# Matter nRF Connect Window Covering Example Application
The nRF Connect Window Covering Example demonstrates how to remotely control a
window shutter device. It uses buttons to test changing cover position and
device states and LEDs to show the state of these changes. You can use this
example as a reference for creating your own application.
The example is based on
[Matter](https://github.com/project-chip/connectedhomeip) and Nordic
Semiconductor's nRF Connect SDK, and supports remote access and control of a
simulated window shutter over a low-power, 802.15.4 Thread network.
The example behaves as a Matter accessory, that is a device that can be paired
into an existing Matter network and can be controlled by this network.
- [Overview](#overview)
- [Bluetooth LE advertising](#bluetooth-le-advertising)
- [Bluetooth LE rendezvous](#bluetooth-le-rendezvous)
- [Device Firmware Upgrade](#device-firmware-upgrade)
- [Requirements](#requirements)
- [Supported devices](#supported-devices)
- [Device UI](#device-ui)
- [Setting up the environment](#setting-up-the-environment)
- [Using Docker container for setup](#using-docker-container-for-setup)
- [Using native shell for setup](#using-native-shell-for-setup)
- [Building](#building)
- [Removing build artifacts](#removing-build-artifacts)
- [Building with release configuration](#building-with-release-configuration)
- [Building with Device Firmware Upgrade support](#building-with-device-firmware-upgrade-support)
- [Configuring the example](#configuring-the-example)
- [Example build types](#example-build-types)
- [Flashing and debugging](#flashing-and-debugging)
- [Testing the example](#testing-the-example)
- [Testing using Linux CHIPTool](#testing-using-linux-chiptool)
- [Testing using Android CHIPTool](#testing-using-android-chiptool)
- [Testing Device Firmware Upgrade](#testing-device-firmware-upgrade)
## Overview
This example is running on the nRF Connect platform, which is based on Nordic
Semiconductor's
[nRF Connect SDK](https://developer.nordicsemi.com/nRF_Connect_SDK/doc/latest/nrf/index.html)
and [Zephyr RTOS](https://zephyrproject.org/). Visit Matter's
[nRF Connect platform overview](../../../guides/nrfconnect_platform_overview.md)
to read more about the platform structure and dependencies.
The Matter device that runs the window shutter application is controlled by the
Matter controller device over the Thread protocol. By default, the Matter
accessory device has IPv6 networking disabled. You must pair it with the Matter
controller over Bluetooth® LE to get the configuration from the controller to
use the device within a Thread or Wi-Fi network. You have to make the device
discoverable manually (for security reasons). See
[Bluetooth LE advertising](#bluetooth-le-advertising) to learn how to do this.
The controller must get the commissioning information from the Matter accessory
device and provision the device into the network.
You can test this application remotely over the Thread or the Wi-Fi protocol,
which in either case requires more devices, including a Matter controller that
you can configure either on a PC or a mobile device.
### Bluetooth LE advertising
In this example, to commission the device onto a Matter network, it must be
discoverable over Bluetooth LE. For security reasons, you must start Bluetooth
LE advertising manually after powering up the device by pressing **Button 4**.
### Bluetooth LE rendezvous
In this example, the commissioning procedure is done over Bluetooth LE between a
Matter device and the Matter controller, where the controller has the
commissioner role.
To start the rendezvous, the controller must get the commissioning information
from the Matter device. The data payload is encoded within a QR code, printed to
the UART console, and shared using an NFC tag. NFC tag emulation starts
automatically when Bluetooth LE advertising is started and stays enabled until
Bluetooth LE advertising timeout expires.
#### Thread provisioning
Last part of the rendezvous procedure, the provisioning operation involves
sending the Thread network credentials from the Matter controller to the Matter
device. As a result, device is able to join the Thread network and communicate
with other Thread devices in the network.
### Device Firmware Upgrade
The example supports over-the-air (OTA) device firmware upgrade (DFU) using the
Matter OTA update, which is mandatory for Matter-compliant devices and enabled
by default.
For this method, the
[MCUboot](https://developer.nordicsemi.com/nRF_Connect_SDK/doc/latest/mcuboot/index.html)
bootloader solution is used to replace the old firmware image with the new one.
#### Matter Over-the-Air Update
The Matter over-the-air update distinguishes two types of nodes: OTA Provider
and OTA Requestor.
An OTA Provider is a node that hosts a new firmware image and is able to respond
on an OTA Requestor's queries regarding availability of new firmware images or
requests to start sending the update packages.
An OTA Requestor is a node that wants to download a new firmware image and sends
requests to an OTA Provider to start the update process.
