT Hub selection in Visual Studio Code
     
  6. Click Set IoT Hub Connection String in the context menu.
    Select options in Visual Studio Code
     
  7. An input box will pop up, then enter your IoT Hub Connection String.
    This is a one-time configuration. Make sure it is IoT Hub Connection String and not Device Connection String.
    The format is:  HostName=<my-hub>.azure-devices.net;SharedAccessKeyName=<my-policy>;SharedAccessKey=<my-policy-key>)
    Enter IOT Hub Connection String
     
  8. The device list will be shown:
    List of devices

 

Deploying modules to device
For deploying the Automated Checkout RI modules to IoT Edge device that was created, follow the below steps. 

  1. Open the Connect to Edge Device Automated Checkout RI folder (AC_Azure_IoT) on your Visual Studio Code using the option File > Open Folder.
  2. Expand the eflow_deployment_manifest folder to see the deployment files.
  3. Update the .env file with the required details of Azure Container Registry that was created and save the file.
  4. Right-click the deployment.template.json file and select Generate IoT Edge Deployment Manifest to generate the deployment manifest.
    Generate IOT Edge Deployment Manifest
     
  5. The generated deployment manifests will appear under a new config directory. Right-click on the deployment.amd64.json file under config folder and select Create Deployment for Single Device.
    Create Deployment for Single Device
     
  6. An input box will pop up with options to select from the IoT Edge Device. Select the IoT Edge device name that was created.
    IOT Edge Device selection box
     
  7. Click Azure IoT Hub Devices in the bottom left corner and expand the Modules of the IoT Edge device selected on the previous step.
    Select Azure IOT Hub Devices Modules
     

NOTE: Depending on the network speed of the edge machine, it might take a while to deploy all the modules.

 

Monitoring Edge Device

Using Windows Admin Center

After successful setup/deployment of EFLOW, you can connect to your EFLOW VM from Windows Admin Center and see the status of your edge modules as shown below:

NOTE:  Make a note of the IP address for viewing visualization of the cooler.

Windows Admin Center Overview


 

Windows Admin Center Tools

Using Windows PowerShell

  1. Connect to your EFLOW VM from your Windows machine by executing this command in PowerShell: 
    Connect-EflowVM

     

  2. Run the below command to see the deployed list of edge modules:

    sudo iotedge list


    You should see output similar to: 
    Screenshot of iotedge list output
     

  3. To check the logs of edge modules, execute the command:

    sudo iotedge logs <edge module name>

     

Visualization of Cooler

To view the cooler simulation video, open a browser on the Windows machine that hosts the EFLOW VM and navigate to <EFLOW VM IP address>:9005

Screenshot of Cooler simulation video

 

Visualization of Azure IoT Hub Data 

 

Microsoft Azure IoT Hub is used for bidirectional communication and to optimize the process of connecting IoT devices to Azure cloud services. 
This section covers the topics below:

  1. Creation of Azure IoT Hub and Microsoft* Power BI* for visualization. 
  2. Creation and configuration of Azure Stream Analytic Job to query information from database.
  3. Operation of connect script to collect and send data to Azure IoT Hub.
  4. Visualization of data in Power BI dashboard.

If you have already created an IoT Hub in Azure, skip to Step 2 below. 

 

Step 1: Create an Azure IoT Hub
  1. Follow the Create an IoT hub using the Azure portal instructions to create IoT Hub.
  2. In your Azure Portal, go to your IoT Hub.
  3. Under Device Management from the menu on the left, select Devices.
  4. Click on Add Device to create a new device. Provide a device ID and click the Save button.
  5. Select the device ID of the target device you just created. Make a note of the primary connection string for future reference.

    Screenshot of Create Azure IoT Hub
     

 

Step 2: Create a Power BI Account

Power BI is a collection of software services, apps, and connectors that work together to turn unrelated sources of data into coherent, visually immersive, and interactive insights. In the Power BI service, dashboards and reports connect to datasets that brings all the relevant data together in one place.

If you already have a Power BI account, you can skip this step. Otherwise, create a Power BI account here

 

Step 3: Create Stream Analytics Job
  1. In the Azure portal, select create a resource, choose Stream Analytics Job.
  2. In the Stream Analytics job overview page, select Create.
  3. Give a name and select the Resource group and Location same as which is used for creating IoT Hub and select Create.

    Screenshot of Create Stream Analytics Job



     
Step 4: Configure Stream Analytics Job

You must configure an input and an output to use a Azure Stream Analytics job. Follow the below steps for configuring input and output.

Step 4.1: Add IoT Hub as Input to the Stream Analytics Job

  1. Open the Stream Analytics job.
  2. Under Job topology > select Inputs.
  3. In the Inputs pane, select Add stream input, then select IoT Hub from the drop-down list.
    On the new input pane, enter the following information:
    • Input alias: Enter a unique alias for the input. For example, automated-checkout-input
    • Select IoT Hub from your subscription: Select this radio button.
    • Subscription: Select the Azure subscription you're using.
    • IoT Hub: Select the IoT Hub you have created from the above section.
    • Consumer Group: Select the consumer group you have created for IoT Hub.
    • Endpoint: Select Messaging.
    • Shared access policy name: Select the “service”.
    • Shared access policy key: This field is auto filled based on your selection for the shared access policy name.
  4. Leave all other fields at their defaults.

    Screenshot of Add Input to Job

    Screenshot of Configure Stream Analytics Job List
     
  5. Select Save

 

Step 4.2: Add Power BI as Output to the Stream Analytics Job

  1. Under Job topology > select Outputs.
  2. In the Outputs pane > select Add > select Power BI from the drop-down list for visualizing the event hub data.
  3. On the Power BI - New output pane, select Authorize and follow the prompts to sign into your Power BI account.
  4. After you've signed into Power BI, enter the following information:
    • Output alias: A unique alias for the output (ex: automatedcheckoutschema1).
    • Group workspace: Select your target group workspace.
    • Dataset name: Enter a dataset name (ex: schema1dataset).
    • Table name: Enter a table name (ex: schema1table).
    • Authentication mode: Leave at the default.

      Screenshot of Add Power BI to Job

       
  5. Similarly, create another Power BI output with the following information:
    • Output alias: A unique alias for the output (ex: automatedcheckoutschema2).
    • Group workspace: Select your target group workspace.
    • Dataset name: Enter a dataset name (ex: schema2dataset).
    • Table name: Enter a table name (ex: schema2table).
    • Authentication mode: Leave at the default.

       
  6. Select Save. Both outputs will be listed as shown below. 

    Screenshot of Power BI Outputs

 

Step 4.2: Configure the Query for the Stream Analytics Job

Replace the query with the below:

SELECT 

    IoTHub.ConnectionDeviceId as hostname,

    temperature, humidity, EventEnqueuedUtcTime

INTO
    automatedcheckoutschema2

FROM

    automatedcheckoutinput

WHERE temperature IS NOT NULL and humidity IS NOT NULL

SELECT
IoTHub.ConnectionDeviceId as hostname,
sprite.itemPrice as spriteitemprice,
sprite.productName  as sprite_productName,sprite.unitsOnHand as sprite_unitsOnHand, sprite.maxRestockingLevel as sprite_maxRestockingLevel,
mountain_dew.itemPrice as mountain_dew_itemPrice,mountain_dew.productName as mountain_dew_productName,mountain_dew.unitsOnHand as mountain_dew_unitsOnHand, mountain_dew.maxRestockingLevel as mountain_dew_maxRestockingLevel,
gatorade.itemPrice as gatorade_itemPrice,gatorade.productName as gatorade_productName,gatorade.unitsOnHand as gatorade_unitsOnHand, gatorade.maxRestockingLevel as gatorade_maxRestockingLevel,
Pringles.itemPrice as Pringles_itemPrice,Pringles.productName as Pringles_productName,Pringles.unitsOnHand as Pringles_unitsOnHand, Pringles.maxRestockingLevel as Pringles_maxRestockingLevel,
Ruffles.itemPrice as Ruffles_itemPrice,Ruffles.productName as Ruffles_productName,Ruffles.unitsOnHand as Ruffles_unitsOnHand, Ruffles.maxRestockingLevel as Ruffles_maxRestockingLevel,
EventEnqueuedUtcTime
INTO
automatedcheckoutschema1
FROM
automatedcheckoutinput 
WHERE sprite IS NOT NULL and mountain_dew IS NOT NULL and gatorade is NOT NULL and Pringles IS NOT NULL and Ruffles IS NOT NULL 

 

Step 4.4: Run the Application on the IoT Edge Device

  1. Go to the AC_Azure_IoT directory:
    cd ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/AC_Azure_IoT/

     
  2. Execute the below commands:
    chmod +x connect.sh
    sudo -s
    ./connect.sh -a IOT_Hub -c <IoT Hub connection String> -p <HOST_IP> -i <Interval> -m <true/false> 
    Where: 
     
    • <IoT Hub connection String> is the string you created earlier.
    • <HOST_IP> is the IP of the machine on which the Automated checkout RI is running.
      To view the host IP in Ubuntu, execute the command below:  
      hostname -I
      If Automated checkout is running in same machine from where you run connect.sh, you can use 127.0.0.1 as host IP.
    • -i <Interval> is the metric sending interval.
    • Set the –m argument to true to enable the manageability feature. (Default value = false)

For example:

./connect.sh -a IOT_Hub -c “HostName=XXXIOTHub.azure-devices.net;DeviceId=XXXDeviceid;SharedAccessKey=o/AKq/3SDxJC0AWAXXXXXXXXXX=" -p 127.0.0.1 -i 1 –m true

 

Step 4.5: Run the Stream Analytics Job

In the Stream Analytics job, select Overview, then select Start > Now > Start. Once the job successfully starts, the job status changes from Stopped to Running.

