このページは、お客様の言語ではご利用いただけません。Huawei Cloudは、より多くの言語バージョンを追加するために懸命に取り組んでいます。ご協力ありがとうございました。
- What's New
- Product Bulletin
- Service Overview
- Billing
-
Getting Started
-
Quick Device Access - Property Reporting and Command Receiving
- Subscribing to IoTDA
- Connecting a Smart Smoke Detector to the Platform (Quick Usage)
- Registering a Simulated Smart Street Light Device
- Using MQTT.fx to Simulate Communication Between the Smart Street Light and the Platform
- Using a Virtual Smart Street Light to Communicate with the Platform (Java SDK)
- Using a Virtual Smart Street Light to Communicate with the Platform (C SDK)
- Quick Device Access - Message Sending and Receiving
- Quick Application Access
-
Quick Device Access - Property Reporting and Command Receiving
-
User Guide
- Overview
- IoTDA Instances
- Resource Spaces
- Device Access
- Message Communications
- Device Management
-
Rules
- Overview
- Data Forwarding Process
- SQL Statements
- Connectivity Tests
- Data Forwarding to Huawei Cloud Services
- Data Forwarding to Third-Party Applications
- Data Forwarding Channel Details
- Data Forwarding Stack Policies
- Data Forwarding Flow Control Policies
- Abnormal Data Target
- Device Linkage
- Monitoring and O&M
- Granting Permissions Using IAM
-
Best Practices
- Introduction
-
Device Access
- Developing an MQTT-based Simulated Smart Street Light Online
- Developing a Smart Street Light Using NB-IoT BearPi
- Developing a Smart Smoke Detector Using NB-IoT BearPi
- Connecting and Debugging an NB-IoT Smart Street Light Using a Simulator
- Developing a Protocol Conversion Gateway for Access of Generic-Protocol Devices
- Connecting a Device That Uses the X.509 Certificate Based on MQTT.fx
- Connecting to IoTDA Based on the BearPi-HM_Nano Development Board and OpenHarmony 3.0
- Testing MQTT Performance Using JMeter
- Device Management
- Data Forwarding
- Device Linkage
-
Developer Guide
- Before You Start
- Obtaining Resources
- Product Development
- Development on the Device Side
- Development on the Application Side
-
API Reference
-
API Reference on the Application Side
- Before You Start
- Calling APIs
- API Overview
-
API
- Product Management
- Device Management
- Device Message
- Device Command APIs
- Device Property
- AMQP Queue Management
- Access Credential Management
- Data Forwarding Rule Management
-
Transition Data
- Push a Device Status Change Notification
- Push a Device Property Reporting Notification
- Push a Device Message Status Change Notification
- Push a Batch Task Status Change Notification
- Push a Device Message Reporting Notification
- Push a Device Addition Notification
- Push a Device Update Notification
- Push a Device Deletion Notification
- Push a Product Addition Notification
- Push a Product Update Notification
- Push a Product Deletion Notification
- Push an Asynchronous Device Command Status Change Notification
- Rule Management
- Device Shadow
- Group Management
- Tag Management
- Instance Management
- Resource Space Management
- Batch Task
- Device CA Certificate Management
- OTA Upgrade Package Management
- Message Broadcasting
- Device Tunnel Management
- Stack policy management
- Flow control policy management
- Device Proxy
- Device Policy Management
- Bridge Management
- Pre-provisioning Template Management
- Custom Authentication
- Codec Function Management
- Permissions and Supported Actions
- Examples
- Appendix
-
MQTT or MQTTS API Reference on the Device Side
- Before You Start
- Communication Modes
- Topics
- Device Connection Authentication
- Device Commands
- Device Messages
- Device Properties
-
Gateway and Child Device Management
- Platform Notifying a Gateway of New Child Device Connection
- Platform Notifying a Gateway of Child Device Deletion
- Gateway Synchronizing Child Device Information
- Gateway Updating Child Device Status
- Responding to a Request for Updating Child Device Statuses
- Gateway Requesting for Adding Child Devices
- Platform Responding to a Request for Adding Child Devices
- Gateway Requesting for Deleting Child Devices
- Platform Responding to a Request for Deleting Child Devices
- Software and Firmware Upgrade
- File Upload and Download
- Device Time Synchronization
- Device Reporting Information
- Device Log Collection
- Remote Configuration
- Device Tunnel Management
- HTTPS API Reference on the Device Side
- LwM2M API Reference on the Device Side
- Security Tunnel WebSocket API Reference
- Module AT Command Reference
- Change History
-
API Reference on the Application Side
- SDK Reference
-
FAQs
- Top FAQs
-
Solution Consulting
- In What Scenarios Can the IoT Platform Be Applied?
