ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (2024)

Learn how to publish temperature and humidity readings from a DHT11 or DHT22 sensor via MQTT with the ESP8266 NodeMCU to any platform that supports MQTT or any MQTT client. As an example, we’ll publish sensor readings to Node-RED Dashboard and the ESP8266 will be programmed using Arduino IDE.

ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (1)

Recommended reading: What is MQTT and How It Works

Project Overview

The following diagram shows a high-level overview of the project we’ll build.

ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (2)
  • The ESP8266 requests temperature and humidity readings from the DHT11 or DHT22 sensor;
  • Temperature readings are published in theesp/dht/temperaturetopic;
  • Humidity readings are published in theesp/dht/humidity topic;
  • Node-RED is subscribed those topics;
  • Node-RED receives the sensor readings and displays them on gauges;
  • You can receive the readings in any other platform that supports MQTT and handle the readings as you want.

Prerequisites

Before proceeding with this tutorial, make sure you check the following prerequisites.

Arduino IDE

We’ll program the ESP8266 using Arduino IDE, so make sure you have the ESP8266 add-on installed.

  • Installing ESP8266 Board in Arduino IDE (Windows, Mac OS X, Linux)

MQTT Broker

ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (3)

To use MQTT, you need a broker. We’ll be usingMosquitto brokerinstalled on a Raspberry Pi. ReadHow to Install Mosquitto Broker on Raspberry Pi.

You can use any other MQTT broker, including a cloud MQTT broker. We’ll show you how to do that in the code later on.

If you’re not familiar with MQTT make sure you read our introductory tutorial:What is MQTT and How It Works.

MQTT Libraries

To use MQTT with the ESP8266 we’ll use the Async MQTT Client Library.

Installing the Async MQTT Client Library

  1. Click here to download the Async MQTT client library. You should have a .zip folder in your Downloads folder
  2. Unzip the .zip folder and you should getasync-mqtt-client-masterfolder
  3. Rename your folder fromasync-mqtt-client-mastertoasync_mqtt_client
  4. Move theasync_mqtt_clientfolder to your Arduino IDE installation libraries folder
  5. Finally, re-open your Arduino IDE

Alternatively, you can go to Sketch > Include Library > Add . ZIP library and select the library you’ve just downloaded.

Installing the ESPAsync TCP Library

To use MQTT with the ESP8266, you also need theESPAsync TCP library.

  1. Click here to download the ESPAsync TCP client library. You should have a .zip folder in your Downloads folder
  2. Unzip the .zip folder and you should getESPAsyncTCP-masterfolder
  3. Rename your folder fromESPAsyncTCP-mastertoESPAsyncTCP
  4. Move theESPAsyncTCPfolder to your Arduino IDE installation libraries folder
  5. Finally, re-open your Arduino IDE

Alternatively, you can go to Sketch > Include Library > Add . ZIP library and select the library you’ve just downloaded.

DHT Sensor Libraries

To read from the DHT sensor, we’ll use theDHT library from Adafruit. To use this library you also need to install theAdafruit Unified Sensor library. Follow the next steps to install those libraries.

1. Open your Arduino IDE and go toSketch>Include Library>Manage Libraries. The Library Manager should open.

2. Search for “DHT” on the Search box and install the DHT library from Adafruit.

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3. After installing the DHT library from Adafruit, type “Adafruit Unified Sensor” in the search box. Scroll all the way down to find the library and install it.

After installing the libraries, restart your Arduino IDE.

Parts Required

For this tutorial you need the following parts:

You can use the preceding links or go directly to MakerAdvisor.com/tools to find all the parts for your projects at the best price!

ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (6)

Schematic Diagram

Wire the DHT11 or DHT22 to the ESP8266 as shown in the following schematic diagram with the data pin connected to GPIO 14.

ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (7)

Note: if you have a DHT sensor in a breakout board, it comes with only three pins and with an internal pull-up resistor on pin 2, so you don’t need to connect the resistor. You just need to wire VCC, data and GND.

In this example, we’re connecting the DHT data pin to GPIO 14. However, you can use any other suitable digital pin.

Learn how to use the ESP8266 GPIOs with our guide:ESP8266 Pinout Reference: Which GPIO pins should you use?

Code

Copy the following code to your Arduino IDE. To make it work for you, you need to insert your network credentials as well as the MQTT broker details.

