Skip to main content

Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

lizzieepton
on 21 March 2024

Getting Started with Azure IoT Edge on Ubuntu Core


Introduction

Earlier this month/week, we announced that you can now benefit from the combined power of Ubuntu Core and Azure IoT Edge to bring the computation, storage, and AI capabilities of the cloud closer to the edge of the network. Azure IoT Edge is a device-focused runtime that enables you to deploy, run, and monitor containerised Linux workloads. Ubuntu Core is a version of Ubuntu that has been specially optimised for IoT and embedded systems. The combination of the two is ideal for those looking for reduced latency, lower bandwidth, and more efficient data processing. 

This tutorial helps you get started using an Ubuntu Core device and managing it from the Azure IoT Hub. Azure IoT Hub is the cloud platform which allows you to connect to, configure and deploy Edge workloads directly to your device.

Setting up Ubuntu Core

Ubuntu Core is a minimal, immutable version of Ubuntu focused on providing a reliable and secure platform for connected devices. 

Create an Ubuntu SSO Account

Before you can create an Ubuntu Core device, you need to ensure you can connect to it after initial configuration. This will require an Ubuntu SSO account and an SSH keypair. 

You can skip this step if you already have an account. If you do not have an SSO account, you can sign up for one here:

https://login.ubuntu.com/

SSH Keys

In order to authenticate yourself when trying to connect to your Ubuntu Core device, you will need to upload a public SSH key to your SSO account. This will then be automatically downloaded to the Core device during initial configuration.

To generate and upload an SSH key pair, please follow the steps detailed in the link below:

Connect to Ubuntu Core with SSH

You may also want to come back to this information once you have configured your Core device in the next stage.

Obtaining and configuring an Ubuntu Core Device

For the next stage in the process you will need an IoT device running Ubuntu Core. This can either be a physical device, such as a raspberry pi, or  a virtual device on your desktop. 

You can find all the available Ubuntu Core images, ready to download at: https://ubuntu.com/certified/iot 

To set up a virtual device, you can use QEMU to emulate your desired hardware. Please follow these instructions to complete this phase:

Testing Ubuntu Core with QEMU

Independently of which option you chose, you should now have a fully working Ubuntu Core device that you can connect to via SSH. You are now ready to provision it for Microsoft Azure.

Installing Azure IoT Edge Snaps

Having created and connected to your Ubuntu Core device, the next step is to install the Azure snaps.

Microsoft provides four snaps for your Ubuntu Core device: 

  • The Identity snap authenticates your device with the Azure cloud.
  • The Device Agent snap ensures your device is up-to-date. 
  • The Edge snap manages your cloud-deployed workloads on the device. 
  • The Delivery Optimization agent manages downloads of payloads from the Azure cloud.

In addition, Azure’s workloads are distributed as Docker containers and you therefore need to install the Docker Snap to run these.

All five snaps can be installed from your SSH terminal using the following commands:

snap install azure-iot-identity

snap install azure-iot-edge

snap install deviceupdate-agent

snap install deliveryoptimization-agent

snap install docker

Note: if you are being asked to use sudo to run snap install, you may need to authenticate yourself with the snap store using sudo snap login <email address>. This will then allow you to perform all snap commands without root privileges.

Wiring up slots and plugs

By default, snaps are dependency-free, untrusted, and strictly confined hence they must be connected to other snaps and system resources once installed using interfaces. Each snap has a selection of plugs and slots that either request or provide certain access. For production deployments, they can be configured to automatically connect to reduce the provisioning workload but to get started you may need to manually configure some of them to ensure they have all the permissions they need.

If installing the snaps from the global snap store, most interfaces will already be connected for you, however there are a few you may need to manually configure.

From an SSH terminal, you can check which interfaces are already connected using the following commands for each snap:

undefined

snap connections azure-iot-identity

snap connections azure-iot-edge

snap connections deviceupdate-agent

snap connections deliveryoptimization

For each snap you will be presented with a list of the interfaces. If the slot is empty, it may need connecting. For example, if you get the following response from snap connections azure-iot-identity:

We can see that some interfaces have been connected but the identity snap can not access hostname information, log information, mount information, system information or the tpm. We need to manually connect them which we can do from our terminal:

undefined

snap connect azure-iot-identity:log-observe

snap connect azure-iot-identity:mount-observe

snap connect azure-iot-identity:system-observe

snap connect azure-iot-identity:tpm

snap connect azure-iot-identity:hostname-control

The format of this command is snap connect <plug> <slot> but as we are connecting to snapd system slots we do not need to specify them. 

IoT Edge

For the IoT Edge agent, we can go through a similar process but this time we also want to connect from one snap (Edge agent) to another (Docker). The following commands should cover all unconnected interfaces.

# Connect to logging and grant permission to query system info

snap connect azure-iot-edge:log-observe

snap connect azure-iot-edge:mount-observe

snap connect azure-iot-edge:system-observe

snap connect azure-iot-edge:hostname-control

# Connect IoT Edge to Docker

snap connect azure-iot-edge:docker docker:docker-daemon

IoT Device agent

undefined

# Connect to logging and grant permission to query system info

snap connect deviceupdate-agent:account-control

snap connect deviceupdate-agent:hardware-observe

#Connect to SnapD

snap connect deviceupdate-agent:snapd-control

#Connect to other Azure Snaps

snap connect deviceupdate-agent:identity-service azure-iot-identity:identity-service

With all the interfaces now connected, we are ready to move onto the connecting to the cloud. 