Screenshot of Run Stream Analytics Job
 

 

Step 4.6: Visualize the Telemetry Output on IoT Hub Terminal

Run the below command in PowerShell of Azure IoT Hub terminal.

az iot hub monitor-events -n <iothub_name> -d <device_id>

You will see output similar to:

Screenshot of Visualize Telemetry Output

 

Step 4.7: Visualize the Dashboard on Power BI

  1. Sign in to your Power BI account and select Power BI service from the top menu. 

  2. Select the workspace you used from the side menu, My Workspace.

  3. Under the All tab or the Datasets + dataflows tab, you should see the dataset that you specified when you created the output for the Stream Analytics job.

    Screenshot of My Workspace
     

  4. Go to the top part of the same window and select New > Dashboard.

    Screenshot of New Dashboard
     

  5. Put in a descriptive name and click on Create.

    Screenshot of Create Dashboard

  6. The new dashboard will open automatically. Next you can create your first visualization, for this go to Edit > Add a tile

    Screenshot of Add a Tile  
     

  7. In the new window select Custom Streaming Data, and then click on Next.

    Screenshot of Custom Data

  8. Select the dataset (schema1dataset,schema2dataset) created by the Stream Analytics job, and click on Next.
    For temperature and humidity, select schema2dataset.

  9. Select Card for visualization type. Under Fields, click Add value, then select the desired attribute, such as temperature, humidity. 
    Click Apply to save the tile to your dashboard.

    Screenshot of Custom Data Card  
     

  10. For Line Chart, follow the instructions below. ​​

    • Select Line chart for visualization type.

    • Under Axis, click Add value then select EventEnqueuedUtcTime.

    • Under Values, click Add value, then select sprite_unitsOnHand, mountain_dew_unitsOnHand, pringles_unitsOnHand

      Screenshot of Custom Data Line Chart 1



      Screenshot of Custom Data Line Chart 2


       

  11. You will see a dashboard similar to below.

    Screenshot of Custom Data Dashboard  

 

 

Visualization in Azure IoT Central 

This section contains instructions for both Linux and EFLOW. 

 

Step 1: Create Azure IoT Central Dashboard
  1. To create an Azure IoT Central dashboard, follow these instructions.
     Create Azure IOT Central Dashboard

 

Step 2: Create Device Template
  1. To create a device template, follow these steps:
    • Go to the Azure IoT Central application that you created in step 1, then navigate to Device templates and choose +New.
    • On the Select template type page, choose the IoT Device tile. Then select Next: Customize
       Select and customize IOT Device Template
    • On the Customize page, provide a name for the device template and select Next: Review.
      NOTE: You do not need to select the check box for Gateway device with downstream devices.  
      Customize device template name
       
    • On the Review page, select Create.  
      Create customized device template
       
  2. Click on Import a model and upload the capability model AC_DCM.json
    The typical path is: ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/AC_Azure_IoT/

    Import model to device template
    Upload the capability model: 

    Upload model to device template

 

  • To create an overall view, click Views and choose Visualizing the Device. Provide a View Name, for example, View-Overall and add the following tiles to the view. Click on Start with devices and choose telemetry names from the drop-down.    
    Create overall view of device

     
    SI No. Title Name Telemetry Name Visualizing Panel Size 
    1 <Leave this field empty> <Leave this field empty> Markdown^ 1x3
    2 Temperature (°F) Temperature Last Known Value* 1x1
    3 Humidity Humidity Last Known Value* 1x1
    4 Sprite Sprite / Units Last Known Value** 1x1
    5 Inventory Sprite / Units,
    Mountain Dew / Units,
    Gatorade / Units,
    Pringles / Units,
    Ruffles / Units
    Line Chart 4x2
    6 Mountain Dew Mountain Dew / Units Last Known Value** 1x1
    7 Gatorade Gatorade / Units Last Known Value** 1x1
    8 Pringles Pringle / Units Last Known Value** 1x1
    9 Ruffles Ruffles / Units Last Known Value** 1x1

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     








    NOTE: The symbols (^, * and **) in the Visualizing Panel column represent a specific action to be done. Refer to the below table for details. 



     
    SI. No Symbol Property Value
    1 ^ Description <br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><center><h1> # Vending Machine 1 ➤</center>
    2 * and ** Text Size 44
    3 ** Decimals 0



    Edit overall view

     
  • To create a channel-wise view, click Views and choose Visualizing the Device. Provide a View Name, for example, Inventory, and add the following tiles to the view. 
    Click on Start with devices and choose telemetry names from the drop-down. 

    Create channel-wise view


     
    SI No. Title Name Telemetry Name Visualizing Panel Size 
    1 Sprite Sprite / Name Last Known Value 2x1
    2 Mountain Dew Mountain Dew / Name  Last Known Value 2x1
    3 Gatorade Gatorade / Name Last Known Value 2x1
    4 Pringles Pringle / Name Last Known Value 2x1
    5 Ruffles Ruffles / Name Last Known Value 2x1
    6 Price Sprite / Price Last Known Value 1x1
    7 Price Mountain Dew / Price Last Known Value 1x1
    8 Price Gatorate / Price Last Known Value 1x1
    9 Price Pringles / Price Last Known Value 1x1
    10 Price  Ruffles / Price Last Known Value 1x1
    11 Units Sprite / Units Last Known Value 1x1
    12 Units Mountain Dew / Units Last Known Value 1x1
    13 Units Gatorate / Units Last Known Value 1x1
    14 Units Pringles / Units Last Known Value 1x1
    15 Units Ruffles / Units Last Known Value 1x1
    16 Maximum Stock Sprite / Maximum Stock Last Known Value 1x1
    17 Maximum Stock Mountain Dew / Maximum Stock  Last Known Value  1x1
    18 Maximum Stock Gatorade / Maximum Stock Last Known Value 1x1
    19 Maximum Stock Pringles / Maximum Stock Last Known Value 1x1
    20 Maximum Stock  Ruffles / Maximum Stock Last Known Value 1x1

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

































    The view will be similar to: 


    Output of channel-wise view



     

  1. Click Publish on the top panel. When prompted, click the Publish button to publish your device template.

 

Step 3: Add Device to Device Template 

In the next series of steps, you will attach an edge device to your published Automated Checkout device template.

  1. In your Azure IoT Central application, navigate to the Devices page and choose the template you created in the previous step.
  2. Click on + New to add the new device to the template.
  3. Provide the required details and click Create (refer to the screenshot below). 
    • Make sure you choose the right device template from the drop-down box.
    • Give a display name to your device. 
    • Provide a device ID. 
    • Do not enable the Simulate this device option.

    Add Device to Device Template


 

 

Step 4: Get Device Connection Parameters

In the next series of steps, you will view device connection parameters of the Azure IoT Central device.

  1. On the Device page, select the device you created in the previous step.
  2. Select Connect.
  3. Make a note of the ID Scope, Device ID, and Primary Key values. 
    Get Device Connection Parameters
     
Step 5: Run Program to Connect to Azure Dashboard

This section describes how to run a program that fetches data from the Automated Checkout using Rest API and sends the data to the Azure IoT Central dashboard. There are different steps for Linux and for EFLOW.