#### Simple Management Protocol
Simple Management Protocol (SMP) is a basic transfer encoding that is used for
device management purposes, including application image management. SMP supports
using different transports, such as Bluetooth LE, UDP, or serial USB/UART.
In this example, the Matter device runs the SMP Server to download the
application update image using the Bluetooth LE transport.
See the
[Building with Device Firmware Upgrade support](#building-with-device-firmware-upgrade-support)
section to learn how to enable SMP and use it for the DFU purpose in this
example.
#### Bootloader
MCUboot is a secure bootloader used for swapping firmware images of different
versions and generating proper build output files that can be used in the device
firmware upgrade process.
The bootloader solution requires an area of flash memory to swap application
images during the firmware upgrade. Nordic Semiconductor devices use an external
memory chip for this purpose. The memory chip communicates with the
microcontroller through the QSPI bus.
See the
[Building with Device Firmware Upgrade support](#building-with-device-firmware-upgrade-support)
section to learn how to change MCUboot and flash configuration in this example.
## Requirements
The application requires a specific revision of the nRF Connect SDK to work
correctly. See [Setting up the environment](#setting-up-the-environment) for
more information.
### Supported devices
The example supports building and running on the following devices:
| Hardware platform | Build target | Platform image |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | -------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| [nRF52840 DK](https://www.nordicsemi.com/Software-and-Tools/Development-Kits/nRF52840-DK) | `nrf52840dk_nrf52840` | nRF52840 DK
|
| [nRF5340 DK](https://www.nordicsemi.com/Software-and-Tools/Development-Kits/nRF5340-DK) | `nrf5340dk_nrf5340_cpuapp` | nRF5340 DK
|
## Device UI
This section lists the User Interface elements that you can use to control and
monitor the state of the device. These correspond to PCB components on the
platform image.
**LED 1** shows the overall state of the device and its connectivity. The
following states are possible:
- _Short Flash On (50 ms on/950 ms off)_ — The device is in the
unprovisioned (unpaired) state and is waiting for a commissioning
application to connect.
- _Rapid Even Flashing (100 ms on/100 ms off)_ — The device is in the
unprovisioned state and a commissioning application is connected through
Bluetooth LE.
- _Short Flash Off (950ms on/50ms off)_ — The device is fully
provisioned, but does not yet have full connectivity for Thread or Wi-Fi
network.
- _Solid On_ — The device is fully provisioned and has full Thread
network and service connectivity.
**LED 2** indicates the lift position of the shutter, which is represented by
the brightness of the LED. The brightness level ranges from 0 to 255, where the
switched off LED with brightness level 0 indicates a fully opened shutter
(lifted) and 255 indicates a fully closed shutter (lowered).
**LED 3** indicates the tilt position of the shutter, which is represented by
the brightness of the LED. The brightness level ranges from 0 to 255, where the
switched off LED with brightness level 0 indicates a fully opened shutter
(tilted to a horizontal position) and 255 indicates a fully closed shutter
(tilted to a vertical position).
**Button 1** can be used for the following purposes:
- _Pressed for 6 s_ — Initiates the factory reset of the device.
Releasing the button within the 6-second window cancels the factory reset
procedure. **LED 1** and **LED 4** blink in unison when the factory reset
procedure is initiated.
- _Pressed for less than 3 s_ — Initiates the OTA software update
process. This feature is disabled by default, but can be enabled by
following the
[Building with Device Firmware Upgrade support](#building-with-device-firmware-upgrade-support)
instruction.
**Button 2** — Pressing the button once moves the shutter towards the open
position by one step. Depending on the current movement mode, the button
decreases the brightness of **LED2** for the lift mode and **LED3** for the tilt
mode.
**Button 3** — Pressing the button once moves the shutter towards the
closed position by one step. Depending on the current movement mode, the button
increases the brightness of **LED2** for the lift mode and **LED3** for the tilt
mode.
**Button 2** and **Button 3** — Pressing both buttons at the same time
toggles the shutter movement mode between lift and tilt. After each device
reset, the mode is set to lift by default.
> **Note**:
>
> Completely opening and closing the shutter requires 20 button presses (steps).
> Each step takes approximately 200 ms to simulate the real shutter movement.
> The shutter position and LED brightness values are stored in non-volatile
> memory and are restored after every device reset. After the firmware update or
> factory reset both LEDs are switched off by default, which corresponds to the
> shutter being fully open, both lift-wise and tilt-wise.
**Button 4** — Pressing the button once starts the NFC tag emulation and
enables Bluetooth LE advertising for the predefined period of time (15 minutes
by default).
**SEGGER J-Link USB port** can be used to get logs from the device or
communicate with it using the
[command line interface](../../../guides/nrfconnect_examples_cli.md).
