Bluetooth: Throughput
The Bluetooth® Throughput sample uses the GATT Throughput Service to measure Bluetooth Low Energy throughput performance. You can use it to determine the maximum throughput, or to experiment with different connection parameters and check their impact on the throughput.
Requirements
The sample supports the following development kits:
Hardware platforms |
PCA |
Board name |
Build target |
---|---|---|---|
PCA10095 |
|
||
PCA10056 |
|
||
PCA10100 |
|
||
PCA10040 |
|
You can use any two of the development kits listed above and mix different development kits.
Note
If you use nRF5340 DK, the additional configuration of the network core will be taken from the child_image
directory.
For more details see: Image-specific variables.
The sample also requires a connection to a computer with a serial terminal for each of the development kits.
Overview
The sample transmits data between two development kits, the tester and the peer, and measures the throughput performance. It uses the GATT Throughput Service for this. To run the tests, connect to the kit using the serial port and send shell commands. Zephyr’s Shell module is used to handle the commands.
The sample demonstrates the interaction of the following connection parameters:
- ATT_MTU size
In Bluetooth Low Energy, the default Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU) is 23 bytes. When increasing this value, longer ATT payloads can be achieved, increasing the ATT throughput.
Note
To configure the ATT_MTU size, use menuconfig and compile and program the sample again.
- Data length
In Bluetooth Low Energy, the default data length for a radio packet is 27 bytes. Data length extension allows to use larger radio packets, so that more data can be sent in one packet, increasing the throughput.
- Connection interval
The connection interval defines how often the devices must listen to the radio. When increasing this value, more packets may be sent in one interval, but if a packet is lost, the wait until the retransmission is longer.
- Physical layer (PHY) data rate
Starting with Bluetooth 5, the over-the-air data rate in Bluetooth Low Energy can exceed 1 Ms/s (mega symbols per second), which allows for faster transmission. In addition, you can use coded PHY (available on the nRF52840 SoC only) for long-range transmission.
By default, the following connection parameter values are used:
Parameter |
Value |
---|---|
ATT_MTU size |
247 bytes |
Data length |
251 bytes |
Connection interval |
320 units (400 ms) |
PHY data rate |
2 Ms/s |
Changing connection parameter values
To experiment with different connection parameter values, reconfigure the values using the Shell interface before running a test.
You can adjust the following parameters:
PHY
LE Data Length
LE Connection interval
Note
In a Bluetooth Low Energy connection, the different devices negotiate the connection parameters that are used. If the configuration parameters for the devices differ, they agree on the lowest common denominator.
By default, the sample uses the fastest connection parameters. You can change them to different valid values without a need to program both kits again.
Note
When you have set the LE Connection Interval to high values and need to change the PHY or the Data Length in the next test, the PHY Update or Data Length Update procedure can take several seconds.
User interface
- Button 1:
Set the board into a master (tester) role.
- Button 2:
Set the board into a slave (peer) role.
Building and running
This sample can be found under samples/bluetooth/throughput
in the nRF Connect SDK folder structure.
See Building and programming an application for information about how to build and program the application.
Testing
After programming the sample to both kits, complete following steps to test it:
Connect to both kits with a terminal emulator (for example, PuTTY). See How to connect with PuTTY for the required settings.
Reset both kits.
Press Button 1 on the kit to set the kit into master (tester) role.
Press Button 2 on the other kit to set the kit into slave (peer) mode.
Observe that the kits establish a connection. The tester outputs the following information:
Type 'config' to change the configuration parameters. You can use the Tab key to autocomplete your input. Type 'run' when you are ready to run the test.
Type
config print
in the terminal to print the current configuration. Typeconfig
in the terminal to configure the test parameters to your choice. Use the Tab key for auto-completion and to view the options available for a parameter.Type
run
in the terminal to start the test.Observe the output while the tester sends data to the peer. At the end of the test, both tester and peer display the results of the test.
Repeat the test after changing the parameters. Observe how the throughput changes for different sets of parameters.
Sample output
The result should look similar to the following output.
For the tester:
*** Booting Zephyr OS build v2.4.0-ncs1-1715-g3366927a5498 ***
Starting Bluetooth Throughput example
I: SoftDevice Controller build revision:
I: 7a 01 b4 17 68 14 99 b6 |z...h...
I: 6a d1 f2 fd fe 59 63 e3 |j....Yc.
I: 43 ca fb 5c |C..\
I: HW Platform: Nordic Semiconductor (0x0002)
I: HW Variant: nRF52x (0x0002)
I: Firmware: Standard Bluetooth controller (0x00) Version 122.46081 Build 256825
I: Identity: D9:85:73:DC:7D:D4 (random)
I: HCI: version 5.2 (0x0b) revision 0x1154, manufacturer 0x0059
I: LMP: version 5.2 (0x0b) subver 0x1154
Bluetooth initialized
Press button 1 on the master board.
Press button 2 on the slave board.
uart:~$
Master role. Starting scanning
Filters matched. Address: D2:71:97:84:DE:B2 (random) connectable: 1
Connected as master
Conn. interval is 320 units
Service discovery completed
MTU exchange pending
MTU exchange successful
Type 'config' to change the configuration parameters.
