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Automatic IoT device and module management using the Azure portal

Automatic device management in Azure IoT Hub automates many of the repetitive and complex tasks of managing large device fleets. With automatic device management, you can target a set of devices based on their properties, define a desired configuration, and then let IoT Hub update the devices when they come into scope. This update is done using an automatic device configuration or automatic module configuration, which lets you summarize completion and compliance, handle merging and conflicts, and roll out configurations in a phased approach.

Note

The features described in this article are available only in the standard tier of IoT Hub. For more information about the basic and standard/free IoT Hub tiers, see Choose the right IoT Hub tier for your solution.

Automatic device management works by updating a set of device twins or module twins with desired properties and reporting a summary that's based on twin reported properties. It introduces a new class and JSON document called a Configuration that has three parts:

  • The target condition defines the scope of device twins or module twins to be updated. The target condition is specified as a query on twin tags and/or reported properties.

  • The target content defines the desired properties to be added or updated in the targeted device twins or module twins. The content includes a path to the section of desired properties to be changed.

  • The metrics define the summary counts of various configuration states such as Success, In Progress, and Error. Custom metrics are specified as queries on twin reported properties. System metrics are the default metrics that measure twin update status, such as the number of twins that are targeted and the number of twins that have been successfully updated.

Automatic configurations run for the first time shortly after the configuration is created and then at five minute intervals. Metrics queries run each time the automatic configuration runs. A maximum of 100 automatic configurations is supported on standard tier IoT hubs; ten on free tier IoT hubs. Throttling limits also apply. To learn more, see Quotas and Throttling.

Implement twins

Automatic device configurations require the use of device twins to synchronize state between the cloud and devices. For more information, see Understand and use device twins in IoT Hub.

Automatic module configurations require the use of module twins to synchronize state between the cloud and modules. For more information, see Understand and use module twins in IoT Hub.

Use tags to target twins

Before you create a configuration, you must specify which devices or modules you want to affect. Azure IoT Hub identifies devices using tags in the device twin, and identifies modules using tags in the module twin. Each device or modules can have multiple tags, and you can define them any way that makes sense for your solution. For example, if you manage devices in different locations, add the following tags to a device twin:

"tags": {
	"location": {
		"state": "Washington",
		"city": "Tacoma"
    }
},

Create a configuration

You can create a maximum of 100 automatic configurations on standard tier IoT hubs; ten on free tier IoT hubs. To learn more, see Quotas and Throttling.

  1. In the Azure portal, go to your IoT hub.

  2. Select Configurations + Deployments in the left navigation pane.

  3. Select Add and choose Device twin configuration or Module twin configuration from the drop-down list.

    Screenshot showing how to add a configuration.

There are five steps to create a configuration. The following sections walk through each one.

Name and label

  1. Give your configuration a unique name that is up to 128 characters long. Lowercase letters and the following special characters are allowed: -+%_*!'. Spaces are not allowed.

  2. Add labels to help track your configurations. Labels are Name, Value pairs that describe your configuration. For example, HostPlatform, Linux or Version, 3.0.1.

  3. Select Next to move to the next step.

Twin settings

This section defines the content to be set in targeted device twin or module twin desired properties. There are two inputs for each set of settings. The first is the twin path, which is the path to the JSON section within the twin desired properties that will be set. The second is the JSON content to be inserted in that section.

For example, you could set the twin path to properties.desired.chiller-water and then provide the following JSON content:

{
  "temperature": 66,
  "pressure": 28
}

Screenshot of setting the device or module twin property and json content.

You can also set individual settings by specifying the entire twin path and providing the value with no brackets. For example, with the twin path properties.desired.chiller-water.temperature, set the content to 66. Then create a new twin setting for the pressure property.

If two or more configurations target the same twin path, the content from the highest priority configuration will apply (priority is defined in step 4).

If you wish to remove an existing property, specify the property value to null.

You can add additional settings by selecting Add Device Twin Setting or Add Module Twin Setting.

Target devices or modules

Use the tags property from your twins to target the specific devices or modules that should receive this configuration. You can also target twin reported properties.

Automatic device configurations can only target device twin tags, and automatic module configurations can only target module twin tags.

Since multiple configurations may target the same device or module, each configuration needs a priority number. If there's ever a conflict, the configuration with the highest priority wins.

  1. Enter a positive integer for the configuration Priority. The highest numerical value is considered the highest priority. If two configurations have the same priority number, the one that was created most recently wins.

