Eclipse Ditto
Eclipse Ditto is an open-source project in scope of Eclipse IoT that provides a ready-to-use functionality to manage the state of Digital Twins. It provides access to them and mediates between the physical world and this digital representation.
An ever growing list of adopters makes use of Ditto as part of their IoT platforms - if you're as well using it, it would be super nice to show your adoption here.
Documentation
Find the documentation on the project site: https://eclipse.org/ditto/
Getting started
In order to start up Ditto via Docker Compose, you'll need:
- a running Docker daemon
- Docker Compose installed
You also have other possibilities to run Ditto, please have a look here to explore them.
Start Ditto
In order to start the latest built Docker images from Docker Hub, simply execute:
cd deployment/docker/
docker-compose up -d
Check the logs after starting up:
docker-compose logs -f
Open following URL to get started: http://localhost:8080
Or have a look at the "Hello World"
Build and start Ditto locally
In order to build Ditto, you'll need
- JDK 11 >= 11.0.5 and
- Apache Maven 3.x installed.
In order to first build Ditto and then start the built Docker images.
1. Build Ditto with Maven
mvn clean install
2. Build local Ditto Docker snapshot images
cd services/
./build-images.sh
If your infrastructure requires a proxy, its host and port can be set using the -p
option like for example:
./build-images.sh -p 172.17.0.1:3128
Please note that the given host and port automatically applies for HTTP and HTTPS.
3. Start Ditto with local snapshot images
cd ../deployment/docker/
# the "dev.env" file contains the SNAPSHOT number of Ditto, copy it to ".env" so that docker compose uses it:
cp dev.env .env
docker-compose up -d
Check the logs after starting up:
docker-compose logs -f
You have now running:
- a MongoDB as backing datastore of Ditto (not part of Ditto but started via Docker)
- Ditto microservices:
- Policies
- Things
- Things-Search
- Gateway
- Connectivity
- Concierge
- an nginx acting as a reverse proxy performing a simple "basic authentication" listening on port
8080
- including some static HTTP + API documentation on http://localhost:8080