Developing Bluetooth Applications

Initialization

The Bluetooth subsystem is initialized using the bt_enable() function. The caller should ensure that function succeeds by checking the return code for errors. If a function pointer is passed to bt_enable(), the initialization happens asynchronously, and the completion is notified through the given function.

Bluetooth Application Example

A simple Bluetooth beacon application is shown below. The application initializes the Bluetooth Subsystem and enables non-connectable advertising, effectively acting as a Bluetooth Low Energy broadcaster.

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/*
 * Set Advertisement data. Based on the Eddystone specification:
 * https://github.com/google/eddystone/blob/master/protocol-specification.md
 * https://github.com/google/eddystone/tree/master/eddystone-url
 */
static const struct bt_data ad[] = {
	BT_DATA_BYTES(BT_DATA_FLAGS, BT_LE_AD_NO_BREDR),
	BT_DATA_BYTES(BT_DATA_UUID16_ALL, 0xaa, 0xfe),
	BT_DATA_BYTES(BT_DATA_SVC_DATA16,
		      0xaa, 0xfe, /* Eddystone UUID */
		      0x10, /* Eddystone-URL frame type */
		      0x00, /* Calibrated Tx power at 0m */
		      0x00, /* URL Scheme Prefix http://www. */
		      'z', 'e', 'p', 'h', 'y', 'r',
		      'p', 'r', 'o', 'j', 'e', 'c', 't',
		      0x08) /* .org */
};

/* Set Scan Response data */
static const struct bt_data sd[] = {
	BT_DATA(BT_DATA_NAME_COMPLETE, DEVICE_NAME, DEVICE_NAME_LEN),
};

static void bt_ready(int err)
{
	if (err) {
		printk("Bluetooth init failed (err %d)\n", err);
		return;
	}

	printk("Bluetooth initialized\n");

	/* Start advertising */
	err = bt_le_adv_start(BT_LE_ADV_NCONN, ad, ARRAY_SIZE(ad),
			      sd, ARRAY_SIZE(sd));
	if (err) {
		printk("Advertising failed to start (err %d)\n", err);
		return;
	}

	printk("Beacon started\n");
}

void main(void)
{
	int err;

	printk("Starting Beacon Demo\n");

	/* Initialize the Bluetooth Subsystem */
	err = bt_enable(bt_ready);
	if (err) {
		printk("Bluetooth init failed (err %d)\n", err);
	}
}

The key APIs employed by the beacon sample are bt_enable() that’s used to initialize Bluetooth and then bt_le_adv_start() that’s used to start advertising a specific combination of advertising and scan response data.

Testing with QEMU

It’s possible to test Bluetooth applications using QEMU. In order to do so, a Bluetooth controller needs to be exported from the host OS (Linux) to the emulator.

Using Host System Bluetooth Controller in QEMU

The host OS’s Bluetooth controller is connected to the second QEMU serial line using a UNIX socket. This socket employs the QEMU option -serial unix:/tmp/bt-server-bredr. This option is already added to QEMU through QEMU_EXTRA_FLAGS in most Bluetooth sample Makefiles’ and made available through the ‘run’ make target.

On the host side, BlueZ allows to export its Bluetooth controller through a so-called user channel for QEMU to use:

  1. Make sure that the Bluetooth controller is down

  2. Use the btproxy tool to open the listening UNIX socket, type:

    $ sudo tools/btproxy -u
    Listening on /tmp/bt-server-bredr
    
  3. Choose one of the Bluetooth sample applications located in samples/bluetooth.

  4. To run Bluetooth application in QEMU, type:

    $ make run
    

Running QEMU now results in a connection with the second serial line to the bt-server-bredr UNIX socket, letting the application access the Bluetooth controller.