WMC v3.x wiki
Introduction
Quick Start
System Management
Network Management
SNMP
Push
LoRa features
GMS API
Troubleshooting
Gateway software resources
WMC 3.2:
Server software resources
WMC 3.2:
FAQ
WMC 3.x:
WMC 3.0:
WMC 3.1:
>= WMC 3.2:
>= WMC 3.1:
Introduction
Quick Start
System Management
Network Management
SNMP
Push
LoRa features
GMS API
Troubleshooting
Gateway software resources
WMC 3.2:
WMC 3.1:
WMC 3.0:
Server software resources
WMC 3.2:
FAQ
WMC 3.x:
WMC 3.0:
WMC 3.1:
>= WMC 3.2:
>= WMC 3.1:
This is an old revision of the document!
To activate message buffering, issue the following command:
/usr/bin/lorafwdctl database.enable trueYou can verify that the feature is enabled by reading the database.enable variable in the configuration file specified in
/etc/default/lorafwd
root@klk-lpbs-050792:~ # cat /etc/default/lorafwd # Configuration file for lorafwd. # The configuration file. # The configuration files can be found in: /user/etc/lorafwd CONFIGURATION_FILE="/user/etc/lorafwd/lorafwd.toml" # The extra arguments. EXTRA_ARGS="-v" root@klk-lpbs-050792:/etc/default # grep -i -A10 "\[ database \]" /user/etc/lorafwd/lorafwd.toml [ database ] # Whether or not a persistent database will store the incoming messages until # they will be sent and acknowledged. # # Type: boolean # Example: true # Default: false # enable = true
To deactivate message buffering, issue the following command:
lorafwdctl database.enable falseYou can verify that the feature is enabled by reading the database.enable variable in the configuration file specified in
/etc/default/lorafwd
root@klk-lpbs-050792:~ # cat /etc/default/lorafwd # Configuration file for lorafwd. # The configuration file. # The configuration files can be found in: /user/etc/lorafwd CONFIGURATION_FILE="/user/etc/lorafwd/lorafwd.toml" # The extra arguments. EXTRA_ARGS="-v" root@klk-lpbs-050792:/etc/default # grep -i -A10 "\[ database \]" /user/etc/lorafwd/lorafwd.toml [ database ] # Whether or not a persistent database will store the incoming messages until # they will be sent and acknowledged. # # Type: boolean # Example: true # Default: false # enable = false
root@klk-lpbs-050792:/etc/default # grep -i -A10 "\[ limit.messages \]" /user/etc/lorafwd/lorafwd.toml # The maximum number of messages allowed to be stored in the database. When # full the newest message will replace the oldest one. # # Type: integer # Example: 20000 # Default: 200 # #limit.messages = 200