/* Rui Santos Complete project details at https://RandomNerdTutorials.com/esp8266-nodemcu-mqtt-publish-dht11-dht22-arduino/ Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files. The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.*/#include "DHT.h"#include <ESP8266WiFi.h>#include <Ticker.h>#include <AsyncMqttClient.h>#define WIFI_SSID "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_SSID"#define WIFI_PASSWORD "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_PASSWORD"// Raspberri Pi Mosquitto MQTT Broker#define MQTT_HOST IPAddress(192, 168, 1, XXX)// For a cloud MQTT broker, type the domain name//#define MQTT_HOST "example.com"#define MQTT_PORT 1883// Temperature MQTT Topics#define MQTT_PUB_TEMP "esp/dht/temperature"#define MQTT_PUB_HUM "esp/dht/humidity"// Digital pin connected to the DHT sensor#define DHTPIN 14 // Uncomment whatever DHT sensor type you're using//#define DHTTYPE DHT11 // DHT 11#define DHTTYPE DHT22 // DHT 22 (AM2302), AM2321//#define DHTTYPE DHT21 // DHT 21 (AM2301) // Initialize DHT sensorDHT dht(DHTPIN, DHTTYPE);// Variables to hold sensor readingsfloat temp;float hum;AsyncMqttClient mqttClient;Ticker mqttReconnectTimer;WiFiEventHandler wifiConnectHandler;WiFiEventHandler wifiDisconnectHandler;Ticker wifiReconnectTimer;unsigned long previousMillis = 0; // Stores last time temperature was publishedconst long interval = 10000; // Interval at which to publish sensor readingsvoid connectToWifi() { Serial.println("Connecting to Wi-Fi..."); WiFi.begin(WIFI_SSID, WIFI_PASSWORD);}void onWifiConnect(const WiFiEventStationModeGotIP& event) { Serial.println("Connected to Wi-Fi."); connectToMqtt();}void onWifiDisconnect(const WiFiEventStationModeDisconnected& event) { Serial.println("Disconnected from Wi-Fi."); mqttReconnectTimer.detach(); // ensure we don't reconnect to MQTT while reconnecting to Wi-Fi wifiReconnectTimer.once(2, connectToWifi);}void connectToMqtt() { Serial.println("Connecting to MQTT..."); mqttClient.connect();}void onMqttConnect(bool sessionPresent) { Serial.println("Connected to MQTT."); Serial.print("Session present: "); Serial.println(sessionPresent);}void onMqttDisconnect(AsyncMqttClientDisconnectReason reason) { Serial.println("Disconnected from MQTT."); if (WiFi.isConnected()) { mqttReconnectTimer.once(2, connectToMqtt); }}/*void onMqttSubscribe(uint16_t packetId, uint8_t qos) { Serial.println("Subscribe acknowledged."); Serial.print(" packetId: "); Serial.println(packetId); Serial.print(" qos: "); Serial.println(qos);}void onMqttUnsubscribe(uint16_t packetId) { Serial.println("Unsubscribe acknowledged."); Serial.print(" packetId: "); Serial.println(packetId);}*/void onMqttPublish(uint16_t packetId) { Serial.print("Publish acknowledged."); Serial.print(" packetId: "); Serial.println(packetId);}void setup() { Serial.begin(115200); Serial.println(); dht.begin(); wifiConnectHandler = WiFi.onStationModeGotIP(onWifiConnect); wifiDisconnectHandler = WiFi.onStationModeDisconnected(onWifiDisconnect); mqttClient.onConnect(onMqttConnect); mqttClient.onDisconnect(onMqttDisconnect); //mqttClient.onSubscribe(onMqttSubscribe); //mqttClient.onUnsubscribe(onMqttUnsubscribe); mqttClient.onPublish(onMqttPublish); mqttClient.setServer(MQTT_HOST, MQTT_PORT); // If your broker requires authentication (username and password), set them below //mqttClient.setCredentials("REPlACE_WITH_YOUR_USER", "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_PASSWORD"); connectToWifi();}void loop() { unsigned long currentMillis = millis(); // Every X number of seconds (interval = 10 seconds) // it publishes a new MQTT message if (currentMillis - previousMillis >= interval) { // Save the last time a new reading was published previousMillis = currentMillis; // New DHT sensor readings hum = dht.readHumidity(); // Read temperature as Celsius (the default) temp = dht.readTemperature(); // Read temperature as Fahrenheit (isFahrenheit = true) //temp = dht.readTemperature(true); // Publish an MQTT message on topic esp/dht/temperature uint16_t packetIdPub1 = mqttClient.publish(MQTT_PUB_TEMP, 1, true, String(temp).c_str()); Serial.printf("Publishing on topic %s at QoS 1, packetId: %i ", MQTT_PUB_TEMP, packetIdPub1); Serial.printf("Message: %.2f \n", temp); // Publish an MQTT message on topic esp/dht/humidity uint16_t packetIdPub2 = mqttClient.publish(MQTT_PUB_HUM, 1, true, String(hum).c_str()); Serial.printf("Publishing on topic %s at QoS 1, packetId %i: ", MQTT_PUB_HUM, packetIdPub2); Serial.printf("Message: %.2f \n", hum); }}