 

Step 5.1: Run Program on Linux 

  1. Go to the AC_Azure_IoT directory: 
    cd ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/AC_Azure_IoT/
  2. Enter the command below using the parameters from the previous step. 
    chmod +x connect.sh
    ./connect.sh -a IOT_Central -s <ID SCOPE> -d <DEVICE ID> -k <PRIMARY KEY> -p <HOST IP> -i <INTERVAL> 

    You will see output similar to: 

    Screenshot of application output

 

NOTE: Use device Scope ID, Device ID and Primary Key obtained from the previous step in the Visualization in Azure IoT Central section. 
You can run the reference implementation in parallel to send live data.  
The HOST IP is the IP of the machine on which RI is running.
You can adjust the metric sending interval with INTERVAL.

 

Step 5.2: Run Program on EFLOW

  1. Go to the connect_aziot module in IoT hub that was created in the previous section.


    Set Modules on device

     

  2. Add the following configuration to the Container Create Options for the IoT Edge Module.

    • Update the variables mentioned in the below json with values noted in the Get Device Connection Parameters step.

      For example, the value <SCOPE ID> should be updated with the scope ID of the Azure IoT Central device.
       

      {
            "NetworkingConfig": {
              "EndpointsConfig": {
                  "host": {}
              }
          },
          "HostConfig": {
              "NetworkMode": "host"
          },
          "Cmd": [
              "python3",           "Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/AC_Azure_IoT/send_telemetry.py",
              "-az",
              "IOT_Central",
              "-s",
              "<SCOPE ID>",
              "-d",
              "<DEVICE ID>",
              "-k",
              "<PRIMARY KEY>",
              "-ip",
              "localhost",
              "-i",
              "<INTERVAL>"
      
          ]
      }        


       

    • Once updated, copy the updated content to Container Create Options section of the module.

  3. After updating the above details, it should look similar to the following:
    Update IOT Edge Module Settings

     

  4. After adding all the required modules, click on Review + Create to proceed to the validation page.

    Review and Create Modules on Device
     

  5. Once validation is done, click on Create to deploy the modules in EFLOW.

    Deploy Modules on EFLOW

 

Step 6: Simulating Automated Checkout RI Scenarios

This section describes how to simulate the following retail cooler scenarios:

  1. An employee stocks the cooler
    • The cooler is empty - it has no stock in its inventory
    • A worker swipes their badge
    • The worker adds stock to the cooler
  2. A customer purchases an item
    • Later, a customer swipes their badge to open the cooler
    • The customer takes item(s) from the inventory
    • The customer closes the door and gets billed
  3. The cooler requires maintenance
    • The internal temperature of the cooler has exceeded the maximum temperature threshold
    • A maintenance worker resolves the issue

The next sections describe two different ways of simulating these scenarios.

Step 6.1: Simulating using curl REST API calls

The steps in the Simulate User Actions section in the Automated Checkout RI user guide show how to simulate the automated checkout workflow using curl REST API calls. It is a step-by-step walkthrough with specific commands to run on the command line.

Step 6.2: Simulating using automated script

The automated checkout workflow scenarios can be simulated automatically using a simulator script that utilizes the Python requests library to make REST API requests. This script helps simulate all the scenarios mentioned above and avoids manual step-by-step execution of REST API using the command line.

You need the following prerequisites to run the simulator script:

  • python3

In case of deploying in EFLOW, copy the repo to the Windows host machine. 

The simulator script will follow the below flow to simulate the scenarios:

  1. Employee stocks the cooler
  2. Customer purchasing from the cooler. The script will continue this scenario four times until the cooler is empty.
  3. The cooler requires maintenance. 

Follow the below steps to run the simulator script.

  1. Go to the AC_Azure_IoT directory:
    cd ~/AC_Azure_IoT/


     

  2. Run the command below with the host_ip parameter: 

    python3 simulator.py --host_ip/-ip <HOST IP>


    NOTE: The HOST IP is the IP of the machine on which Automated Checkout RI is running (EFLOW VM IP for EFLOW based deployment). Default value is 127.0.0.1.​

    You will see output similar to: 

    Screenshot of simulator output

 

 

Step 7: Monitor Data in Azure IoT Central Dashboard

In the following series of steps, you will monitor data exported to your Azure IoT Central dashboard.

  1. Go to your Azure IoT Central dashboard. 
  2. Navigate to Devices and choose the device template you created for Automated Checkout.

    Monitor Data in Azure IOT Central Dashboard
     
  3. Click your device, then click on different tabs to display telemetry data in the dashboard as shown below.

    • Admin View
      This view provides current cooler parameters and high-level insights on inventory using historical data.

      Admin View of data
       
    • Inventory Status
      This view provides real-time status of each product on the inventory.
      Inventory Status view of data
       

To learn more, you can add Out-of-Band Manageability functionality to your reference implementation. 

 

Intelligent Traffic Management Reference Implementation

In this section, you will create an Azure IoT Central dashboard for the Intelligent Traffic Management reference implementation, run standalone Python code to fetch telemetry data from InfluxDB, and send data to the Azure IoT Central dashboard for visualizing telemetry data. You can utilize the rest of the Azure IoT Central services to meet your needs. You will be able to run this application in both the Ubuntu* Linux* and Azure IoT Edge for Linux on Windows* (EFLOW) environments.

 

Prerequisites

Before you continue, you must complete the following:

NOTE: You are not required to run the web app or any additional steps for the installation (i.e., you are just installing to access the scripts).

NOTE: These steps will result in building containers for the Linux environment. To build containers for the EFLOW environment, refer to the Deployment in Windows Environment section.

 

Deployment in Linux Environment

 

Visualization in Grafana

To view the inference results in your local Grafana dashboard, follow the Visualize the Map UI on Grafana instructions in the Intelligent Traffic Management Reference Implementation

 

Visualization in Azure IoT Central

To view the inference results in the IoT Central dashboard, follow the Visualization in Azure IoT Central instructions later in this guide.
 

Deployment in Windows EFLOW Environment

Azure IoT Edge for Linux on Windows (EFLOW) works by running a Linux virtual machine on a Windows device. The Linux virtual machine comes pre-installed with the IoT Edge runtime. Any IoT Edge modules deployed to the device runs inside the virtual machine. Meanwhile, Windows applications running on the Windows host device can communicate with the modules running in the Linux virtual machine.

EFLOW enables users to run production Linux-based cloud-native workloads on Windows IoT device, while providing only server mode access to VM and no GUI support.

Prerequisites

 

Build Intelligent Traffic Management Docker Images

Since container images are not readily available for Intelligent Traffic management, this section will provide details to create and upload the container images to Azure Container Registry. To make the Intelligent Traffic Management reference implementation’s containers work with Microsoft EFLOW, modify Docker file for Smart City container and build new Docker image as described below.

1. Go to the reference implementation installation folder by executing the command:

cd Intelligent_Traffic_Management_<version>/Intelligent_Traffic_Management/intelligent-traffic-management


2. Open Dockerfile in text editor and make these changes:

  • Add instructions to copy resource folder and camera_config.json file: 
    COPY resources /resources
    COPY camera_config.json /camera_config.json 

     

  • Pass the value of Grafana port argument (g_port) as 3000: 
    -g_port 3000 

    After adding instructions, it should look similar to the following: 
    Screenshot of dockerfile after changes

3. To build the Docker images for Intelligent Traffic Management containers, run the command: 

sudo -E docker-compose build

 

Push Intelligent Traffic Management Docker Images to ACR

Follow the steps below to push Intelligent Traffic Management Docker images to ACR.


1. To create an Azure Container Registry (ACR), use the following link: Creating a container registry.
2. Go to Azure portal > container registry > choose your container registry > Access keys
    Enable Admin user, get the details of container registry and please make a note of username, password, and login server for further steps. 
3. Login to your Azure container registry: 

sudo docker login -u <ACR username> -p <ACR password> <ACR login server> 


4. Tag all Intelligent Traffic Management Docker images:

sudo docker tag intelligent-traffic-management_smartcity:latest <ACR login server>/intelligent-traffic-management_smartcity:latest
sudo docker tag intelligent-traffic-management_grafana:latest <ACR login server>/intelligent-traffic-management_grafana:latest


5. Push all Intelligent Traffic Management Docker images to ACR:

sudo docker push <ACR login server>/intelligent-traffic-management_smartcity:latest
sudo docker push <ACR login server>/intelligent-traffic-management_grafana:latest


If you have not done so already, install Connect Edge Devices to Azure* IoT (See Step 5: Install the connect_devices_to_azure_iot).

 

Build Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT Docker Images

To make the Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT work with Azure EFLOW, build it as container. 


