Jump To Close Expand all Collapse all Table of contents Evaluating AMQ Online on OpenShift 1. Introduction Expand section "1. Introduction" Collapse section "1. Introduction" 1.1. AMQ Online overview 1.2. Supported features 1.3. Supported configurations 1.4. Document conventions Expand section "1.4. Document conventions" Collapse section "1.4. Document conventions" 1.4.1. Variable text 2. Getting started Expand section "2. Getting started" Collapse section "2. Getting started" 2.1. Installing AMQ Online using a YAML bundle Expand section "2.1. Installing AMQ Online using a YAML bundle" Collapse section "2.1. Installing AMQ Online using a YAML bundle" 2.1.1. Downloading AMQ Online 2.1.2. Installing AMQ Online using a YAML bundle 2.2. Installing and configuring AMQ Online using the Operator Lifecycle Manager Expand section "2.2. Installing and configuring AMQ Online using the Operator Lifecycle Manager" Collapse section "2.2. Installing and configuring AMQ Online using the Operator Lifecycle Manager" 2.2.1. Installing AMQ Online from the OperatorHub using the OpenShift Container Platform console 2.2.2. Configuring AMQ Online using the OpenShift Container Platform console Expand section "2.2.2. Configuring AMQ Online using the OpenShift Container Platform console" Collapse section "2.2.2. Configuring AMQ Online using the OpenShift Container Platform console" 2.2.2.1. Creating an infrastructure configuration custom resource using the OpenShift Container Platform console 2.2.2.2. Creating an authentication service custom resource using the OpenShift Container Platform console 2.2.2.3. Creating an address space plan custom resource using the OpenShift Container Platform console 2.2.2.4. Creating an address plan custom resource using the OpenShift Container Platform console 2.3. Creating address spaces using the command line 2.4. Creating addresses using the command line 2.5. Creating users using the command line 2.6. Sending and receiving messages 3. Internet of Things (IoT) on AMQ Online Expand section "3. Internet of Things (IoT) on AMQ Online" Collapse section "3. Internet of Things (IoT) on AMQ Online" 3.1. Getting started using IoT Expand section "3.1. Getting started using IoT" Collapse section "3.1. Getting started using IoT" 3.1.1. IoT connectivity concepts 3.1.2. Installing AMQ Online using a YAML bundle 3.1.3. Installing IoT services 3.1.4. Creating an IoT project 3.1.5. Creating an IoT device Expand section "3.1.5. Creating an IoT device" Collapse section "3.1.5. Creating an IoT device" 3.1.5.1. Registering a new device 3.1.5.2. Setting user name and password credentials for a device 3.1.6. Installing the Eclipse Hono command-line client 3.1.7. Starting the telemetry consumer 3.1.8. Sending telemetry using HTTP 3.2. IoT for service administrators Expand section "3.2. IoT for service administrators" Collapse section "3.2. IoT for service administrators" 3.2.1. IoT monitoring 3.2.2. IoT logging Expand section "3.2.2. IoT logging" Collapse section "3.2.2. IoT logging" 3.2.2.1. Configuration options 3.2.2.2. Log levels 3.2.3. IoT tracing 3.2.4. Device registry 3.2.5. Installing IoT services 3.2.6. Deploy JDBC external device registry Expand section "3.2.6. Deploy JDBC external device registry" Collapse section "3.2.6. Deploy JDBC external device registry" 3.2.6.1. Choose a data storage model 3.2.6.2. Create a database instance 3.2.6.3. Deploy the SQL schema to the database instance 3.2.6.4. Configure the IoT infrastructure 3.2.7. Configuring logging Expand section "3.2.7. Configuring logging" Collapse section "3.2.7. Configuring logging" 3.2.7.1. Configuring global log levels 3.2.7.2. Configuring application-specific log levels 3.2.7.3. Applying a custom logback specific configuration Expand section "3.2.7.3. Applying a custom logback specific configuration" Collapse section "3.2.7.3. Applying a custom logback specific configuration" 3.2.7.3.1. Using the IoTConfig resource 3.2.7.3.2. Using the service’s ConfigMap resource 3.2.8. Configuring tracing 3.2.9. IoT services