Setting up your Azure IoT Edge account

For the next step, you need to move to the cloud and the Azure IoT Edge portal. If you already have an Azure account, you can sign in here: 

Azure Portal

If you do not have an account, you can sign up for an account here:

Azure IoT Edge

You will be given the option to either create a free account (which includes a time-limited, preview credit) or a paid account with access to premium services. Both Azure IoT Hub and Azure IoT Edge are free services that can be used without charge provided you stay within Azure’s usage limitations. More information can be found on this here.

Once you have access to your Azure account and the Azure Portal, you will need to create your IoT Hub. From the Azure services section of the portal, click “More services” and select “IoT Hub” from the “Internet of Things” section.

Once in your IoT Hub, you need to create a Hub. Click the Create button and fill in the details. Once happy, click the ‘Create’ button.

After a brief pause, your Hub will have been deployed and we can now see it in the IoT Hub portal.

Select your Hub and, from the menu on the right hand side of the screen, select Devices. 

Click “Add Device”, choose a name for your device and select the “IoT Edge Device” checkbox. Choose any other settings you desire and click “Save”.

Again after a slight pause, your device will have been created and added to your Hub. 

Select your device from your Hub and you will be presented with the various options and information. For the moment, we are just interested in the “Primary connection string” as we will need this to provision the actual device. 

You can view the connection string by clicking on the small eye icon or copy it to your clipboard by clicking the icon to the right. 

Provisioning your Device

In order for your Core device to connect to your newly created IoT Hub, it needs to be

configured with the connection string we have just obtained. 

Returning to the SSH terminal of your Core device, create a file called config.toml.

At this point it may be useful to install a text editor onto your Core device. Follow the steps below to install the nano strictly confined snap and connect it to your home directory. Then open the config.toml file to edit

sudo snap install nano-strict

snap connect nano-strict:home :home

nano-strict config.toml

Copy and paste the following into your text editor but replace the connection string with the one you obtained from your IoT Hub Device. 

## Manual provisioning with connection string 

# 

[provisioning]

source = "manual" 

connection_string = "HostName=snaphub-free.azure-devices.net;DeviceId=iotvm;SharedAccessKey=XXXXXXXXX"

Apply that configuration file to your Azure Snap using the following command:

sudo snap set azure-iot-edge raw-config="$(cat config.toml)"

It is also possible to authenticate your device to the Azure IoT Hub using X.509 certificates. For information on how to use that method, please refer to this documentation from Microsoft. 

Your Device in Azure IoT Hub

Once configured, your device will download some containers to allow it to run Azure IoT Edge workloads. This may take some time depending on your network connection speed but once complete your device will be visible from your Azure portal and you can configure it with additional workloads from there as well as explore all the offerings Azure has for your device. 

Deploying Modules to your Device

Next Steps

You should now have a fully working and configured Ubuntu Core device which can be remotely managed with the Azure IoT Hub. From here you can explore the features Azure IoT has to offer. 

If you want to try and deploy your first module to your Edge device, this tutorial from Microsoft shows you how you can deploy a sensing module that will send simulated telemetry data from your device to the cloud. It is the perfect place to get started with your Ubuntu Core Azure IoT Edge device.  

For more information on what you can do with Azure IoT, please refer to the Microsoft documentation.

Azure IoT Edge documentation | Microsoft Learn 

For more information on the power and capabilities of Ubuntu Core please refer to Ubuntu Core.

Related posts


Canonical
20 March 2024

Canonical’s Ubuntu Core receives Microsoft Azure IoT Edge Tier 1 supported platform status

Canonical announcements Canonical News

London, 20 March 2024. Canonical has announced that Ubuntu Core, its operating system optimised for the Internet of Things (IoT) and edge, has received Microsoft Azure IoT Edge Tier 1 supported platform status from Microsoft.  This collaboration brings computation, storage, and artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities in the cloud closer ...


Gabriel Aguiar Noury
21 November 2024

EdgeIQ and Ubuntu Core; bringing security and scalability to device management 

Internet of Things Article

Today, EdgeIQ and Canonical announced the release of the EdgeIQ Coda snap and official support of Ubuntu Core on the EdgeIQ Symphony platform. EdgeIQ Symphony helps you simplify and scale workflows for device fleet operations, data consumption and delivery, and application orchestration. Distributing EdgeIQ Coda as a snap brings the power ...


Canonical
19 November 2024

Canonical provides the ideal platform for Microsoft Azure IoT Operations

IoT Article

London, 19 November 2024. Canonical has collaborated with Microsoft as an early adopter partner and tested Microsoft Azure IoT Operations on Ubuntu Core and Kubernetes, which is notable as Microsoft today released Azure IoT Operations, a unified data plane providing significant improvements in node data capture, edge-based telemetry proce ...