Thread: CLI
The Thread CLI sample demonstrates how to send commands to a Thread device using the OpenThread Command Line Interface (CLI). The CLI is integrated into the Zephyr shell.
Requirements
The sample supports the following development kits for testing the network status:
Hardware platforms |
PCA |
Board name |
Build target |
---|---|---|---|
PCA10095 |
|
||
PCA10059 |
|
||
PCA10056 |
|
||
PCA10100 |
|
||
PCA10112 |
|
Optionally, you can use one or more compatible development kits programmed with this sample or another Thread sample for testing communication or diagnostics and Configuring on-mesh Thread commissioning.
You need nRF Sniffer for 802.15.4 to observe messages sent from the router to the leader kit when Testing Thread 1.2 and Thread 1.3 features.
When built for an _ns
build target, the sample is configured to compile and run as a non-secure application with Cortex-M Security Extensions enabled.
Therefore, it automatically includes Trusted Firmware-M that prepares the required peripherals and secure services to be available for the application.
Overview
The sample demonstrates the usage of commands listed in OpenThread CLI Reference.
OpenThread CLI is integrated into the system shell accessible over serial connection.
To indicate a Thread command, the ot
keyword needs to precede the command.
The number of commands you can test depends on the application configuration.
The CLI sample comes with the full set of OpenThread functionalities enabled (CONFIG_OPENTHREAD_NORDIC_LIBRARY_MASTER
).
Thread 1.2 version is selected as default.
If used alone, the sample allows you to test the network status. It is recommended to use at least two development kits running the same sample for testing the communication.
Certification tests with CLI sample
You can use the Thread CLI sample to run certification tests. See Thread certification for information on how to use this sample on Thread Certification Test Harness.
User interface
All interactions with the application are handled using serial communication. See OpenThread CLI Reference for the list of available serial commands.
Diagnostic module
By default, the CLI sample comes with the CONFIG_OPENTHREAD_NORDIC_LIBRARY_MASTER
feature set enabled, which allows you to use Zephyr’s diagnostic module with its diag
commands.
Use these commands to manually check hardware-related functionalities without running a Thread network.
For example, to ensure radio communication is working when adding a new functionality or during the manufacturing process.
See Testing diagnostic module section for an example.
Note
If you disable the CONFIG_OPENTHREAD_NORDIC_LIBRARY_MASTER
feature set, you can enable the diagnostic module with the CONFIG_OPENTHREAD_DIAG
Kconfig option.
Configuration
See Configuring your application for information about how to permanently or temporarily change the configuration.
Configuration files
The sample provides predefined configuration files for typical use cases, and to activate sample extensions. You can find the configuration files in the root directory of the sample.
Specify the corresponding file names in the OVERLAY_CONFIG option when building. See Providing CMake options for instructions on how to add this option. For more information about using configuration overlay files, see Important Build System Variables in the Zephyr documentation.
The following configuration files are available:
overlay-usb.conf
- Enables USB transport support. Additionally, you need to set DTC_OVERLAY_FILE tousb.overlay
.overlay-logging.conf
- Enables logging using RTT. For additional options, refer to RTT logging.overlay-debug.conf
- Enables debugging the Thread sample with GDB thread awareness.overlay-ci.conf
- Disables boot banner and shell prompt.overlay-multiprotocol.conf
- Enables Bluetooth LE support in this sample.overlay-tcp.conf
- Enables experimental TCP support in this sample.overlay-low_power.conf
- Enables low power consumption mode in this sample. Additionally, you need to set DTC_OVERLAY_FILE tolow_power.overlay
.
FEM support
You can add support for the nRF21540 front-end module to this sample by using one of the following options, depending on your hardware:
Build the sample for one board that contains the nRF21540 FEM, such as nrf21540dk_nrf52840.
Manually create a devicetree overlay file that describes how FEM is connected to the nRF5 SoC in your device. See Set devicetree overlays for different ways of adding the overlay file.
