BLE User Guide¶
Apache Mynewt offers the world’s first fully open-source Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) or Bluetooth Smart stack fully compliant with Bluetooth 5 specifications with support for Bluetooth Mesh. It is called NimBLE.
BLE technology operates in the unlicensed industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) band at 2.4 to 2.485 GHz which is available in most countries. It uses a spread spectrum, frequency hopping, full-duplex signal. BLE FHSS employs 40 2-MHz-wide channels to ensure greater reliability over longer distances. It also features 0-dBm (1 mW) power output and a typical maximum range of 50 meters. With Bluetooth 5 specification range can be increased 4 times and speed 2 time.
Note that BLE is not compatible with standard Bluetooth.
Features¶
NimBLE complies with Bluetooth Core Specification 5.0 which makes it an ideal wireless technology for the Internet of Things (IoT).
LE Advertising Extensions
2Msym/s PHY for higher throughput
Coded PHY for LE Long Range
High Duty Cycle Non-Connectable Advertising
Channel Selection Algorithm #2 to utilize channels in more efficient way.
LE Privacy 1.2 for frequent changes to the device address to make it difficult to track for outsiders
LE Secure Connections featuring FIPS-compliant algorithms.
LE Data Length Extension for higher throughput
Coming Soon: Assigning an Internet Protocol (IP) address (compliant with the IPv6 or 6LoWPAN standard) to a Bluetooth device through Internet Protocol Support Profile (IPSP)
The Bluetooth 5 is backward compatible with previous Bluetooth version 4.2 which is also supported by Apache Mynewt.
Bluetooth Mesh features¶
Bluetooth Mesh is a great addition to and opens a wide range of new possibilities for the IoT connectivity space. NimBLE fully supports the following Bluetooth Mesh features:
Advertising and GATT bearers
PB-GATT and PB-ADV provisioning
Foundation Models (server role)
Relay support
GATT Proxy
Components¶
A Bluetooth low energy stack (NimBLE included) consists of two components with several subcomponents:
Controller
Physical Layer: adaptive frequency-hopping Gaussian Frequency Shift Keying (GFSK) radio using 40 RF channels (0-39), with 2 MHz spacing.
Link Layer: with one of five states (Standby, Advertising, Scanning, Initiating, Connection states) active at any time
Host
Logical Link Control and Adaptation Protocol (L2CAP): provides logical channels, named L2CAP channels, which are multiplexed over one or more logical links to provide packet segmentation and reassembly, flow control, error control, streaming, QoS etc.
Security Manager (SM): uses Security Manager Protocol (SMP) for pairing and transport specific key distribution for securing radio communication
Attribute protocol (ATT): allows a device (Server) to expose certain pieces of data, known as Attributes, to another device (Client)
Generic Attribute Profile (GATT): a framework for using the ATT protocol to exchange attributes encapsulated as Characteristics or Services
Generic Access Profile (GAP): a base profile which all Bluetooth devices implement, which in the case of LE, defines the Physical Layer, Link Layer, L2CAP, Security Manager, Attribute Protocol and Generic Attribute Profile.
Host Controller Interface (HCI): the interface between the host and controller either through software API or by a hardware interface such as SPI, UART or USB.
Subsequent chapters in this manual will go into the details of the implementation of each component, APIs available, and things to consider while designing a NimBLE app.
Example NimBLE projects¶
Mynewt comes with two built-in projects that allow users to play with NimBLE, try the tutorials out with, and see how to use available services.
btshell : A simple shell application which provides a basic interface to the host-side of the BLE stack.
bleprph: A basic peripheral device with no user interface. It advertises automatically on startup, and resumes advertising whenever a connection is terminated. It supports a maximum of one connection.
blemesh: A sample application for Bluetooth Mesh Node using on/off model.