1. Go to Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT folder in Desktop:

cd ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT 


2. Build Docker image:

sudo docker build . -t connect-edge-devices-to-azure-iot:latest 

 

Push Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT Docker Images to ACR 

Follow the steps below to push Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT docker images to ACR.
1. Tag Connect Edge devices to Azure IoT container:

sudo docker tag connect-edge-devices-to-azure-iot:latest <ACR login server>/connect-edge-devices-to-azure-iot:latest 


2. Push the container to ACR:

sudo docker push <ACR login server>/connect-edge-devices-to-azure-iot:latest

 

Set Up Azure Resources for Deployment

Before deploying the Intelligent Traffic Management Reference Implementation and Connect Edge devices to Azure IoT modules on EFLOW, you must complete the following steps. 

 

Create Azure IoT Hub

1. Follow the Create an IoT hub using the Azure portal instructions.
2. In your Azure Portal, go to your IoT Hub.
3. Under Automatic Device Management from the menu on the left, select IoT Edge.
4. Click on Add IoT Edge Device to create a new edge device for EFLOW VM. Provide a device ID and click the Save button.

Add IOT Edge device to Azure IOT Hub

5. Select the device ID of the target device you just created. Make a note of primary connection string for future reference.

 

Create Microsoft EFLOW device

To create an EFLOW device, follow the Microsoft installation guide
During the provisioning step, choose manual provisioning and provide the connection string of your IoT hub.

Deploy Reference solution in EFLOW

For deploying IoT modules which are pushed into ACR, follow the steps below.
1. Go to IoT device that is created in IoT hub in previous step, select the Module Settings tab.
2. On the container registry credential, provide the details of your Azure Container Registry that you have created in previous section. The username, password, and login server address can be found in your registry, under Settings in the Access keys section.
3. On the IoT Edge Modules, choose Add and select to add an IoT Edge Module. We need to add all the ITM containers as IoT edge Module to IoT Edge Deployment to EFLOW VM. 

The edge modules listed below are added by referencing to ITM RIs docker compose file along with Connect Edge devices to Azure IoT. 

Container Edge Module Name Startup Order Image URI
Influx DB itm_influxdb 1 influxdb:1.7
Grafana itm_grafana 2 As per docker image URI in AZCR
Smart City itm_smartcity 3 As per docker image URI in AZCR
Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT connect_edge_devices_to_azure_iot 4 As per docker image URI in AZCR

 

The dialog will look similar to: 

Update IOT Edge Module

4. The Smart City and Grafana modules will need to have some more information under the Environment Variables and Container Create Options tabs:

  • The Smart City container has several environment variables that need to be added for the container to run in the EFLOW environment. 
     
    Environment Variable Value
    HOST_IP <EFLOW VM IP>
    GRAFANA_HOST itm_grafana
    INFLUXDB_HOST itm_influxdb
    LOCAL_HOST 0.0.0.0


    NOTE: In EFLOW environment (after creating EFLOW VM), use Windows PowerShell to execute the command below to get the EFLOW VM IP address: 

    Get-EflowVMAddr


    After updating the environment variables in IoT Edge Module, the screen will look similar to: 

    Environment variables in IOT Edge Module
     

  • The Smart City and Grafana containers will both have port bindings and volume mount that need to be accessed by container (information in the docker-compose.yml file) as shown below:

    Screenshot of port bindings

    Update these settings as per the docker-compose.yml file under the Container Create Options.
    Refer to the code snippets and screenshots below for details. 

    itm_smartcity Container Create Options

    {
        "HostConfig": {
            "Devices": [
                {
                    "PathOnHost": "/dev/",
                    "PathInContainer": "/dev/",
                    "CgroupPermissions": "rwm"
                }
            ],
            "NetworkHost": "host",
            "PortBindings": {
                "5000/tcp": [
                    {
                        "HostPort": "5000"
                    }
                ]
            },
            "Binds": [
                "/dev:/dev",
                "/var/tmp:/var/tmp"
            ]
        }
    }


    After updating the above details, it should look similar to: 
    Container Create Options for IOT Edge Module

    itm_grafana Container Create Options

    {
        "HostConfig": {
            "PortBindings": {
                "3000/tcp": [
                    {
                        "HostPort": "3222"
                    }
                ]
            }
        }
    } 

    After updating the above details, it should look similar to: 
    Container Create Options for IOT Edge Module

5. Once validation is done, click on Create to deploy the modules in EFLOW.

Monitoring Edge Device

Using Windows Admin Center

After successful setup/deployment of EFLOW, you can connect to your EFLOW VM from Windows Admin Center and see the status of your edge modules as shown below:

NOTE:  Make a note of the IP address for viewing Grafana Dashboard.

Window Admin Center

 

Using Windows PowerShell

  1. Connect to your EFLOW VM from windows machine by executing this command in PowerShell: 
    Connect-EflowVM

     

  2. Run the below command to see the deployed list of edge modules:

    sudo iotedge list


    You should see output similar to: 
    Screenshot of iotedge list output
     

  3. To check the logs of edge modules, execute the command:

    sudo iotedge logs <edge module name>

     

 

Visualization in Grafana

To view the inference results in your local Grafana dashboard, open a browser on the Windows machine that hosts the EFLOW VM and navigate to: <EFLOW VM IP address>:3222

  1. Log in with User as admin and password as admin.
  2. Click on Home and select ITM to open the main dashboard.

    Grafana dashboard for ITM

 

Visualization in Azure IoT Central 

This section contains instructions for both Linux and EFLOW. 

Step 1: Create Azure IoT Central Dashboard

To create an Azure IoT Central dashboard, follow these instructions.
 Create Azure IOT Central Dashboard

 

Step 2: Create Device Template

To create a device template, follow these steps:

1. Go to the Azure IoT Central application that you created in step 1, then navigate to Device templates and choose +New.

2. On the Select template type page, choose the IoT Device tile. Then select Next: Customize
 Select and create custom IOT Device template

3. On the Customize page, provide a name for the device template and select Next: Review.
NOTE: You do not need to select the check box for Gateway device with downstream devices.  Review customized device template

4. On the Review page, select Create.
  Create customized device template

5. Click on Import a model and upload the capability model ITM_DCM.json
The typical path is: ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/ITM_Azure_IoT/


Upload model to device template

 

6. To create an overall view, click Views and choose Visualizing the Device. Provide a View Name, for example, View-Overall and add the following tiles to the view:   

SI No. Title Name Telemetry Name Visualizing Panel Size
1 Total Vehicle Count Total Car Count Last Known Value* 2x1
2 Total Bicycle Count Total Bicycle Count Last Known Value* 2x1
3 Total People Count Total People Count Last Known Value* 2x1
4 Total Collision Count Total Collision Count Last Known Value* 2x2
5 Traffic Analysis

Total Car Count
Total Bicycle Count
Total People Count
Total Collision Count

Pie Chart 2x2
6 Total Collision Chart Total Collision Count Line Chart** 2x2
7 Traffic Flow

Total Car Count
Total Bicycle Count
Total People Count

Line Chart** 2x2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

* Disable the ‘Abbreviate values’ option in configure options. 

** Select Display Range as ‘last 100 value’ in chart configure options. 

 

The view will be similar to: 

Create overall display view

 

7. To create a channel-wise view, click Views and choose Visualizing the Device. Provide a View Name, for example, View-ChannelWise and add the following tiles to the view: 
 

SI No. Title Name Telemetry Name Visualizing Panel Size
1 Channel 0

Channel 0 / Bicycle Count 
Channel 0 / Car Count 
Channel 0 / People Count 

Pie Chart 2x2
2 Channel 1

Channel 1 / Bicycle Count 
Channel 1 / Car Count 
Channel 1 / People Count 

Pie Chart 2x2
3 Channel 2

Channel 2 / Bicycle Count 
Channel 2 / Car Count 
Channel 2 / People Count 

Pie Chart 2x2
4 Channel 3

Channel 3 / Bicycle Count 
Channel 3 / Car Count 
Channel 3 / People Count

Pie Chart 2x2
5 Channel 4

Channel 4 / Bicycle Count 
Channel 4 / Car Count 
Channel 4 / People Count

Pie Chart 3x2
6 Channel 5

Channel 5 / Bicycle Count 
Channel 5 / Car Count 
Channel 5 / People Count

Pie Chart 3x2
7 Channel 6

Channel 6 / Bicycle Count 
Channel 6 / Car Count 
Channel 6 / People Count 

Pie Chart 3x2
8 Channel 7

Channel 7 / Bicycle Count 
Channel 7 / Car Count 
Channel 7 / People Count 

Pie Chart 3x2
9 Channel 8

Channel 8 / Bicycle Count 
Channel 8 / Car Count 
Channel 8 / People Count 

Pie Chart 2x2


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The view will be similar to:  

Create channel-wise display view

8. To create a channel wise view, click on ‘Views’ and choose ‘Visualizing the Device’.  Provide a View Name, for example ‘C. Collision View’ and add following tiles to the view:

 

I No.