You can use the Tab key to autocomplete your input.
Type 'run' when you are ready to run the test.
run
==== Starting throughput test ====
PHY update pending
LE PHY updated: TX PHY LE 2M, RX PHY LE 2M
LE Data length update pending
LE data len updated: TX (len: 251 time: 2120) RX (len: 251 time: 2120)
^.-.^ ^..^
^-/ooooo+:.^ ^.--:+syo/.
^-/oooooooooooo+:. ^.-:::::+yyyyyy+:^
^-/+oooooooooooooooooo/-^ ^.-::::::::/yyyyyyyhhs/-
^-:/++++oooooooooooooooooooo+:. ^.-::::::::::::/yyyyyyyhhhhhho:^
^::///++++oooooooooooooooooooooooo//:::::::::::::::/yyyyyyyhhhhhddds
-::://+++ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo+/:::::::::::/yyyyyyyhhhhhdddd^
-::::::/++ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo+/::::::::/yyyyyyyhhhhhdddd^
-:::::::::/+ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooossso+/::::/yyyyyyyhhhhhdddd^
-::::::::::::/+oooooooooooooooooooooooooossssssso+//yyyyyyyhhhhhdddd^
-::::::::::::::::/+ooooooooooooooooooooooossssssssssyyyyyyyhhhhhdddd.
-:::::::::::::::::::/+oooooooooooooooooooossssssssssyyyyyyyhhhhhdddd.
-:::::::::::::::::::::::/+ooooooooooooooosssssssssssyyyyyyyhhhhhdddd.
-::::::::::::::::::::::::::/+ooooooooooooossssssssssyyyyyyyhhhhhdddd.
-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::/+ooooooooossssssssssyyyyyyyhhhhhdddd-
-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::/+ooooosssssssssssyyyyyyyhhhhhdddd-
-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::/+oossssssssssyyyyyyyhhhhhdddd:
-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::/+ossssssssyyyyyyyhhhhhdddd:
-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::/osssssyyyyyyyhhhhhdddd:
-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::/+ossyyyyyyhhhhhdddd:
-:::::::::::::::::o+/:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::+oyyyyyhhhhhdddd:
-:::::::::::::::::ossyso/::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::/osyhhhhhdddd/
-:::::::::::::::::ossyyyyys+:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::+shhhdddd/
-:::::::::::::::::ossyyyyhhhhyo/::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::/oyddd/
.-::::::::::::::::ossyyyyhhhhddddy/-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::+y:
^.-:::::::::::::ossyyyyhhhhdhs/. ^.--:::::::::::::::::::::::::-.^
^.--:::::::::ossyyyyhhy+-^ ^.-::::::::::::::::::--.^
^.-::::::ossyyyo/. ^^.-:::::::::::-.^
^..-::oss+:^ ^.-:::::-.^
^.:.^ ^^.^^
Done
[local] sent 612684 bytes (598 KB) in 3890 ms at 1260 kbps
[peer] received 612684 bytes (598 KB) in 2511 GATT writes at 1395626 bps
Type 'config' to change the configuration parameters.
You can use the Tab key to autocomplete your input.
Type 'run' when you are ready to run the test.
For the peer:
*** Booting Zephyr OS build v2.4.0-ncs1-1715-g3366927a5498 ***
Starting Bluetooth Throughput example
I: SoftDevice Controller build revision:
I: 7a 01 b4 17 68 14 99 b6 |z...h...
I: 6a d1 f2 fd fe 59 63 e3 |j....Yc.
I: 43 ca fb 5c |C..\
I: HW Platform: Nordic Semiconductor (0x0002)
I: HW Variant: nRF52x (0x0002)
I: Firmware: Standard Bluetooth controller (0x00) Version 122.46081 Build 256825
I: Identity: D2:71:97:84:DE:B2 (random)
I: HCI: version 5.2 (0x0b) revision 0x1154, manufacturer 0x0059
I: LMP: version 5.2 (0x0b) subver 0x1154
Bluetooth initialized
Press button 1 on the master board.
Press button 2 on the slave board.
uart:~$
Slave role. Starting advertising
Connected as slave
Conn. interval is 320 units
LE PHY updated: TX PHY LE 2M, RX PHY LE 2M
=============================================================================
=============================================================================
=============================================================================
=============================================================================
=============================================================================
=============================================================================
=============================================================================
===========================================================
[local] received 612684 bytes (598 KB) in 2511 GATT writes at 1261557 bps
Dependencies
This sample uses the following nRF Connect SDK libraries:
In addition, it uses the following Zephyr libraries:
include/console.h
-
include/kernel.h
include/sys/printk.h
include/zephyr/types.h
-
include/bluetooth/bluetooth.h
include/bluetooth/conn.h
include/bluetooth/gatt.h
include/bluetooth/hci.h
include/bluetooth/uuid.h
-
include/shell/shell.h
References
For more information about the connection parameters that are used in this sample, see the following chapters in the Bluetooth Core Specification:
Vol 3, Part F, 3.2.8 Exchanging MTU Size
Vol 6, Part B, 5.1.1 Connection Update Procedure
Vol 6, Part B, 5.1.9 Data Length Update Procedure
Vol 6, Part B, 5.1.10 PHY Update Procedure