  2. Enter a Target condition to determine which devices or modules will be targeted with this configuration. The condition is based on twin tags or twin reported properties and should match the expression format.

    For automatic device configuration, you can specify just the tag or reported property to target. For example, tags.environment='test' or properties.reported.chillerProperties.model='4000x'. You can specify * to target all devices.

    For automatic module configuration, use a query to specify tags or reported properties from the modules registered to the IoT hub. For example, from devices.modules where tags.environment='test' or from devices.modules where properties.reported.chillerProperties.model='4000x'. The wildcard cannot be used to target all modules.

Metrics

Metrics provide summary counts of the various states that a device or module may report back after applying configuration content. For example, you may create a metric for pending settings changes, a metric for errors, and a metric for successful settings changes.

Each configuration can have up to five custom metrics.

  1. Enter a name for Metric Name.

  2. Enter a query for Metric Criteria. The query is based on device twin reported properties. The metric represents the number of rows returned by the query.

    For example:

    SELECT deviceId FROM devices 
      WHERE properties.reported.chillerWaterSettings.status='pending'
    

    You can include a clause that the configuration was applied, for example:

    /* Include the double brackets. */
    SELECT deviceId FROM devices 
      WHERE configurations.[[yourconfigname]].status='Applied'
    

    If you're building a metric to report on configured modules, select moduleId from devices.modules. For example:

    SELECT deviceId, moduleId FROM devices.modules
      WHERE properties.reported.lastDesiredStatus.code = 200
    

Review Configuration

Review your configuration information, then select Submit.

Monitor a configuration

To view the details of a configuration and monitor the devices running it, use the following steps:

  1. In the Azure portal, go to your IoT hub.

  2. Select Configurations in Device management.

  3. Inspect the configuration list. For each configuration, you can view the following details:

    • ID - the name of the configuration.

    • Target condition - the query used to define targeted devices or modules.

    • Priority - the priority number assigned to the configuration.

    • Creation time - the timestamp from when the configuration was created. This timestamp is used to break ties when two configurations have the same priority.

    • System metrics - metrics that are calculated by IoT Hub and cannot be customized by developers. Targeted specifies the number of device twins that match the target condition. Applies specified the number of device twins that have been modified by the configuration, which can include partial modifications in the event that a separate, higher priority configuration also made changes.

    • Custom metrics - metrics that have been specified by the developer as queries against twin reported properties. Up to five custom metrics can be defined per configuration.

  4. Select the configuration that you want to monitor.

  5. Inspect the configuration details. You can use tabs to view specific details about the devices that received the configuration.

    • Target Devices or Target Modules - the devices or modules that match the target condition.

    • Metrics - a list of system metrics and custom metrics. You can view a list of devices or modules that are counted for each metric by selecting the metric in the drop-down and then selecting View Devices or View Modules.

    • Labels - key-value pairs used to describe a configuration. Labels have no impact on functionality.

    • Device Twin Settings or Module Twin Settings - the twin settings that are set by the configuration, if any.

Modify a configuration

When you modify a configuration, the changes immediately replicate to all targeted devices or modules.

If you update the target condition, the following updates occur:

  • If a twin didn't meet the old target condition, but meets the new target condition and this configuration is the highest priority for that twin, then this configuration is applied.

  • If a twin currently running this configuration no longer meets the target condition, the settings from the configuration will be removed and the twin will be modified by the next highest priority configuration.

  • If a twin currently running this configuration no longer meets the target condition and doesn't meet the target condition of any other configurations, then the settings from the configuration will be removed and no other changes will be made on the twin.

To modify a configuration, use the following steps:

  1. In the Azure portal, go to your IoT hub.

  2. Select Configurations + Deployments in Device management.

  3. Select the configuration that you want to modify.

  4. You can make updates to the following fields:

    • Priority
    • Metrics
    • Target condition
    • Labels
  5. Select Save.

  6. Follow the steps in Monitor a configuration to watch the changes roll out.

Delete a configuration

When you delete a configuration, any device twins take on their next highest priority configuration. If device twins don't meet the target condition of any other configuration, then no other settings are applied.

  1. In the Azure portal, go to your IoT hub.

  2. Select Configurations + Deployments in Device management.

  3. Use the checkbox to select the configuration that you want to delete.

  4. Select Delete.

  5. A prompt will ask you to confirm.

Next steps

In this article, you learned how to configure and monitor IoT devices at scale.

To learn how to manage IoT Hub device identities in bulk, see Import and export IoT Hub device identities in bulk