Provide nRF21540 FEM capabilities by using a shield, for example the nRF21540 EK shield that is available in the nRF Connect SDK. In this case, build the project for a board connected to the shield you are using with an appropriate variable included in the build command, for example
SHIELD=nrf21540_ek
. This variable instructs the build system to append the appropriate devicetree overlay file.To build the sample in the nRF Connect for VS Code IDE for an nRF52840 DK with the nRF21540 EK attached, add the shield variable in the build configuration’s Extra CMake arguments and rebuild the build configuration. For example:
-DSHIELD=nrf21540_ek
.See nRF Connect for VS Code extension pack documentation for more information.
To build the sample from the command line for an nRF52840 DK with the nRF21540 EK attached, use the following command within the sample directory:
west build -b nrf52840dk_nrf52840 -- -DSHIELD=nrf21540_ek
See Programming nRF21540 EK for information about how to program when you are using a board with a network core, for example nRF5340 DK.
Each of these options adds the description of the nRF21540 FEM to the devicetree. See Working with RF front-end modules for more information about FEM in the nRF Connect SDK.
To add support for other front-end modules, add the respective devicetree file entries to the board devicetree file or the devicetree overlay file.
Memory optimization
See Memory footprint optimization for actions and configuration options you can use to optimize the memory footprint of the sample.
Serial transport
The Thread CLI sample supports UART and USB CDC ACM as serial transports. By default, it uses UART transport. To switch to USB transport, activate the USB overlay extension.
Building and running
Make sure to enable the OpenThread stack before building and testing this sample. See Thread for more information.
This sample can be found under samples/openthread/cli
in the nRF Connect SDK folder structure.
When built as firmware image for the _ns
build target, the sample has Cortex-M Security Extensions (CMSE) enabled and separates the firmware between Non-Secure Processing Environment (NSPE) and Secure Processing Environment (SPE).
Because of this, it automatically includes the Trusted Firmware-M (TF-M).
To read more about CMSE, see Processing environments.
To build the sample with Visual Studio Code, follow the steps listed on the How to build an application page in the nRF Connect for VS Code extension documentation. See Building and programming an application for other building and programming scenarios and Testing and debugging an application for general information about testing and debugging in the nRF Connect SDK.
To update the OpenThread libraries provided by nrfxlib
, invoke west build -b nrf52840dk_nrf52840 -t install_openthread_libraries
.
Testing
After building the sample and programming it to your development kit, complete the following steps to test it:
Turn on the development kit.
Connect to the kit with a terminal emulator that supports VT100/ANSI escape characters (for example, PuTTY). See How to connect with PuTTY for the required settings.
Note
This sample has Hardware Flow Control mechanism enabled by default in serial communication. When enabled, it allows devices to manage transmission by informing each other about their current state, and ensures more reliable connection in high-speed communication scenarios.
Configure the required Thread network parameters with the
ot channel
,ot panid
, andot networkkey
commands. Make sure to use the same parameters for all nodes that you add to the network. The following example uses the default OpenThread parameters:uart:~$ ot channel 11 Done uart:~$ ot panid 0xabcd Done uart:~$ ot networkkey 00112233445566778899aabbccddeeff Done
Enable the Thread network with the
ot ifconfig up
andot thread start
commands:uart:~$ ot ifconfig up Done uart:~$ ot thread start Done
Invoke some of the OpenThread commands:
Test the state of the Thread network with the
ot state
command. For example:uart:~$ ot state leader Done
Get the Thread network name with the
ot networkname
command. For example:uart:~$ ot networkname OpenThread Done
Get the IP addresses of the current Thread network with the
ot ipaddr
command. For example:uart:~$ ot ipaddr fdde:ad00:beef:0:0:ff:fe00:800 fdde:ad00:beef:0:3102:d00b:5cbe:a61 fe80:0:0:0:8467:5746:a29f:1196 Done
Testing with multiple kits
If you are using more than one development kit for testing the CLI sample, you can also complete additional testing procedures.
Note
The following testing procedures assume you are using two development kits.
Testing communication between kits
To test communication between kits, complete the following steps:
Make sure both development kits are programmed with the CLI sample.
Turn on the developments kits.
Connect to both kits with a terminal emulator that supports VT100/ANSI escape characters (for example, PuTTY). See How to connect with PuTTY for the required settings.
