The latest development version of this page may be more current than this released 3.7.0 version.

SMP server

Overview

This sample application implements a Simple Management Protocol (SMP) server. SMP is a basic transfer encoding for use with the MCUmgr management protocol. For more information about MCUmgr and SMP, please see Device Management.

This sample application supports the following mcumgr transports by default:

  • Shell

  • Bluetooth

  • UDP

smp_svr enables support for the following command groups:

  • fs_mgmt

  • img_mgmt

  • os_mgmt

  • stat_mgmt

  • shell_mgmt

Caveats

  • The MCUboot bootloader is required for img_mgmt to function properly. More information about the Device Firmware Upgrade subsystem and MCUboot can be found in MCUboot.

Prerequisites

Use of a tool

To interact remotely with the management subsystem on a device, a tool is required to interact with it. There are various tools available which are listed on the Tools/libraries page of the Management subsystem documentation.

Building a BLE Controller

Note

This section is only relevant for Linux users

If you want to try out Device Firmware Upgrade (DFU) over the air using Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) and do not have a built-in or pluggable BLE radio, you can build one and use it following the instructions in Using the controller with BlueZ.

Building and flashing MCUboot

The below steps describe how to build and run the MCUboot bootloader. Detailed instructions can be found in the MCUboot documentation page.

The Zephyr port of MCUboot is essentially a normal Zephyr application, which means that it can be built and flashed like normal using west, like so:

west build -b <board> -d build_mcuboot bootloader/mcuboot/boot/zephyr
west flash -d build_mcuboot

Substitute <board> for one of the boards supported by the sample, see sample.yaml.

Building the sample application

The below steps describe how to build and run the smp_svr sample in Zephyr. The smp_svr sample comes in different flavours.

To build the bluetooth sample:

west build \
   -b nrf52dk/nrf52832 \
   samples/subsys/mgmt/mcumgr/smp_svr \
   -- \
   -DEXTRA_CONF_FILE=overlay-bt.conf

Signing the sample image

A key feature of MCUboot is that images must be signed before they can be successfully uploaded and run on a target. To sign images, the MCUboot tool imgtool can be used.

To sign the sample image built in the previous step:

west sign -t imgtool -- --key bootloader/mcuboot/root-rsa-2048.pem

The above command creates an image file called zephyr.signed.bin in the build directory.

For more information on image signing and west sign, see the Signing Binaries documentation.

Flashing the sample image

Upload the zephyr.signed.bin file from the previous to image slot-0 of your board. See Flash map for details on flash partitioning.

To upload the initial image file to an empty slot-0, use west flash like normal. west flash will automatically detect slot-0 address and confirm the image.

west flash --bin-file build/zephyr/zephyr.signed.bin

The signed image file needs to be used specifically, otherwise the non-signed version will be used and the image won’t be runnable.

Sample image: hello world!

The smp_svr app is ready to run. Just reset your board and test the app with your choice of tool’s echo functionality, which will send a string to the remote target device and have it echo it back.

Device Firmware Upgrade (DFU)

Now that the SMP server is running on your board and you are able to communicate with it using mcumgr, you might want to test what is commonly called “OTA DFU”, or Over-The-Air Device Firmware Upgrade. This works for both BT and UDP.

The general sequence of a DFU process is as follows:

  • Build an MCUboot enabled application, see Building the sample application

  • Sign the application image, see Signing the sample image

  • Upload the signed image using mcumgr

  • Listing the images on the device using mcumgr

  • Mark the uploaded image for testing using mcumgr

  • Reset the device remotely using mcumgr

  • Confirm the uploaded image using mcumgr (optional)

Direct image upload and Image mapping to MCUboot slot

Currently the mcumgr supports, for direct upload, 4 target images, of which first two are mapped into MCUboot primary (slot-0) and secondary (slot-1) respectively.

For clarity, here is DTS label to slot to <image> translation table:

DTS label

Slot

-n <image>

“image-0”

slot-0

1

“image-1”

slot-1

0, 1

“image-2”

2

“image-3”

3

Upload the signed image

To upload the signed image, refer to the documentation for your chosen tool, select the new firmware file to upload and begin the upload.

Note

At the beginning of the upload process, the target might start erasing the image slot, taking several dozen seconds for some targets.

List the images

A list of images (slot-0 and slot-1) that are present can now be obtained on the remote target device using the tool of your choice, which should print the status and hash values of each of the images present.

Test the image

In order to instruct MCUboot to swap the images, the image needs to be tested first, making sure it boots, see the instructions in the tool of your choice. Upon reboot, MCUBoot will swap to the new image.

Note

There is not yet any way of getting the image hash without actually uploading the image and getting the hash.

Reset remotely

The device can be reset remotely to observe (use the console output) how MCUboot swaps the images, check the documentation in the tool of your choice. Upon reset MCUboot will swap slot-0 and slot-1.

Confirm new image

The new image is now loaded into slot-0, but it will be swapped back into slot-1 on the next reset unless the image is confirmed. Confirm the image using the tool of your choice.

Note that if you try to send the very same image that is already flashed in slot-0 then the procedure will not complete successfully since the hash values for both slots will be identical.

Download file from File System

SMP server supports downloading files from File System on device via mcumgr. This is useful with FS log backend, when files are stored in non-volatile memory. Build and flash both MCUboot and smp_svr applications and then use the tool of your choice to download files from the file system.