Title Name

Telemetry Name

Visualizing Panel

Size

1

Channel 0

Collision – Channel 0, 
Near Miss – Channel 0 

Bar Chart

2x2

2

Channel 2

Collision – Channel 2, 
Near Miss – Channel 2

Bar Chart

2x2

3

Channel 6

Collision – Channel 6, 
Near Miss – Channel 6 

Bar Chart

2x2

4

Channel 7

Collision – Channel 7, 
Near Miss – Channel 7

Bar Chart

2x2

5

Collision Event

Collision Event

Last Known Value

3x2

6

near Miss

Near Miss – Channel 0, 
Near Miss – Channel 2, 
Near Miss – Channel 6, 
Near Miss – Channel 7 

KPI

3x2

7

Collision Chart

Collision – Channel 0, 
Collision – Channel 2, 
Collision – Channel 6, 
Collision – Channel 7 

Line Chart**

3x2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

** Select Display Range as ‘last 100 value’ in chart configure options.

 

The view will be similar to:  

Create channel-wise display view 2

9. Click on ‘publish’ on top panel when prompted. Click on the ‘publish’ button to publish your device template. 

 

Step 3: Add Device to Device Template
  1. In your Azure IoT Central application, navigate to the Devices page and choose the template you created in the previous step.
  2. Click on + New to add the new device to the template.
  3. Provide the required details and click Create (refer to the screenshot below). 
  4. Make sure you choose the right device template from the drop-down box.
  5. Give a display name to your device. 
  6. Provide a device ID. 
  7. Do not enable the Simulate this device option.

Add device to IOT Template

 

Step 4: Get Device Connection Parameters

View and record the device connection parameters of the Azure IoT Central device.

  1. On the Device page, select the device you created in the previous step.
  2. Select Connect.
  3. Make a note of the ID Scope, Device ID, and Primary Key values. 

Review Device Connection Parameters
 

Step 5: Run Program to Connect to Azure Dashboard

This section describes how to run a program that fetches data from the InfluxDB and sends the data to the Azure IoT Central dashboard. There are different steps for Linux and for EFLOW. 

 

Step 5.1 Run Program on Linux

1. Go to the ITM_Azure_IoT directory: 

cd ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/ITM_Azure_IoT/


2. Enter the command below using the parameters from the previous step. 

chmod +x connect.sh
./connect.sh -s <ID SCOPE> -d <DEVICE ID> -k <PRIMARY KEY> 

   You will see output similar to: 

Screenshot of application output

NOTE: Use device Scope ID, Device ID and Primary Key obtained from the previous step. 
You can run the reference implementation in parallel to send live data.  
The same script can be used with similar RIs for sending data from InfluxDB to Azure IoT Central with slight modifications in Python script and device template. 

 

Step 5.2 Run Program on EFLOW

1. Go to the connect_edge_devices_to_azure_iot module in IoT hub that was created in the previous section.

{
    "CMD": [
        "python3",
        "Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/ITM_Azure_IoT/send_telemetry.py",
        "-s",
        "<SCOPE ID>",
        "-d",
        "<DEVICE ID>",
        "-k",
        "<PRIMARY KEY>",
        "-o",
        "eflow"
    ]
}

After updating the above details, it should look similar to the following:

Container Create Options for IOT Edge Module

2. After adding all the required modules, click on Review + Create to proceed to the validation page.

Review and Create modules

3. Once validation is done, click on Create to deploy the modules in EFLOW.

 

Step 6: Monitor Data in Azure IoT Central Dashboard

1. Go to your Azure IoT Central dashboard. 

2. Navigate to Devices and choose the device template you created for Intelligent Traffic Management.
Monitor Data in Azure IOT Central Dashboard

3. Click your device, then click on different tabs to view telemetry data in dashboards as shown in the following images:

  • Overall View

     
    Overall view of telemetry data

 

  • Channel View

     
    Channel view of telemetry data

 

  • Collision View

     
    Collision View of Telemetry Data

 

To learn more, you can add Out-of-Band Manageability functionality to your reference implementation. 

 

Social Distancing Detection for Retail Settings Reference Implementation (Multi-Camera Detection of Social Distancing) 

 

In this section, you will create an Azure IoT Central dashboard for Social Distancing Detection for Retail Settings Reference Implementation (Multi-Camera Detection of Social Distancing), run standalone Python* code to fetch telemetry data from InfluxDB*, and send data to the Azure IoT Central dashboard for visualizing telemetry data. You can utilize the rest of the Azure IoT Central services to meet your needs. You will be able to run this application in both the Ubuntu* Linux* and Azure IoT Edge for Linux on Windows* (EFLOW) environments. 

Prerequisites

Before you continue, you must complete the following:

NOTE: You are not required to run the web app or any additional steps for the installation (i.e., you are just installing to access the scripts).

NOTE: These steps will result in building containers for the Linux environment. To build containers for the EFLOW environment, refer to the Deployment in Windows Environment section.

 

Deployment in Linux Environment 

 

Visualization in Grafana

To view the inference results in your local Grafana dashboard, follow the Visualize the Map UI on Grafana instructions in the Social Distancing Detection for Retail Settings reference implementation (Multi-Camera Detection of Social Distancing). 

 

Visualization in Azure IoT Central

To view the inference results in the IoT Central dashboard, follow the Visualization in Azure IoT Central instructions later in this guide.
 

Deployment in Windows EFLOW Environment

Azure IoT Edge for Linux on Windows (EFLOW) works by running a Linux virtual machine on a Windows device. The Linux virtual machine comes pre-installed with the IoT Edge runtime. Any IoT Edge modules deployed to the device runs inside the virtual machine. Meanwhile, Windows applications running on the Windows host device can communicate with the modules running in the Linux virtual machine.

EFLOW enables users to run production Linux-based cloud-native workloads on Windows IoT device, while providing only server mode access to VM and no GUI support.

Prerequisites

 

Build Social Distancing Detection for Retail Settings (Multi-Camera Detection of Social Distancing) Docker Images

Since container images are not readily available for Social Distancing Detection for Retail Settings (Multi-Camera Detection of Social Distancing), this section will provide details to create and upload the container images to Azure Container Registry. To make the reference implementation’s containers work with Microsoft EFLOW, modify Docker file for Smart City container and build new Docker image as described below.

  1. Go to the reference implementation installation folder by executing the command: 
    cd <MCSD_INSTALL_PATH>/MultiCamera_Detection_of_Social_Distancing_<version>/Social_Distancing_Detection_for_Retail_Settings/mcss-covid19/app
  2. Copy the resource folder from <MCSD_install_path>/mcss-covid19/ folder to <MCSD_install_path>/mcss-covid19/app folder:
    cp -r ../resources/ .

     
  3. Open Dockerfile in text editor and make these changes:
    Add instructions to copy resource folder and configuration.env file: 
    COPY resources app/resources
    COPY configuration.env /app/configuration.env 
    After adding instructions, it should look similar to the following: 
    Screenshot of configuration file

     
  4. Disable display output window to make compatible with Microsoft EFLOW:  
    cd <MCSD_INSTALL_PATH>/MultiCamera_Detection_of_Social_Distancing_<version>/Social_Distancing_Detection_for_Retail_Settings/mcss-covid19/app/application/
    Open run.sh script in a text editor and add --no_show argument in CMD as shown below: 
    Screenshot of run.sh script

    Once the changes are done, go to the app folder to build the Docker images:
    cd ..
  5. Build the updated Dockerfile using the below command:
    sudo docker build . -t mcss-covid19_solution:latest

 

Push Social Distancing Detection for Retail Settings (Multi-Camera Detection of Social Distancing) Docker Images to ACR

Follow the steps below to push Social Distancing Detection for Retail Settings (Multi-Camera Detection of Social Distancing) Docker images to ACR.