- What Are the Changes Brought by the Integration of IoT Device Management and IoTDA?
- Can I Enable IoTDA for IAM Users or Sub-Projects?
- Which Regions of Huawei Cloud Are Supported by the IoT Platform?
- Does Huawei Provide Modules, Hardware Devices, and Application Software?
- What Should I Do If I Want to Call an API But Have No Permissions to Do So as an IAM User? (Is It Edition-specific?)
- Why Was I Prompted to Grant Security Administrator Permissions When I Create a Rule or Set Resource File Storage?
- Which Resource Space Will Be Set As Default on the IoT Platform?
- How Does IoTDA Obtain Device Data?
- Is There Any Limitation on the Number of Resource Spaces and Devices I Can Add on the IoT Platform?
- Does the IoTDA Support Device Registration in Batches?
- Are There Any Limitations on the Use of the IoT Platform?
- What DTLS Encryption Algorithms Are Supported by the IoT Platform?
- Does the IoT Platform Support Conversion Between Big-Endian and Little-Endian for Binary Data?
- What Is NB-IoT?
- What Are the Components of the IoT Platform and What Hardware Architectures Does It Support?
- How Do I Obtain the Platform Access Address?
- Device Integration
- IoT Device SDKs
- LwM2M/CoAP Device Access
- MQTT-based Device Access
- Products Models
- Message Communications
- Subscription and Push
- Codecs
- OTA Upgrades
- Application Integration
- General Reference
Copied.
Data Forwarding Channel Details
Overview
When using the data forwarding function, you can check whether the performance of the forwarding target (such as a third-party application) meets service requirements based on the usage of the data forwarding channel. For example, if the data forwarded to the target (third-party application) cannot be quickly processed, the data will be stacked (cached) on the platform. In this case, you can view the channel details. If you find that the message production rate is always higher than the push rate, and the number of stacked messages keeps increasing, it may indicate that the performance of the target (third-party application) cannot meet the service requirements and scale-out is required. In addition, you can clear stacked data in the data forwarding channel.
Viewing Forwarding Channel Details
- Access the IoTDA service page and click Access Console. Click the target instance card.
- In the navigation pane, choose Rules > Data Forwarding, locate the target rule, and click View in the Operation column.
Figure 1 Rule details - Viewing rule details
- Click Set Forwarding Target, find the target data forwarding channel, and click Details. View the push details in the displayed dialog box.
Figure 2 Forwarding rule detailsFigure 3 Push details - Data forwarding rule
Table 1 Parameter description Parameter
Description
Message Push Rate
Number of messages forwarded by the platform to the target per second.
Message Creation Rate
Number of messages sent by the device to the platform per second.
Stacked Messages
Number of messages stacked on the platform when the production rate is higher than the push rate. For a data forwarding rule, the max. stacking (cache) data size is 1 GB, and the max. stacking (cache) duration is 24 hours by default. To change the values, see Data Forwarding Stack Policies.
Clearing Stacked Messages
When the rule engine forwards messages to a third-party application, if the application cannot process the data in real time, the data will be stacked on the platform. You can clear the data stacked in the forwarding channel for timely processing.
For example, a water meter periodically reports user usage to a server. When the server is faulty, the forwarded data piles up. In this case, you can clear the stacked data and let the system process the newly reported data.
In the details page of a forwarding target, if you click Clear Stacked Messages, all data that has not been transferred to the forwarding target will be cleared. Exercise caution.
Feedback
Was this page helpful?
Provide feedbackThank you very much for your feedback. We will continue working to improve the documentation.See the reply and handling status in My Cloud VOC.
For any further questions, feel free to contact us through the chatbot.
Chatbot