Note
This sample has Hardware Flow Control mechanism enabled by default in serial communication. When enabled, it allows devices to manage transmission by informing each other about their current state, and ensures more reliable connection in high-speed communication scenarios.
Configure the required Thread network parameters with the
ot channel
,ot panid
, andot networkkey
commands. Make sure to use the same parameters for all nodes that you add to the network. The following example uses the default OpenThread parameters:uart:~$ ot channel 11 Done uart:~$ ot panid 0xabcd Done uart:~$ ot networkkey 00112233445566778899aabbccddeeff Done
Enable the Thread network with the
ot ifconfig up
andot thread start
commands:uart:~$ ot ifconfig up Done uart:~$ ot thread start Done
Test communication between the kits with the following command:
ot ping ip_address_of_the_first_kit
For example:
uart:~$ ot ping fdde:ad00:beef:0:3102:d00b:5cbe:a61 16 bytes from fdde:ad00:beef:0:3102:d00b:5cbe:a61: icmp_seq=3 hlim=64 time=23ms 1 packets transmitted, 1 packets received. Packet loss = 0.0%. Round-trip min/av Done
Testing diagnostic module
To test diagnostic commands, complete the following steps:
Make sure both development kits are programmed with the CLI sample.
Turn on the developments kits.
Connect to both kits with a terminal emulator that supports VT100/ANSI escape characters (for example, PuTTY). See How to connect with PuTTY for the required settings.
Note
This sample has Hardware Flow Control mechanism enabled by default in serial communication. When enabled, it allows devices to manage transmission by informing each other about their current state, and ensures more reliable connection in high-speed communication scenarios..
Make sure that the diagnostic module is enabled and configured with proper radio channel and transmission power. Run the following commands on both devices:
uart:~$ ot diag start start diagnostics mode status 0x00 Done uart:~$ ot diag channel 11 set channel to 11 status 0x00 Done uart:~$ ot diag power 0 set tx power to 0 dBm status 0x00 Done
Transmit a fixed number of packets with the given length from one of the devices. For example, to transmit 20 packets that contain 100 B of random data, run the following command:
uart:~$ ot diag send 20 100 sending 0x14 packet(s), length 0x64 status 0x00 Done
To read the radio statistics on the other device, run the following command:
uart:~$ ot diag stats received packets: 20 sent packets: 0 first received packet: rssi=-29, lqi=255 last received packet: rssi=-30, lqi=255 Done
Testing Thread 1.2 and Thread 1.3 features
To test the Thread 1.2 and Thread 1.3 features, complete the following steps:
Enable the extra options
CONFIG_OPENTHREAD_BORDER_ROUTER
,CONFIG_OPENTHREAD_BACKBONE_ROUTER
andCONFIG_OPENTHREAD_SRP_SERVER
when building the CLI sample.Make sure both development kits are programmed with the CLI sample.
Turn on the developments kits.
Connect to both kits with a terminal emulator that supports VT100/ANSI escape characters (for example, PuTTY). See How to connect with PuTTY for the required settings.