1. To create an Azure Container Registry (ACR), use the following link: Creating a container registry.
2. Go to Azure portal > container registry > choose your container registry > Access keys
    Enable Admin user, get the details of container registry and please make a note of username, password, and login server for further steps. 
3. Login to your Azure container registry: 

sudo docker login -u <ACR username> -p <ACR password> <ACR login server> 


4. Tag all Social Distancing Detection for Retail Settings (Multi-Camera Detection of Social Distancing) Docker images:

sudo docker tag mcss-covid19_solution:latest <ACR login server>/mcss-covid19_solution:latest
sudo docker tag mcss-covid19_grafana:latest <ACR login server>/mcss-covid19_grafana:latest 
sudo docker tag mcss-covid19_influxdb:latest <ACR login server>/mcss-covid19_influxdb:latest


5. Push all Social Distancing Detection for Retail Settings (Multi-Camera Detection of Social Distancing) Docker images to ACR:

sudo docker push <ACR login server>/mcss-covid19_solution:latest
sudo docker push <ACR login server>/mcss-covid19_grafana:latest
sudo docker push <ACR login server>/mcss-covid19_influxdb:latest 


If you have not done so already, install Connect Edge Devices to Azure* IoT (See Step 5: Install the connect_devices_to_azure_iot).

 

Build Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT Docker Images

To make the Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT work with Azure EFLOW, build it as container. 


1. Go to Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT folder in Desktop:

cd ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT 


2. Build Docker image:

sudo docker build . -t connect-edge-devices-to-azure-iot:latest 

 

Push Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT Docker Images to ACR 

Follow the steps below to push Connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT Docker images to ACR.
1. Tag Connect Edge devices to Azure IoT container:

sudo docker tag connect-edge-devices-to-azure-iot:latest <ACR login server>/connect-edge-devices-to-azure-iot:latest 


2. Push the container to ACR:

sudo docker push <ACR login server>/connect-edge-devices-to-azure-iot:latest

 

Set Up Azure Resources for Deployment  

Before deploying the Reference Implementation and Connect Edge devices to Azure IoT modules on EFLOW, you must complete the following steps. 

Create Azure IoT Hub

1. Follow the Create an IoT hub using the Azure portal instructions.
2. In your Azure Portal, go to your IoT Hub.
3. Under Automatic Device Management from the menu on the left, select IoT Edge.
4. Click on Add IoT Edge Device to create a new edge device for EFLOW VM. Provide a device ID and click the Save button.

Create new edge device

5. Select the device ID of the target device you just created. Make a note of primary connection string for future reference.

 

Create Microsoft EFLOW device

To create an EFLOW device, follow the Microsoft installation guide
During the provisioning step, choose manual provisioning and provide the connection string of your IoT hub.

Deploy Reference solution in EFLOW

For deploying IoT modules which are pushed into ACR, follow the steps below.
1. Go to IoT device that is created in IoT hub in previous step, select the Module Settings tab.
2. On the container registry credential, provide the details of your Azure Container Registry that you have created in previous section. The username, password, and login server address can be found in your registry, under Settings in the Access keys section.
3. On the IoT Edge Modules, choose Add and select to add an IoT Edge Module. We need to add all the MCSS containers as IoT edge Module to IoT Edge Deployment to EFLOW VM. 

The edge modules listed below are added by referencing to MCSS RIs docker compose file along with Connect Edge devices to Azure IoT. 

Container Edge Module Name Startup Order Image URI
influx DB mcss-influxdb 1 As per docker image URI in ACR
grafana mcss-grafana 2 As per docker image URI in ACR
mcss-covid19 mcss-application 3 As per docker image URI in ACR
connect Edge Devices to Azure IoT connect_edge_devices_to_azure_iot 4 As per docker image URI in ACR

 

The dialog will look similar to: 

Update IOT Edge module

4. The mcss-application, influxdb, and grafana modules will need to have some more information under the Environment Variables and Container Create Options tabs:

  • The mcss-application container has several environment variables that need to be added for the container to run in the EFLOW environment. 
     
    Environment Variable Type Value
    display Text $DISPLAY
    DEVICE1 Text CPU
    PERSON_DETECTOR Text /intel/person-detection-retail-0013/FP32/person-detection-retail-0013.xml
    MODEL1_INPUT_HEIGHT Text 480
    MODEL1_INPUT_WIDTH Text 816
    WIDTH Text 1280
    HEIGHT Text 720
    NUM_THREADS Text 3
    START_QUEUE_SIZE Text 10
    NUM_SOURCES Text 1
    NUM_CHANNELS Text 2
    MIN_SOCIAL_DIST1 Text 80
    DECODE_DEVICE Text CPU
    INPUT_SOURCE1 Text /app/resources/Pexels Videos 2670.mp4
     


    After updating the environment variables in IoT Edge Module, the screen will look similar to: 
    Update IOT Edge Module fields
     

  • The mcss-application container will have port bindings and volume mount that need to be accessed by container. Update these settings as per the docker-compose.yml file under the Container Create Options.
    Refer to the code snippet and screenshot below for details. 

    Container Create Options

    {
        "NetworkingConfig": {
            "EndpointsConfig": {
                "host": {}
            }
        },
        "HostConfig": {
            "Devices": [
                {
                    "PathOnHost": "/dev/",
                    "PathInContainer": "/dev/",
                    "CgroupPermissions": "rwm"
                }
            ],
            "NetworkMode": "host",
            "Binds": [
                "/dev:/dev",
                "/var/tmp:/var/tmp"
            ]
        }
    } 


    After updating the above details, it should look similar to: 
    Container create options yaml

  • The influxdb container has several environment variables that need to be added for the container to run in the EFLOW environment. 

    Environment Variable Type Value
    INFLUX_USER Text admin
    INFLUX_PASSWORD Text admin
    INFLUX_DB Text McssCovid
    INFLUXDB_HTTP_ENABLED Text true
      

    After updating the environment variables in IoT Edge Module, the screen will look similar to: 
    Environment Variables fields

    The influxdb container will have port bindings that need to be accessed by container. Update these settings as per the docker-compose.yml file under the Container Create Options.
    Refer to the code snippet and screenshot below for details. 

    Container Create Options

    {
        "HostConfig": {
            "PortBindings": {
                "8086/tcp": [
                    {
                        "HostPort": "8086"
                    }
                ]
            }
        }
    } 


    After updating the above details, it should look similar to: 
    Container Create Options fields
     

  • The grafana container has several environment variables that need to be added for the container to run in the EFLOW environment. 

    Environment Variable Type Value
    GF_SECURITY_ADMIN_USER Text admin
    GF_SECURITY_ADMIN_PASSWORD Text admin
      

    After updating the environment variables in IoT Edge Module, the screen will look similar to: 
    Environment Variables fields

    The grafana container will have port bindings that need to be accessed by container. Update these settings as per the docker-compose.yml file under the Container Create Options.
    Refer to the code snippet and screenshot below for details. 

    Container Create Options

    {
        "HostConfig": {
            "PortBindings": {
                "3000/tcp": [
                    {
                        "HostPort": "3000"
                    }
                ]
            }
        }
    } 


    After updating the above details, it should look similar to: 
    Container Create Options fields

5. Once validation is done, click on Create to deploy the modules in EFLOW.  

Monitoring Edge Device

Using Windows Admin Center

After successful setup/deployment of EFLOW, you can connect to your EFLOW VM from Windows Admin Center and see the status of your edge modules as shown below:

NOTE:  Make a note of the IP address for viewing Grafana Dashboard.

Windows Admin Center view

 

Using Windows PowerShell

  1. Connect to your EFLOW VM from windows machine by executing this command in PowerShell: 
    Connect-EflowVM

     

  2. Run the below command to see the deployed list of edge modules:

    sudo iotedge list


    You should see output similar to: 
    Screenshot of edge module list
     

  3. To check the logs of edge modules, execute the command:

    sudo iotedge logs <edge module name>

     

Visualization in Grafana

To view the inference results in your local Grafana dashboard, open a browser on the Windows machine that hosts the EFLOW VM and navigate to: <EFLOW VM IP address>:3000

  1. Log in with User as admin and password as admin.
  2. To get the data from influxDB, click on Settings icon from left panel > click data sources > click Mcss Covid
  3. Under HTTP section, update the URL to http://mcss-influxdb:8086 
  4. Under InfluxDB Details section, provide database as McssCovid.
  5. Click on Save and Test.
  6. Go to Home and select Multi Camera Covid19 solution to open the main dashboard. 
    Grafana dashboard showing output
     

 

Visualization in Azure IoT Central 

This section contains instructions for both Linux and EFLOW. 

