BLOB Transfer Client
The Binary Large Object (BLOB) Transfer Client is the sender of the BLOB transfer. It supports sending BLOBs of any size to any number of Target nodes, in both Push BLOB Transfer Mode and Pull BLOB Transfer Mode.
Usage
Initialization
The BLOB Transfer Client is instantiated on an element with a set of event handler callbacks:
static const struct bt_mesh_blob_cli_cb blob_cb = {
/* Callbacks */
};
static struct bt_mesh_blob_cli blob_cli = {
.cb = &blob_cb,
};
static const struct bt_mesh_model models[] = {
BT_MESH_MODEL_BLOB_CLI(&blob_cli),
};
Transfer context
Both the transfer capabilities retrieval procedure and the BLOB transfer uses an instance of a
bt_mesh_blob_cli_inputs
to determine how to perform the transfer. The BLOB Transfer Client
Inputs structure must at least be initialized with a list of targets, an application key and a time
to live (TTL) value before it is used in a procedure:
static struct bt_mesh_blob_target targets[3] = {
{ .addr = 0x0001 },
{ .addr = 0x0002 },
{ .addr = 0x0003 },
};
static struct bt_mesh_blob_cli_inputs inputs = {
.app_idx = MY_APP_IDX,
.ttl = BT_MESH_TTL_DEFAULT,
};
sys_slist_init(&inputs.targets);
sys_slist_append(&inputs.targets, &targets[0].n);
sys_slist_append(&inputs.targets, &targets[1].n);
sys_slist_append(&inputs.targets, &targets[2].n);
Note that all BLOB Transfer Servers in the transfer must be bound to the chosen application key.
Group address
The application may additionally specify a group address in the context structure. If the group is
not BT_MESH_ADDR_UNASSIGNED
, the messages in the transfer will be sent to the group
address, instead of being sent individually to each Target node. Mesh Manager must ensure that all
Target nodes having the BLOB Transfer Server model subscribe to this group address.
Using group addresses for transferring the BLOBs can generally increase the transfer speed, as the BLOB Transfer Client sends each message to all Target nodes at the same time. However, sending large, segmented messages to group addresses in Bluetooth Mesh is generally less reliable than sending them to unicast addresses, as there is no transport layer acknowledgment mechanism for groups. This can lead to longer recovery periods at the end of each block, and increases the risk of losing Target nodes. Using group addresses for BLOB transfers will generally only pay off if the list of Target nodes is extensive, and the effectiveness of each addressing strategy will vary heavily between different deployments and the size of the chunks.
Transfer timeout
If a Target node fails to respond to an acknowledged message within the BLOB Transfer Client’s time limit, the Target node is dropped from the transfer. The application can reduce the chances of this by giving the BLOB Transfer Client extra time through the context structure. The extra time may be set in 10-second increments, up to 182 hours, in addition to the base time of 20 seconds. The wait time scales automatically with the transfer TTL.
Note that the BLOB Transfer Client only moves forward with the transfer in following cases:
All Target nodes have responded.
A node has been removed from the list of Target nodes.
The BLOB Transfer Client times out.
Increasing the wait time will increase this delay.
BLOB transfer capabilities retrieval
It is generally recommended to retrieve BLOB transfer capabilities before starting a transfer. The procedure populates the transfer capabilities from all Target nodes with the most liberal set of parameters that allows all Target nodes to participate in the transfer. Any Target nodes that fail to respond, or respond with incompatible transfer parameters, will be dropped.
Target nodes are prioritized according to their order in the list of Target nodes. If a Target node
is found to be incompatible with any of the previous Target nodes, for instance by reporting a
non-overlapping block size range, it will be dropped. Lost Target nodes will be reported through the
lost_target
callback.
The end of the procedure is signalled through the caps
callback, and the resulting capabilities can be used to determine the block and chunk sizes required
for the BLOB transfer.
BLOB transfer
The BLOB transfer is started by calling bt_mesh_blob_cli_send()
function, which (in addition
to the aforementioned transfer inputs) requires a set of transfer parameters and a BLOB stream
instance. The transfer parameters include the 64-bit BLOB ID, the BLOB size, the transfer mode, the
block size in logarithmic representation and the chunk size. The BLOB ID is application defined, but
must match the BLOB ID the BLOB Transfer Servers have been started with.
The transfer runs until it either completes successfully for at least one Target node, or it is
cancelled. The end of the transfer is communicated to the application through the end
callback. Lost Target nodes will be reported through the
lost_target
callback.