Configure the required Thread network parameters with the
ot channel
,ot panid
, andot networkkey
commands. Make sure to use the same parameters for all nodes that you add to the network. The following example uses the default OpenThread parameters:uart:~$ ot channel 11 Done uart:~$ ot panid 0xabcd Done uart:~$ ot networkkey 00112233445566778899aabbccddeeff Done
Enable the Thread network with the
ot ifconfig up
andot thread start
commands:uart:~$ ot ifconfig up Done uart:~$ ot thread start Done
Test the state of the Thread network with the
ot state
command to see which kit is the leader:uart:~$ ot state leader Done
On the leader kit, enable the Backbone Router function:
uart:~$ ot bbr enable Done
On the leader kit, configure the Domain prefix:
uart:~$ ot prefix add fd00:7d03:7d03:7d03::/64 prosD med Done uart:~$ ot netdata register Done
On the router kit, display the autoconfigured Domain Unicast Address and set another one manually:
uart:~$ ot ipaddr fd00:7d03:7d03:7d03:ee2d:eed:4b59:2736 fdde:ad00:beef:0:0:ff:fe00:c400 fdde:ad00:beef:0:e0fc:dc28:1d12:8c2 fe80:0:0:0:acbd:53bf:1461:a861 Done uart:~$ ot dua iid 0004000300020001 Done uart:~$ ot ipaddr fd00:7d03:7d03:7d03:4:3:2:1 fdde:ad00:beef:0:0:ff:fe00:c400 fdde:ad00:beef:0:e0fc:dc28:1d12:8c2 fe80:0:0:0:acbd:53bf:1461:a861 Done
On the router kit, configure a multicast address with a scope greater than realm-local:
uart:~$ ot ipmaddr add ff04::1 Done uart:~$ ot ipmaddr ff04:0:0:0:0:0:0:1 ff33:40:fdde:ad00:beef:0:0:1 ff32:40:fdde:ad00:beef:0:0:1 ff02:0:0:0:0:0:0:2 ff03:0:0:0:0:0:0:2 ff02:0:0:0:0:0:0:1 ff03:0:0:0:0:0:0:1 ff03:0:0:0:0:0:0:fc Done
The router kit sends an
MLR.req
message and aDUA.req
message to the leader kit (Backbone Router). Use the nRF Sniffer for 802.15.4 to observe this.On the leader kit, list the IPv6 addresses:
uart:~$ ot ipaddr fd00:7d03:7d03:7d03:84c9:572d:be24:cbe fdde:ad00:beef:0:0:ff:fe00:fc10 fdde:ad00:beef:0:0:ff:fe00:fc38 fdde:ad00:beef:0:0:ff:fe00:fc00 fdde:ad00:beef:0:0:ff:fe00:7000 fdde:ad00:beef:0:a318:bf4f:b9c6:5f7d fe80:0:0:0:10b1:93ea:c0ee:eeb7
Note down the link-local address. You must use this address when sending Link Metrics commands from the router kit to the leader kit.
The following steps use the address
fe80:0:0:0:10b1:93ea:c0ee:eeb7
. Replace it with the link-local address of your leader kit in all commands.Run the following commands on the router kit:
Reattach the router kit as Sleepy End Device (SED) with a polling period of three seconds:
uart:~$ ot pollperiod 3000 Done uart:~$ ot mode - Done
Perform a Link Metrics query (Single Probe):
uart:~$ ot linkmetrics query fe80:0:0:0:10b1:93ea:c0ee:eeb7 single qmr Done Received Link Metrics Report from: fe80:0:0:0:10b1:93ea:c0ee:eeb7 - LQI: 220 (Exponential Moving Average) - Margin: 60 (dB) (Exponential Moving Average) - RSSI: -40 (dBm) (Exponential Moving Average)
Send a Link Metrics Management Request to configure a Forward Tracking Series:
uart:~$ ot linkmetrics mgmt fe80:0:0:0:10b1:93ea:c0ee:eeb7 forward 1 dra pqmr Done Received Link Metrics Management Response from: fe80:0:0:0:10b1:93ea:c0ee:eeb7 Status: Success
Send an MLE Link Probe message to the peer:
uart:~$ ot linkmetrics probe fe80:0:0:0:10b1:93ea:c0ee:eeb7 1 10 Done
Perform a Link Metrics query (Forward Tracking Series):
uart:~$ ot linkmetrics query fe80:0:0:0:10b1:93ea:c0ee:eeb7 forward 1 Done Received Link Metrics Report from: fe80:0:0:0:10b1:93ea:c0ee:eeb7 - PDU Counter: 13 (Count/Summation) - LQI: 212 (Exponential Moving Average) - Margin: 60 (dB) (Exponential Moving Average) - RSSI: -40 (dBm) (Exponential Moving Average)
Send a Link Metrics Management Request to register an Enhanced ACK-based Probing:
uart:~$ ot linkmetrics mgmt fe80:0:0:0:10b1:93ea:c0ee:eeb7 enhanced-ack register qm Done Received Link Metrics data in Enh Ack from neighbor, short address:0xa400 , extended address:12b193eac0eeeeb7 - LQI: 255 (Exponential Moving Average) - Margin: 68 (dB) (Exponential Moving Average)
Send a Link Metrics Management Request to clear an Enhanced ACK-based Probing:
uart:~$ ot linkmetrics mgmt fe80:0:0:0:10b1:93ea:c0ee:eeb7 enhanced-ack clear Done Received Link Metrics Management Response from: fe80:0:0:0:10b1:93ea:c0ee:eeb7 Status: Success
Verify the Coordinated Sampled Listening (CSL) functionality.