 

Step 1: Create Azure IoT Central Dashboard
  1. To create an Azure IoT Central dashboard, follow these instructions.
     Create Azure IOT Central Dashboard

 

Step 2: Create Device Template
  1. To create a device template, follow these steps:
    • Go to the Azure IoT Central application that you created in step 1, then navigate to Device templates and choose +New.
    • On the Select template type page, choose the IoT Device tile. Then select Next: Customize
       Select Template Type
    • On the Customize page, provide a name for the device template and select Next: Review.
      NOTE: You do not need to select the check box for Gateway device with downstream devices.  
      Define Template name
    • On the Review page, select Create.  
      Review and create template
  2. Click on Import a model and upload the capability model MCSD_DCM.json
    The typical path is: ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/MCSD_Azure_IoT/
    Create and upload a model
  3. To create an overall view, click Views and choose Visualizing the Device. Provide a View Name, for example, View-Overall and add the following tiles to the view. Click on Start with devices and choose telemetry names from the drop-down.    
     
    SI No. Telemetry Name Visualizing Panel Size 
    1 Total People Count Line Chart 2x2
    2 Total Social Distance Violation Line Chart 2x2
    3 Total People Count Heat Map 2x2
    4 Total Social Distance Violation Heat Map 2x2
    5 Total People Count, 
    Total Social Distance Violation
    Pie Chart 2x2
    6 Total People Count,
    Total Social Distance Violation
    Bar Chart 2x2
    7 Total People Count, 
    Total Social Distance Violation
    KPI 2x2
    8 Total People Count Last Known Value 2x1
    9 Total Social Distance Violation Last Known Value 2x1

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


    Create overall view

     
  4. To create a channel-wise view, click Views and choose Visualizing the Device. Provide a View Name, for example, Channel View and add the following tiles to the view. Click on Start with devices and choose telemetry names from the drop-down. 
     
    SI No. Telemetry Name Visualizing Panel Size 
    1 People Count - Channel 01 Last Known Value 2x2
    2 People Count - Channel 02 Last Known Value 2x2
    3 Social Distance Violation - Channel 01 Last Known Value 3x2
    4 Social Distance Violation - Channel 02 Last Known Value 3x2
    5 People Count - Channel 01,
    Social Distance Violation - Channel 01
    Pie Chart 2x2
    6 People Count - Channel 02,
    Social Distance Violation - Channel 02
    Pie Chart 2x2
    7 People Count - Channel 01,
    People Count - Channel 02
    Bar Chart 2x2
    8 Social Distance Violation - Channel 01,
    Social Distance Violation - Channel 02
    Bar Chart 2x2


     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     



    Create channel-wise view

     
  5. Click Publish on the top panel. When prompted, click the Publish button to publish your device template.

 

Step 3: Add Device to Device Template 

In the next series of steps, you will attach an edge device to your published Multi-Cam device template.

  1. In your Azure IoT Central application, navigate to the Devices page and choose the template you created in the previous step.
  2. Click on + New to add the new device to the template.
  3. Provide the required details and click Create (refer to the screenshot below). 
    • Make sure you choose the right device template from the drop-down box.
    • Give a display name to your device. 
    • Provide a device ID. 
    • Do not enable the Simulate this device option.

Add device to template

 

Step 4: Get Device Connection Parameters

In the next series of steps, you will view device connection parameters of the Azure IoT Central device.

  1. On the Device page, select the device you created in the previous step.
  2. Select Connect.
  3. Make a note of the ID Scope, Device ID, and Primary Key values. 
    Device Connection Parameters
     
Step 5: Run Program to Connect to Azure Dashboard

This section describes how to run a program that fetches data from the InfluxDB and sends the data to the Azure IoT Central dashboard. There are different steps for Linux and for EFLOW.

 

Step 5.1: Run Program on Linux

  1. Go to the MCSD_Azure_IoT directory: 
    cd ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/MCSD_Azure_IoT/
  2. Enter the command below using the parameters from the previous step. 
    chmod +x connect.sh
    ./connect.sh -s <ID SCOPE> -d <DEVICE ID> -k <PRIMARY KEY> 

    You will see output simillar to: 

    Screenshot of program output

 

NOTE: Use device Scope ID, Device ID and Primary Key obtained from the previous step. 
You can run the reference implementation in parallel to send live data.  
The same script can be used with similar reference implementations for sending data from InfluxDB to Azure IoT central with slight modifications in Python script and device template.

 

Step 5.2: Run Program on EFLOW

  1. Go to the connect_edge_devices_to_azure_iot module in IoT hub that was created in the previous section.
    {
        "CMD": [
            "python3","Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/MCSD_Azure_IoT/send_telemetry.py",
            "-s",
            "<SCOPE ID>",
            "-d",
            "<DEVICE ID>",
            "-k",
            "<PRIMARY KEY>",
            "-o",
            "eflow"
        ]
    } 

    After updating the details above, it should look similar to: 

    Container Create Options fields

     

  2. After adding all the required modules, click on Review + Create to proceed to the validation page.

    Review and create modules
     

  3. Once validation is done, click on Create to deploy the modules in EFLOW.

 

Step 6: Monitor Data in Azure IoT Central Dashboard

In the following series of steps, you will monitor data exported to your Azure IoT Central dashboard.

  1. Go to your Azure IoT Central dashboard. 
  2. Navigate to Devices and choose the device template you created for Multi-Camera.
     Select device template
  3. Click your device, then click the View-Channel tab to display channel-wise telemetry data in the dashboard as shown in the following image:
    View channel-wise data
  4. Click the View-Overall tab to display overall telemetry data in the dashboard as shown in the following image: 
    View overall data

To learn more, you can add Out-of-Band Manageability functionality to your reference implementation. 

 

 

Rotor Bearing Defect Detector Reference Implementation

In this section, you will create an Azure IoT Central dashboard for a reference implementation, run standalone Python code to fetch telemetry data from InfluxDB, and send data to the Azure IoT Central dashboard for visualizing telemetry data.  You will also find steps to perform Analytics, set up Azure Event Hub, and visualize vibration data using Time Series Insights. You can utilize the rest of the Azure IoT Central services to meet your needs. 

Prerequisites

Before you continue, you must complete the following:

1. Stop below services if it’s running in system: 

IoT Edge Daemon: 

sudo systemctl stop iotedge

InfluxDB: 

sudo systemctl stop influxd

Mosquitto* MQTT broker: 

sudo systemctl stop mosquitto

Grafana*:  

sudo systemctl stop grafana-server

2. If you have not done so already, install Connect Edge Device to Azure* IoT (See Step 5: Install the connect_devices_to_azure_iot).  

NOTE: You are not required to run the web app or any additional steps for the installation (i.e., you are just installing to access the scripts).

3. Complete the steps to install and run the Rotor Bearing Defect Detector reference implementation. 

Development Mode

NOTE: These instructions can also be found in the Rotor Bearing Defect Detector Documentation in the Customize Application section.  

By default, the application starts to run in Production Mode when the package installation is completed. If you run into any issues in Production Mode, follow the instructions below to change to Development Mode. After successfully installing the reference implementation, follow the steps below to run the application in Development Mode:

1. To switch to Development mode, navigate to the Edge Insights for Industrial /build directory: 

cd <install_directory>/Rotor_Bearing_Defect_Detector_<version>/IEdgeInsights/build

2. Follow below steps to edit .env file: 

vim .env

3. Go to line no.26 and change value of DEV_MODE=true

NOTE:  Edge Insights for Industrial (EII) software package was previously named Edge Insights Software (EIS) and some screenshots may still refer to EIS.  


 Screenshot of dev_mode value

4. Save the file. 

5. Run the following commands to customize the application.

python3.6 eis_builder.py -f time-series.yml
cd provision
sudo ./provision_eis.sh ../docker-compose.yml
cd ..
docker-compose build
docker run --rm -d -p 1883:1883 --name mosquitto_1883 trafex/alpine-mosquitto
docker-compose up

NOTE: If you run into any permission issues while executing Docker commands, execute the commands above as root user. 

NOTE: If executing command to start Mosquitto container results in container name conflict error, please run the command below and try again:  

sudo docker stop $(sudo docker ps -q --filter expose=1883)

Step 1: Create Azure IoT Central Dashboard

To create an Azure IoT Central dashboard, follow these instructions. (Skip this step if you already have an IoT Central Application).
 Create Azure IOT Central Dashboard

 

Step 2: Create Device Template

  1. To create a device template, follow these steps:
    • Go to the Azure IoT Central application that you created in step 1, then navigate to Device templates and choose +New.
    • On the Select template type page, choose the IoT Device tile. Then select Next: Customize

 Select Template to Customize

2. On the Customize page, provide a name for the device template and select Next: Review.
NOTE: You do not need to select the check box for Gateway device with downstream devices.  

Customize template

3. On the Review page, select Create.  

Create template

4. Click on Import a model and upload the capability model RBD_DCM.json
The typical path is: ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/RBD_Azure_IoT/

Upload model to template

5. To create a channel-wise view, click Views and choose Visualizing the Device. Add the following tiles to the view. Click on Start with devices and choose telemetry names from the drop-down.  

