lora-serialization v3.0.1
LoRaWAN serialization/deserialization library for The Things Network
This fully unit-tested library allows you to encode your data on the Arduino side and decode it on the TTN side. It provides both a C-based encoder and a JavaScript-based decoder.
Since version 2.2.0 there is also an encoder for the TTN side.
In short
Encoding on Arduino, decoding in TTN
Arduino side:
#include "LoraMessage.h"
LoraMessage message;
message
    .addUnixtime(1467632413)
    .addLatLng(-33.905052, 151.26641);
lora_send_bytes(message.getBytes(), message.getLength());
delete message;TTN side:
// include src/decoder.js
var json = decode(bytes, [unixtime, latLng], ['time', 'coords']);
// json == {time: unixtime, coords: [latitude, longitude]}Encoding in TTN
TTN side:
// include src/encoder.js
var bytes = encode([timestamp, [latitude, longitude]], [unixtime, latLng]);
// bytes is of type BufferWith the convenience class
// include src/encoder.js
// include src/LoraMessage.js
var bytes = new LoraMessage(encoder)
    .addUnixtime(1467632413)
    .addLatLng(-33.905052, 151.26641)
    .addBitmap(true, true, false, true)
    .getBytes();
// bytes = <Buffer 1d 4b 7a 57 64 a6 fa fd 6a 24 04 09 d0>and then decoding as usual:
var result = decoder.decode(
    bytes,
    [decoder.unixtime, decoder.latLng, decoder.bitmap],
    ['time', 'coords', 'heaters']
);
// result =
// { time: 1467632413,
//  coords: [ -33.905052, 151.26641 ],
//  heaters:
//   { a: true,
//     b: true,
//     c: false,
//     d: true,
//     e: false,
//     f: false,
//     g: false,
//     h: false } }General Usage
Unix time (4 bytes)
Serializes/deserializes a unix time (seconds)
#include "LoraEncoder.h"
byte buffer[4];
LoraEncoder encoder(buffer);
encoder.writeUnixtime(1467632413);
// buffer == {0x1d, 0x4b, 0x7a, 0x57}and then in the TTN frontend, use the following method:
unixtime(bytes.slice(x, x + 4)) // 1467632413GPS coordinates (8 bytes)
Serializes/deserializes coordinates (latitude/longitude) with a precision of 6 decimals.
#include "LoraEncoder.h"
byte buffer[8];
LoraEncoder encoder(buffer);
encoder.writeLatLng(-33.905052, 151.26641);
// buffer == {0x64, 0xa6, 0xfa, 0xfd, 0x6a, 0x24, 0x04, 0x09}and then in the TTN frontend, use the following method:
latLng(bytes.slice(x, x + 8)) // [-33.905052, 151.26641]Unsigned 8bit Integer (1 byte)
Serializes/deserializes an unsigned 8bit integer.
#include "LoraEncoder.h"
byte buffer[1];
LoraEncoder encoder(buffer);
uint8_t i = 10;
encoder.writeUint8(i);
// buffer == {0x0A}and then in the TTN frontend, use the following method:
uint8(bytes.slice(x, x + 1)) // 10Unsigned 16bit Integer (2 bytes)
Serializes/deserializes an unsigned 16bit integer.
#include "LoraEncoder.h"
byte buffer[2];
LoraEncoder encoder(buffer);
uint16_t i = 23453;
encoder.writeUint16(i);
// buffer == {0x9d, 0x5b}and then in the TTN frontend, use the following method:
uint16(bytes.slice(x, x + 2)) // 23453Temperature (2 bytes)
Serializes/deserializes a temperature reading between -327.68 and +327.67 (inclusive) with a precision of 2 decimals.
#include "LoraEncoder.h"
byte buffer[2];
LoraEncoder encoder(buffer);
encoder.writeTemperature(-123.45);
// buffer == {0xcf, 0xc7}and then in the TTN frontend, use the following method:
temperature(bytes.slice(x, x + 2)) // -123.45Humidity (2 bytes)
Serializes/deserializes a humidity reading between 0 and 100 (inclusive) with a precision of 2 decimals.