The following steps use the address
fe80:0:0:0:acbd:53bf:1461:a861
. Replace it with the link-local address of your router kit in all commands.Send an ICMPv6 Echo Request from the leader kit to link-local address of the router kit:
uart:~$ ot ping fe80:0:0:0:acbd:53bf:1461:a861 16 bytes from fe80:0:0:0:acbd:53bf:1461:a861: icmp_seq=2 hlim=64 time=2494ms 1 packets transmitted, 1 packets received. Packet loss = 0.0%. Round-trip min/a Done
Observe that there is a long latency, up to 3000 ms, on the reply. This is due to the indirect transmission mechanism based on data polling.
Stop frequent polling on the router kit (now SED) by configuring a polling period of 240 seconds:
uart:~$ ot pollperiod 240000 Done
Enable a CSL Receiver on the router kit (now SED) by configuring a CSL period of 0.5 seconds:
uart:~$ ot csl period 3125 Done
Send an ICMPv6 Echo Request from the leader kit to the link-local address of the router kit:
uart:~$ ot ping fe80:0:0:0:acbd:53bf:1461:a861 16 bytes from fe80:0:0:0:acbd:53bf:1461:a861: icmp_seq=3 hlim=64 time=421ms 1 packets transmitted, 1 packets received. Packet loss = 0.0%. Round-trip min/a Done
Observe that the reply latency is reduced to a value below 500 ms. The reduction occurs because the transmission from the leader is performed using CSL, based on the CSL Information Elements sent by the CSL Receiver.
Verify the Service Registration Protocol (SRP) functionality.
On the leader kit, enable the SRP Server function:
uart:~$ ot srp server enable Done
Register a _ipps._tcp` service on the router kit (now SED):
uart:~$ ot srp client host name my-host Done uart:~$ ot srp client host address fdde:ad00:beef:0:e0fc:dc28:1d12:8c2 Done uart:~$ ot srp client service add my-service _ipps._tcp 12345 Done uart:~$ ot srp client autostart enable Done
On the router kit (now SED), check that the host and service have been successfully registered:
uart:~$ ot srp client host name:"my-host", state:Registered, addrs:[fdde:ad00:beef:0:e0fc:dc28:1d12:8c2] Done
Check the host and service on the leader kit:
uart:~$ ot srp server host my-host.default.service.arpa. deleted: false addresses: [fdde:ad00:beef:0:e0fc:dc28:1d12:8c2] Done uart:~$ ot srp server service my-service._ipps._tcp.default.service.arpa. deleted: false subtypes: (null) port: 12345 priority: 0 weight: 0 ttl: 7200 TXT: [] host: my-host.default.service.arpa. addresses: [fdde:ad00:beef:0:e0fc:dc28:1d12:8c2] Done
Power consumption measurements
You can use the Thread CLI sample to perform power consumption measurements for Sleepy End Devices.
After building and flashing with overlay-low_power.conf
and low_power.overlay
, the device will start regular operation with the UART console enabled.
This allows for easy configuration of the device, specifically the Sleepy End Device polling period or the Synchronized Sleepy End Device (SSED) CSL period and other relevant parameters.
When the device becomes attached to a Thread Router it will automatically suspend UART operation and power down unused RAM. In this mode, you can not use the CLI to control the device. Instead, the device will periodically wake up from deep sleep mode and turn on the radio to receive any messages from its parent.
If the device is connected to a Power Profiler Kit II (PPK2), you can perform detailed power consumption measurements.
Dependencies
This sample uses the following Zephyr libraries:
-
include/kernel.h
The following dependencies are added by the optional multiprotocol Bluetooth® LE extension:
Zephyr’s Bluetooth APIs:
include/bluetooth/bluetooth.h
include/bluetooth/gatt.h
include/bluetooth/hci.h
include/bluetooth/uuid.h
In addition, it uses the following secure firmware component: