Fixes#178
Also fixed multicast binding to work more correctly.
Note: - if you fix the outbound port it will then be unvailable for input - as we are not setting up a pool.
closes#2
httpAdminRoot / httpNodeRoot can be set to false to disable their respective bits. If both are set to false, (or httpRoot is set to false), and httpStatic is not defined, then it will not start the http server.
Fixes#138
If the connection to a broker is lost mid qos 2 flow, there is a window where we have processed the PUBREL, released the message and deleted it from our store, but not sent the PUBCOMP. When the connection is re-established, and the PUBREL is resent by the broker, we assume the message still exists - and hit the error reported.
The fix is to check the message is valid before trying to process it. We send the PUBCOMP to complete the flow regardless.
Fixes#130
There was a timing window where a client could connect to a broker just as new flows were deployed that would cause the on-connect callback to be called after client has been set to null. This caused an NPE.
The fix is to check client isn't null in the event handler.
Fixes#115
The serial out node does a JSON.stringify if the payload is an object. This was incorrectly being applied to Buffer objects, causing the output seen in issue #115.
The Buffer is now passed through as-is (with the newline appended if so configured).
Partial fix to Issue #111
This doesn't fix the screaming loop issue if you try to write to an unplugged
serial port - but does attempt to fix the not retrying to reconnect part of
the issue.
Both were introduced by changes to the underlying serialport npm.
Addresses Issue #104
adds the option to re-use the character used the split input into lineson input as an append to every line sent out to the serial port.
This allows a websocket-in node to receive data, process it in a flow
and then send it back to the originating websocket client via a
websocket-out node.
Alternative implementation, closes#42
The username/password as not stored in the main flow file for security reasons;
they are stored in the adjacent credentials file. This does mean an extra step
to importing an MQTT node, as the user has to manually edit it to re-add username
and password if needed.