#include "LoraEncoder.h"
byte buffer[2];
LoraEncoder encoder(buffer);
encoder.writeHumidity(99.99);
// buffer == {0x0f, 0x27}and then in the TTN frontend, use the following method:
humidity(bytes.slice(x, x + 2)) // 99.99Bitmap (1 byte)
Serializes/deserializes a bitmap containing between 0 and 8 different flags.
#include "LoraEncoder.h"
byte buffer[1];
LoraEncoder encoder(buffer);
encoder.writeBitmap(true, false, false, false, false, false, false, false);
// buffer == {0x80}and then in the TTN frontend, use the following method:
bitmap(bytes.slice(x, x + 1)) // { a: true, b: false, c: false, d: false, e: false, f: false, g: false, h: false }Composition
On the Arduino side
The decoder allows you to write more than one value to a byte array:
#include "LoraEncoder.h"
byte buffer[19];
LoraEncoder encoder(buffer);
encoder.writeUnixtime(1467632413);
encoder.writeLatLng(-33.905052, 151.26641);
encoder.writeUint8(10);
encoder.writeUint16(23453);
encoder.writeTemperature(80.12);
encoder.writeHumidity(99.99);
encoder.writeBitmap(true, false, false, false, false, false, false, false);
/* buffer == {
    0x1d, 0x4b, 0x7a, 0x57, // Unixtime
    0x64, 0xa6, 0xfa, 0xfd, 0x6a, 0x24, 0x04, 0x09, // latitude,longitude
    0x0A, // Uint8
    0x9d, 0x5b, // Uint16
    0x1f, 0x4c, // temperature
    0x0f, 0x27, // humidity
    0x80 // bitmap
}
*/Convenience class LoraMessage
There is a convenience class that represents a LoraMessage that you can add readings to:
#include "LoraMessage.h"
LoraMessage message;
message
    .addUnixtime(1467632413)
    .addLatLng(-33.905052, 151.26641)
    .addUint8(10)
    .addUint16(23453)
    .addTemperature(80.12)
    .addHumidity(99.99)
    .addBitmap(false, false, false, false, false, false, true, false);
send(message.getBytes(), message.getLength());
/*
getBytes() == {
    0x1d, 0x4b, 0x7a, 0x57, // Unixtime
    0x64, 0xa6, 0xfa, 0xfd, 0x6a, 0x24, 0x04, 0x09, // latitude,longitude
    0x0A, // Uint8
    0x9d, 0x5b, // Uint16
    0x1f, 0x4c, // temperature
    0x0f, 0x27, // humidity
    0xfd // Bitmap
}
and
getLength() == 20
*/Composition in the TTN decoder frontend with the decode method
The decode method allows you to specify a mask for the incoming byte buffer (that was generated by this library) and apply decoding functions accordingly.
decode(byte Array, mask Array [,mapping Array])Example
Paste everything from src/decoder.js into the decoder method and use like this:
function (bytes) {
    // code from src/decoder.js here
    return decode(bytes, [latLng, unixtime], ['coords', 'time']);
}This maps the incoming byte buffer of 12 bytes to a sequence of one latLng (8 bytes) and one unixtime (4 bytes) sequence and maps the first one to a key coords and the second to a key time.
You can use: 64 A6 FA FD 6A 24 04 09 1D 4B 7A 57 for testing, and it will result in:
{
  "coords": [
    -33.905052,
    151.26641
  ],
  "time": 1467632413
}Example decoder in the TTN console
Set up your decoder in the console:

Example converter in the TTN console
The decode method already does most of the necessary transformations, so in most cases you can just pass the data through:

Development
- Install the dependencies via 
yarn - Run the unit tests (C) via 
yarn run test:c - Run the unit tests (JavaScript) via 
yarn test - Check the coverage (JavaScript) via 
yarn coverage(seecoverage/lcov-report) 
The CI will kick off once you create a pull request automatically.