zephyr/samples/bluetooth/mesh
Keith Packard 0b90fd5adf samples, tests, boards: Switch main return type from void to int
As both C and C++ standards require applications running under an OS to
return 'int', adapt that for Zephyr to align with those standard. This also
eliminates errors when building with clang when not using -ffreestanding,
and reduces the need for compiler flags to silence warnings for both clang
and gcc.

Most of these changes were automated using coccinelle with the following
script:

@@
@@
- void
+ int
main(...) {
	...
-	return;
+	return 0;
	...
}

Approximately 40 files had to be edited by hand as coccinelle was unable to
fix them.

Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
2023-04-14 07:49:41 +09:00
..
boards samples: bluetooth: mesh: Fix bbc_microbit overlay 2023-03-20 14:02:32 +00:00
src samples, tests, boards: Switch main return type from void to int 2023-04-14 07:49:41 +09:00
CMakeLists.txt samples: Bluetooth: Mesh: remove nrf51 support 2023-03-03 14:08:24 +01:00
microbit_gatt.conf Bluetooth: Use Zephyr standard log system instead of bluetooth/common/log 2022-11-25 17:08:36 +01:00
prj.conf samples: bluetooth: mesh: Fix bbc_microbit overlay 2023-03-20 14:02:32 +00:00
README.rst
sample.yaml samples: Bluetooth: Mesh: remove nrf51 support 2023-03-03 14:08:24 +01:00

.. _ble_mesh:

Bluetooth: Mesh
###############

Overview
********

This sample demonstrates Bluetooth mesh functionality. It has several
standard mesh models, and supports provisioning over both the
Advertising and the GATT Provisioning Bearers (i.e. PB-ADV and PB-GATT).
The application also needs a functioning serial console, since that's
used for the Out-of-Band provisioning procedure.

On boards with LEDs, a Generic OnOff Server model exposes functionality for
controlling the first LED on the board over the mesh.

On boards with buttons, a Generic OnOff Client model will send Onoff messages
to all nodes in the network when the button is pressed.

Requirements
************

* A board with Bluetooth LE support, or
* QEMU with BlueZ running on the host

Building and Running
********************

This sample can be found under :zephyr_file:`samples/bluetooth/mesh` in the
Zephyr tree.

See :ref:`bluetooth samples section <bluetooth-samples>` for details on how
to run the sample inside QEMU.

For other boards, build and flash the application as follows:

.. zephyr-app-commands::
   :zephyr-app: samples/bluetooth/mesh
   :board: <board>
   :goals: flash
   :compact:

Refer to your :ref:`board's documentation <boards>` for alternative
flash instructions if your board doesn't support the ``flash`` target.

Interacting with the sample
***************************

The sample can either be provisioned into an existing mesh network with an
external provisioner device, or self-provision through a button press.

When provisioning with a provisioner device, the provisioner must give the
device an Application key and bind it to both Generic OnOff models.

When self-provisioning, the device will take a random unicast address and
bind a dummy Application key to these models.

Once provisioned, messages to the Generic OnOff Server will be used to turn
the LED on or off, and button presses will be used to broadcast OnOff
messages to all nodes in the same network.