View raw code

How the Code Works

The following section imports all the required libraries.

#include "DHT.h"#include <ESP8266WiFi.h>#include <Ticker.h>#include <AsyncMqttClient.h>

Include your network credentials on the following lines.

#define WIFI_SSID "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_SSID"#define WIFI_PASSWORD "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_PASSWORD"

Insert the Raspberry Pi IP address, so that the ESP8266 connects to your broker.

#define MQTT_HOST IPAddress(192, 168, 1, 106)

If you’re using a cloud MQTT broker, insert the broker domain name, for example:

#define MQTT_HOST "example.com"

Define the MQTT port.

#define MQTT_PORT 1883

The temperature and humidity will be published on the following topics:

#define MQTT_PUB_TEMP "esp/dht/temperature"#define MQTT_PUB_HUM "esp/dht/humidity"

Define the GPIO that the DHT sensor data pin is connected to. In our case, it is connected to GPIO 14.

#define DHTPIN 14

Uncomment the DHT sensor type you’re using. In our example, we’re using the DHT22.

//#define DHTTYPE DHT11 // DHT 11#define DHTTYPE DHT22 // DHT 22 (AM2302), AM2321//#define DHTTYPE DHT21 // DHT 21 (AM2301)

Initialize the DHT sensor on the pin and type defined earlier.

DHT dht(DHTPIN, DHTTYPE);

The temp and hum variables will hold the temperature and humidity values from the DHT22 sensor.

float temp;float hum;

Create an AsyncMqttClient object called mqttClient to handle the MQTT client and timers to reconnect to your MQTT broker and router when it disconnects.

AsyncMqttClient mqttClient;Ticker mqttReconnectTimer;WiFiEventHandler wifiConnectHandler;WiFiEventHandler wifiDisconnectHandler;Ticker wifiReconnectTimer;

Then, create some auxiliary timer variables to publish the readings every 10 seconds. You can change the delay time on the interval variable.

unsigned long previousMillis = 0; // Stores last time temperature was publishedconst long interval = 10000; // Interval at which to publish sensor readings

Note: the DHT11 and DHT22 have a low sampling rate. You can only request DHT11 readings every second, or every two seconds for the DHT22.

MQTT functions: connect to Wi-Fi, connect to MQTT, and Wi-Fi events

We haven’t added any comments to the functions defined in the next code section. Those functions come with the Async Mqtt Client library. The function’s names are pretty self-explanatory.

For example, the connectToWifi() connects your ESP8266 to your router:

void connectToWifi() { Serial.println("Connecting to Wi-Fi..."); WiFi.begin(WIFI_SSID, WIFI_PASSWORD);}

The connectToMqtt() connects your ESP8266 to your MQTT broker:

void connectToMqtt() { Serial.println("Connecting to MQTT..."); mqttClient.connect();}

The onMqttConnect() function runs after starting a session with the broker.

void onMqttConnect(bool sessionPresent) { Serial.println("Connected to MQTT."); Serial.print("Session present: "); Serial.println(sessionPresent);}

MQTT functions: disconnect and publish

If the ESP8266 loses connection with the MQTT broker, it calls the onMqttDisconnect function that prints that message in the serial monitor.

void onMqttDisconnect(AsyncMqttClientDisconnectReason reason) { Serial.println("Disconnected from MQTT."); if (WiFi.isConnected()) { mqttReconnectTimer.once(2, connectToMqtt); }}

When you publish a message to an MQTT topic, the onMqttPublish() function is called. It prints the packet id in the Serial Monitor.

void onMqttPublish(uint16_t packetId) { Serial.print("Publish acknowledged."); Serial.print(" packetId: "); Serial.println(packetId);}

Basically, all these functions that we’ve just mentioned are callback functions. So, they are executed asynchronously.

setup()

Now, let’s proceed to the setup(). Initialize the DHT sensor.

dht.begin();

The next two lines create handlers that will allow both the MQTT broker and Wi-Fi connection to reconnect, in case the connection is lost.

wifiConnectHandler = WiFi.onStationModeGotIP(onWifiConnect);wifiDisconnectHandler = WiFi.onStationModeDisconnected(onWifiDisconnect);

Finally, assign all the callback functions. This means that these functions will be executed automatically when needed. For example, when the ESP8266 connects to the broker, it automatically calls the onMqttConnect() function, and so on.

mqttClient.onConnect(onMqttConnect);mqttClient.onDisconnect(onMqttDisconnect);//mqttClient.onSubscribe(onMqttSubscribe);//mqttClient.onUnsubscribe(onMqttUnsubscribe);mqttClient.onPublish(onMqttPublish);mqttClient.setServer(MQTT_HOST, MQTT_PORT);

Broker Authentication

If your broker requires authentication, uncomment the following line and insert your credentials (username and password).

mqttClient.setCredentials("REPlACE_WITH_YOUR_USER", "REPLACE_WITH_YOUR_PASSWORD");

Finally, connect to Wi-Fi.

connectToWifi();

loop()

In the loop(), you create a timer that will allow you to get new temperature and humidity readings from the DHT sensor and publishing them on the corresponding topic every 10 seconds.

unsigned long currentMillis = millis();// Every X number of seconds (interval = 10 seconds) // it publishes a new MQTT messageif (currentMillis - previousMillis >= interval) { // Save the last time a new reading was published previousMillis = currentMillis; // New DHT sensor readings hum = dht.readHumidity(); // Read temperature as Celsius (the default) temp = dht.readTemperature(); // Read temperature as Fahrenheit (isFahrenheit = true) //temp = dht.readTemperature(true);

Publishing to topics

To publish the readings on the corresponding MQTT topics, use the next lines:

uint16_t packetIdPub1 = mqttClient.publish(MQTT_PUB_TEMP, 1, true, String(temp).c_str());uint16_t packetIdPub2 = mqttClient.publish(MQTT_PUB_HUM, 1, true, String(hum).c_str());

Basically, use the publish() method on the mqttClient object to publish data on a topic. The publish() method accepts the following arguments, in order:

  • MQTT topic (const char*)
  • QoS (uint8_t): quality of service – it can be 0, 1 or 2
  • retain flag (bool): retain flag
  • payload (const char*) – in this case, the payload corresponds to the sensor reading

The QoS (quality of service) is a way to guarantee that the message is delivered. It can be one of the following levels:

  • 0: the message will be delivered once or not at all. The message is not acknowledged. There is no possibility of duplicated messages;
  • 1: the message will be delivered at least once, but may be delivered more than once;
  • 2: the message is always delivered exactly once;
  • Learn about MQTT QoS.

Uploading the code

With your Raspberry Pi powered on and running the Mosquitto MQTT broker, upload the code to your ESP8266.

Open the Serial Monitor at a baud rate of 115200 and you’ll see that the ESP8266 starts publishing messages on the topics we’ve defined previously.

ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (8)

Preparing Node-RED Dashboard

The ESP8266 is publishing temperature readings every 10 seconds on the esp/dht/temperature and esp/dht/humidity topics. Now, you can use any dashboard that supports MQTT or any other device that supports MQTT to subscribe to those topics and receive the readings.

As an example, we’ll create a simple flow using Node-RED to subscribe to those topics and display the readings on gauges.

If you don’t have Node-RED installed, follow the next tutorials:

  • Getting Started with Node-RED on Raspberry Pi
  • Installing and Getting Started with Node-RED Dashboard

Having Node-RED running on your Raspberry Pi, go to your Raspberry Pi IP address followed by :1880.

http://raspberry-pi-ip-address:1880

The Node-RED interface should open. Drag two MQTT in nodes, and two gauge nodes to the flow.

ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (9)

Click the MQTT node and edit its properties.

ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (10)

The Server field refers to the MQTT broker. In our case, the MQTT broker is the Raspberry Pi, so it is set to localhost:1883. If you’re using a Cloud MQTT broker, you should change that field.

Insert the topic you want to be subscribed to and the QoS. This previous MQTT node is subscribed to the esp/dht/temperature topic.

Click on the other MQTT in node and edit its properties with the same server, but for the other topic: esp/dht/humidity.

Click on the gauge nodes and edit its properties for each reading. The following node is set for the temperature readings. Edit the other chart node for the humidity readings.

ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (11)

Wire your nodes as shown below:

ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (12)

Finally, deploy your flow (press the button on the upper right corner).

ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (13)

Alternatively, you can go to Menu > Import and copy the following to your Clipboard to create your Node-RED flow.

[{"id":"59f95d85.b6f0b4","type":"mqtt in","z":"b01416d3.f69f38","name":"","topic":"esp/dht/temperature","qos":"1","datatype":"auto","broker":"8db3fac0.99dd48","x":910,"y":340,"wires":[["2babfd19.559212"]]},{"id":"2babfd19.559212","type":"ui_gauge","z":"b01416d3.f69f38","name":"","group":"37de8fe8.46846","order":2,"width":0,"height":0,"gtype":"gage","title":"Temperature","label":"ºC","format":"{{value}}","min":0,"max":"40","colors":["#00b500","#f7df09","#ca3838"],"seg1":"","seg2":"","x":1210,"y":340,"wires":[]},{"id":"b9aa2398.37ca3","type":"mqtt in","z":"b01416d3.f69f38","name":"","topic":"esp/dht/humidity","qos":"1","datatype":"auto","broker":"8db3fac0.99dd48","x":900,"y":420,"wires":[["d0f75e86.1c9ae"]]},{"id":"d0f75e86.1c9ae","type":"ui_gauge","z":"b01416d3.f69f38","name":"","group":"37de8fe8.46846","order":2,"width":0,"height":0,"gtype":"gage","title":"Humidity","label":"%","format":"{{value}}","min":"30","max":"100","colors":["#53a4e6","#1d78a9","#4e38c9"],"seg1":"","seg2":"","x":1200,"y":420,"wires":[]},{"id":"8db3fac0.99dd48","type":"mqtt-broker","z":"","name":"","broker":"localhost","port":"1883","clientid":"","usetls":false,"compatmode":false,"keepalive":"60","cleansession":true,"birthTopic":"","birthQos":"0","birthPayload":"","closeTopic":"","closeQos":"0","closePayload":"","willTopic":"","willQos":"0","willPayload":""},{"id":"37de8fe8.46846","type":"ui_group","z":"","name":"BME280","tab":"53b8c8f9.cfbe48","order":1,"disp":true,"width":"6","collapse":false},{"id":"53b8c8f9.cfbe48","type":"ui_tab","z":"","name":"Home","icon":"dashboard","order":2,"disabled":false,"hidden":false}]

View raw code

Demonstration

Go to your Raspberry Pi IP address followed by :1880/ui.

http://raspberry-pi-ip-address:1880/ui

You should get access to the current DHT temperature and humidity readings on the Dashboard. You can use other dashboard-type nodes to display the readings on different ways.

ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (14)

That’s it! You have your ESP8266 board publishing DHT temperature and humidity readings to Node-RED via MQTT.

Wrapping Up

MQTT is a great communication protocol to exchange small amounts of data between devices. In this tutorial you’ve learned how to publish temperature and humidity readings from a DHT sensor with the ESP8266 to different MQTT topics. Then, you can use any device or home automation platform to subscribe to those topics and receive the readings.

Instead of a DHT, you can use any a different sensor:

  • ESP8266 MQTT – Publish DS18B20 Temperature Readings
  • ESP8266 MQTT – Publish BME280 Temperature, Humidity and Pressure Readings

We hope you’ve found this tutorial useful. If you want to learn more about the ESP8266, take a look at our resources:

  • Home Automation using ESP8266
  • MicroPython Programming with ESP32 and ESP8266
  • More ESP8266 NodeMCU Projects…

Thanks for reading.

ESP8266 NodeMCU MQTT - Publish DHT11/DHT22 Sensor Readings (Arduino) | Random Nerd Tutorials (2024)
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