SI No. Telemetry Name Visualizing Panel Size
1 Vibration Signal Line Chart 3x3
2 Inference Result Last Known Value 2x1
3 Inference Result Pie chart 2x2
4 Inference Index Line Chart** 2x2


 

 

 

 

 

** Select Display Range as ‘last 100 value' in chart configure options.

Create channel-wise view

6. Click Publish on the top panel. When prompted, click the Publish button to publish your device template.

Step 3: Add Device to Device Template

  1. In your Azure IoT Central application, navigate to the Devices page and choose the template you created in the previous step.
  2. Click on + New to add the new device to the template.
  3. Provide the required details and click Create (refer to the screenshot below). 
  • Make sure you choose the right device template from the drop-down box.
  • Give a display name to your device. 
  • Provide a device ID. 
  • Do not enable the Simulate this device option.

Add device to template

 

Step 4: Get Device Connection Parameters

  1. View and record the device connection parameters of the Azure IoT Central device.
  2. On the Device page, select the device you created in the previous step.
  3. Select Connect.
  4. Make a note of the ID Scope, Device ID, and Primary Key values. 

View device connection parameters
 

Step 5: Run Program to Connect to Azure Dashboard

Run a program that fetches data from the InfluxDB and sends the data to the Azure IoT Central dashboard. 

1. Go to the RBD_Azure_IoT directory: 

cd ~/Desktop/Connect_Edge_Devices_to_Azure_IoT/RBD_Azure_IoT/

2. Enter the command below using the parameters from the previous step. 

chmod +x connect.sh 
./connect.sh -s <SCOPE ID> -d <DEVICE ID> -k <PRIMARY KEY> -m <true/false> 

3. Please use device Scope ID, Device ID and Primary Key obtained from previous step. Pass the value of argument ‘m’ per the table below:

RBD RI Installation Mode Value
Development Mode true (default)
Production Mode false

 

 

Screenshot of application output

 

NOTE: You can run the reference implementation in parallel to send live data.  
The same script can be used with similar reference implemenations for sending data from InfluxDB to Azure IoT Central with slight modifications in Python script and device template. 

 

Step 6: Monitor Data in Azure IoT Central Dashboard

1. Go to your Azure IoT Central dashboard. 

2. Navigate to Devices and choose the device template you created for RBD.

Select device template

3. Click your device, then click the View tab to display channel-wise telemetry data in the dashboard as shown in the following image. The Inference Result displays the current condition based on the vibration data.

View channel-wise telemetry data 1

 

View channel-wise telemetry data 2

 

View channel-wise telemetry data 3

 

View channel-wise telemetry data 4

 

Step 7: Data Analytics in Azure IoT Central Dashboard  

In following series of steps, you will use analytics to analyze device data. 

  1. Go to your Azure IoT Central dashboard.  
  2. Navigate to Analytics.  
  3. Choose the device group (RBD device template name) from drop down list that contains devices you want to analyze. 
  4. Under telemetry section, choose one of the telemetry (Vibration Signal/Inference Result/Inference Index) from dropdown list.
  5. Click on Analyze

View analytics in dashboard

Connect to Azure Time Series Insight 

In following series of steps, you are going to export device data to Azure Time Series Insight.  

Step 1: Create Azure Event Hub  

You can configure an Azure IoT Central application to continuously export telemetry to an event hub. In this section, you create an event hub to receive telemetry from your Azure IoT Central application.  

  1. To create an Azure Event Hub namespace, please follow the instructions (Only create event hub namespace) at Create an Event Hubs Namespace
  2. In the Azure portal, navigate to your Event Hubs namespace and select + Event Hub
  3. Name your event hub rbd-hub. 
  4. In the list of event hubs in your namespace, select rbd-hub.  
  5. Then choose Shared access policies
  6. Select + Add. Create a policy named rbdPolicy with the Manage claims. 
  7. When the policy is ready, select it in the list, and then copy the Connection string-primary key value. 
  8. Make a note of this connection string; you use it later when you export data from Azure IoT Central. 

Create namespace to receive telemetry

Step 2: Exporting Data to Event Hub 

In following series of steps, you will use analytics to analyze device data. 

1. Navigate to the Data export page, then select Destinations

2. Select + New destination

3. Use the values in the following table to create a destination: 

Settings  Value 
Destination name  RBD Event Hub
Destination type  Azure Event Hubs 
Connection string  The event hub connection string you made a note of previously 

4. Select Save.

Export data to RBD Event Hub

5. To create the export definition: 

  • Navigate to the Data export page and select + New Export
  • Use the values in the following table to configure the export: 
Settings  Value 
Export Name  RBD Event Hub Export 
Enabled  On 
Type of data to export 

Choose Telemetry and then select +Filter and select below values: 

  • Name: Device Template 
  • Operator: Equals
  • Value: Choose Rotor Bearing Defect Detector device template from the dropdown list. 
Destinations  Select +Destination, then select RBD Event Hub 

 

6. Select Save

Save Export Definition

Step 3: Create a Time Series Insight Environment 

Follow these steps to create an environment: 

  1. Sign in to the Azure portal. 
  2. Click on Create a resource.
  3. Type Time Series Insights in the Search box and press Enter, then click on Create button. 
  4. In the Subscription dropdown, you should already have one subscription selected. 
  5. In the Resource group dropdown, select the resource group. 
  6. In the Environment name field, specify a unique name. 
  7. In the Location dropdown, select the location closest to you. 
  8. In the Tier dropdown, select Gen 1(S1) to use Time Series Insights V1. 
  9. Click on Next: Event Source. 

Create TSI Environment

We'll now configure the data source used by Time Series Insights to populate the database. On Event Source tab of the Create Time Series Insights environment, do the following: 

  1. In the Source type selector, Select Event Hub
  2. In the Name field, type a unique name. 
  3. In the Subscription dropdown, leave the default Subscription. 
  4. In the Event Hub namespace dropdown, select the Event Hub namespace created at the previous step  
  5. In the Event Hub name dropdown, select the Event Hub created at the previous step (rbd_hub). 
  6. In the Event Hub access policy name dropdown, select rbdPolicy
  7. In the Event Hub consumer group dropdown, Click on Add and provide a new to consumer group. 
  8. Click on Review + Create

Review and Create TSI Environment

Deployment of Time Series Insights will take a couple of minutes to complete. 

Step 4: Monitoring Data in Time Series Insights Explorer 

1. In the search box at the top of the portal, type Time Series Insights and click on the appropriate result in the Services category. 

2. Click on the name of your Time Series Insights environment you've created in the previous unit. 

3. In the Time Series Insights page, click on Go to TSI Explorer button at the top. Your browser will now open a new window with Time Series Insights main page. 
Time Series Insight main page

4. In Explorer dashboard, navigate to Analyze tab and enable Auto Refresh.  

5. Click on Add new query.  

6. In Measure dropdown, select telemetry.vibration or telemetry.index. Now your time series data will start getting populated in dashboard.

 

To learn more, you can add Out-of-Band Manageability functionality to your reference implementation. 

 


Known Issues

Production Mode Security Warnings

Issue with Grafana Visualization

In Production Mode, security risk warning will be displayed when navigating to Grafana dashboard via https://localhost:3000. To visualize data in Grafana, please navigate to https://127.0.0.1:3000 to avoid receiving warnings.

 

Insecure Request Warning 

On running connect.sh in Production Mode, Insecure Request Warnings will be printed on terminal window. The script is provided for reference purpose only. Update it to meet your needs.

 

Map UI and Inferencing video not rendering on EFLOW

Intel® GPU enablement is not yet available. Instructions will be added once the support is available.
Unable to view Map UI and inference video in Grafana dashboard and flask server. The Smart City module is unable to host video server on EFLOW VM IP. 

Troubleshooting Grafana issue

 

 


Summary and Next Steps 

You have successfully installed the Connect Intel Devices to Azure IoT* web application, and connected to Azure IoT Hub and Azure IoT Central.   

You have also successfully installed and visualized some of the sample applications through Azure IoT Central dashboard.  


Learn More 

To continue learning, refer to these sites for details on Azure Portal, Azure IoT Hub, Azure IoT EFLOW, and Azure IoT Central.

Support Forum 

If you're unable to resolve your issues, contact the Support Forum.  

 

†You are responsible for payment of all third-party charges, including payment for use of Microsoft Azure services. 

For the most up-to-date information on Microsoft® Azure products, see the Microsoft Azure website.