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Network configuration

Domains

Your devices need to have access to the following domain hosts:

Location Service Domain host
Europe CoAP/bootstrap bootstrap.eu-west-1.mbedcloud.com
Europe Edge gateway https://gateways.eu-west-1.mbedcloud.com and https://edge-k8s.eu-west-1.mbedcloud.com
Europe mDS coaps://lwm2m.eu-west-1.mbedcloud.com
Japan CoAP/bootstrap bootstrap.ap-northeast-1.mbedcloud.com
Japan Edge gateway https://gateways.ap-northeast-1.mbedcloud.com and https://edge-k8s.ap-northeast-1.mbedcloud.com
Japan mDS coaps://lwm2m.ap-northeast-1.mbedcloud.com
United States CoAP/bootstrap bootstrap.us-east-1.mbedcloud.com
United States Edge gateway https://gateways.us-east-1.mbedcloud.com and https://edge-k8s.us-east-1.mbedcloud.com
United States mDS coaps://lwm2m.us-east-1.mbedcloud.com

To reach these URLs, the devices need to resolve DNS queries. You therefore need to deploy a DNS server in the network or locally, and make it accessible to the devices (usually over port 53).

Notes:

  • Devices use port 5684 (UDP or TCP) to communicate with Device Management.
  • The IPs of the Device Management hosts can change. Therefore, you need to make sure your DNS server does not cache records for longer than their time to live (TTL).

Connecting devices behind NAT

If your devices are behind a NAT, we recommend using either CoAP over TCP; or, if you require UDP, a dedicated tunnel between your device gateway and Device Management.

CoAP over TCP

If your devices are behind NAT or have IPv4 addresses, we recommend using CoAP over TCP because CoAP provides sustained connectivity between client and server, which helps overcome NAT firewall challenges.

You should also consider the power consumption tradeoffs between keeping the connection alive and requiring the device to re-establish the connection to communicate with Device Management when needed, which will also require it to go through the registration process.

There are two ways to keep the connection alive:

At the TCP level, different network operators typically have much shorter keepalive intervals than the devices; if your device's default keepalive intervals are longer than the network timeouts, you can configure them from Device Management Client. Device Management Client uses CoAP PING to provide uniform functionality for maintaining TCP connectivity. CoAP PING sends a periodic Reset Message to maintain the TLS connection. Device Management Client uses the default value of 540 seconds for keepalive.

You can change this on the application side using the MBED_CLIENT_TCP_KEEPALIVE_INTERVAL definition.

For example, with the Device Management Client reference example, there are two recommended ways to define these parameters.

  • Primarily, using the mbed_cloud_client_user_config.h file:

    #define MBED_CLIENT_TCP_KEEPALIVE_INTERVAL   540
    
  • Alternatively (works only for Mbed OS), you can specify these parameters in the application mbed_app.json:

    "mbed-client.tcp-keepalive-interval": 540
    

Note: Do not define the parameters in both mbed_cloud_client_user_config.h and mbed_app.json as this will result in duplicate definitions.