configuration examples Expand section "3.2.9. IoT services configuration examples" Collapse section "3.2.9. IoT services configuration examples" 3.2.9.1. Minimal IoT configuration example 3.2.9.2. Tuning the IoT protocol adapters example 3.2.9.3. Configuration for JDBC with external PostgreSQL 3.2.10. IoT-specific metrics Expand section "3.2.10. IoT-specific metrics" Collapse section "3.2.10. IoT-specific metrics" 3.2.10.1. Common tags and metrics 3.2.10.2. Protocol adapters 3.2.11. Troubleshooting guide Expand section "3.2.11. Troubleshooting guide" Collapse section "3.2.11. Troubleshooting guide" 3.2.11.1. Fix IoTProject stuck in termination 3.3. IoT for projects owners Expand section "3.3. IoT for projects owners" Collapse section "3.3. IoT for projects owners" 3.3.1. IoT project configuration examples Expand section "3.3.1. IoT project configuration examples" Collapse section "3.3.1. IoT project configuration examples" 3.3.1.1. Using a managed messaging infrastructure 3.3.1.2. Using an external messaging infrastructure 3.4. IoT for device managers Expand section "3.4. IoT for device managers" Collapse section "3.4. IoT for device managers" 3.4.1. Obtaining an authentication token Expand section "3.4.1. Obtaining an authentication token" Collapse section "3.4.1. Obtaining an authentication token" 3.4.1.1. Obtaining an authentication token for a user 3.4.1.2. Obtaining an authentication token for a service account 3.4.2. Creating an IoT device Expand section "3.4.2. Creating an IoT device" Collapse section "3.4.2. Creating an IoT device" 3.4.2.1. Registering a new device 3.4.2.2. Setting user name and password credentials for a device 3.5. IoT for solution developers Expand section "3.5. IoT for solution developers" Collapse section "3.5. IoT for solution developers" 3.5.1. Installing the Eclipse Hono command-line client 3.5.2. Starting the telemetry consumer 3.5.3. Starting the events consumer 3.5.4. Starting the command sender 3.6. IoT for device developers Expand section "3.6. IoT for device developers" Collapse section "3.6. IoT for device developers" 3.6.1. HTTP devices Expand section "3.6.1. HTTP devices" Collapse section "3.6.1. HTTP devices" 3.6.1.1. Sending telemetry using HTTP 3.6.1.2. Sending events using HTTP 3.6.1.3. Receiving commands using the HTTP protocol 3.6.2. MQTT devices Expand section "3.6.2. MQTT devices" Collapse section "3.6.2. MQTT devices" 3.6.2.1. Sending telemetry using MQTT 3.6.2.2. Sending events using MQTT 3.6.2.3. Receiving commands using the MQTT protocol 3.6.3. Configuring Sigfox devices Expand section "3.6.3. Configuring Sigfox devices" Collapse section "3.6.3. Configuring Sigfox devices" 3.6.3.1. Registering the Sigfox backend as a gateway device 3.6.3.2. Registering the Sigfox device 3.6.3.3. Preparing the Sigfox connection information 3.6.3.4. Creating a new callback in the Sigfox backend 3.6.3.5. Enabling command and control in Sigfox 4. Uninstalling AMQ Online Expand section "4. Uninstalling AMQ Online" Collapse section "4. Uninstalling AMQ Online" 4.1. Uninstalling AMQ Online using the YAML bundle 4.2. Uninstalling the AMQ Online Operator using the OpenShift Container Platform 4.x console Expand section "4.2. Uninstalling the AMQ Online Operator using the OpenShift Container Platform 4.x console" Collapse section "4.2. Uninstalling the AMQ Online Operator using the OpenShift Container Platform 4.x console" 4.2.1. Removing remaining resources after uninstalling AMQ Online using the Operator Lifecycle Manager A. Using your subscription Legal Notice Settings Close Language: 日本語 English Language: 日本語 English Format: Multi-page Single-page PDF Format: Multi-page Single-page PDF Language and Page Formatting Options Language: 日本語 English Language: 日本語 English Format: Multi-page Single-page PDF Format: Multi-page Single-page PDF Evaluating AMQ Online on OpenShift Red Hat AMQ 7.7For use with AMQ Online 1.5Legal NoticeAbstract This guide describes how to install and manage AMQ Online to evaluate its potential use in a production environment. Next