**NFC port with antenna attached** can be used to start the
[rendezvous](#bluetooth-le-rendezvous) by providing the commissioning
information from the Matter device in a data payload that can be shared using
NFC.
## Setting up the environment
Before building the example, check out the Matter repository and sync submodules
using the following command:
$ git submodule update --init
The example requires a specific revision of the nRF Connect SDK. You can either
install it along with the related tools directly on your system or use a Docker
image that has the tools pre-installed.
If you are a macOS user, you won't be able to use the Docker container to flash
the application onto a Nordic development kit due to
[certain limitations of Docker for macOS](https://docs.docker.com/docker-for-mac/faqs/#can-i-pass-through-a-usb-device-to-a-container).
Use the [native shell](#using-native-shell-for-setup) for building instead.
### Using Docker container for setup
To use the Docker container for setup, complete the following steps:
1. If you do not have the nRF Connect SDK installed yet, create a directory for
it by running the following command:
$ mkdir ~/nrfconnect
2. Download the latest version of the nRF Connect SDK Docker image by running
the following command:
$ docker pull nordicsemi/nrfconnect-chip
3. Start Docker with the downloaded image by running the following command,
customized to your needs as described below:
$ docker run --rm -it -e RUNAS=$(id -u) -v ~/nrfconnect:/var/ncs -v ~/connectedhomeip:/var/chip \
-v /dev/bus/usb:/dev/bus/usb --device-cgroup-rule "c 189:* rmw" nordicsemi/nrfconnect-chip
In this command:
- _~/nrfconnect_ can be replaced with an absolute path to the nRF Connect
SDK source directory.
- _~/connectedhomeip_ must be replaced with an absolute path to the CHIP
source directory.
- _-v /dev/bus/usb:/dev/bus/usb --device-cgroup-rule "c 189:_ rmw"\*
parameters can be omitted if you are not planning to flash the example
onto hardware. These parameters give the container access to USB devices
connected to your computer such as the nRF52840 DK.
- _--rm_ can be omitted if you do not want the container to be
auto-removed when you exit the container shell session.
- _-e RUNAS=\$(id -u)_ is needed to start the container session as the
current user instead of root.
4. Update the nRF Connect SDK to the most recent supported revision, by running
the following command:
$ cd /var/chip
$ python3 scripts/setup/nrfconnect/update_ncs.py --update
Now you can proceed with the [Building](#building) instruction.
### Using native shell for setup
To use the native shell for setup, complete the following steps:
1. Download and install the following additional software:
- [nRF Command Line Tools](https://www.nordicsemi.com/Software-and-Tools/Development-Tools/nRF-Command-Line-Tools)
- [GN meta-build system](https://gn.googlesource.com/gn/)
2. If you do not have the nRF Connect SDK installed, follow the
[guide](https://developer.nordicsemi.com/nRF_Connect_SDK/doc/latest/nrf/gs_assistant.html#)
in the nRF Connect SDK documentation to install the latest stable nRF
Connect SDK version. Since command-line tools will be used for building the
example, installing SEGGER Embedded Studio is not required.
If you have the SDK already installed, continue to the next step and update
the nRF Connect SDK after initializing environment variables.
3. Initialize environment variables referred to by the CHIP and the nRF Connect
SDK build scripts. Replace _nrfconnect-dir_ with the path to your nRF
Connect SDK installation directory, and _toolchain-dir_ with the path to GNU
Arm Embedded Toolchain.
$ source nrfconnect-dir/zephyr/zephyr-env.sh
$ export ZEPHYR_TOOLCHAIN_VARIANT=gnuarmemb
$ export GNUARMEMB_TOOLCHAIN_PATH=toolchain-dir
4. Update the nRF Connect SDK to the most recent supported revision by running
the following command (replace _matter-dir_ with the path to Matter
repository directory):
$ cd matter-dir
$ python3 scripts/setup/nrfconnect/update_ncs.py --update
Now you can proceed with the [Building](#building) instruction.
## Building
Complete the following steps, regardless of the method used for setting up the
environment:
1. Navigate to the example's directory:
$ cd examples/window-app/nrfconnect
2. Run the following command to build the example, with _build-target_ replaced
with the build target name of the Nordic Semiconductor's kit you own, for
example `nrf52840dk_nrf52840`:
$ west build -b build-target
You only need to specify the build target on the first build. See
[Requirements](#requirements) for the build target names of compatible kits.
The output `zephyr.hex` file will be available in the `build/zephyr/` directory.
### Removing build artifacts
If you're planning to build the example for a different kit or make changes to
the configuration, remove all build artifacts before building. To do so, use the
following command:
$ rm -r build
### Building with release configuration
To build the example with release configuration that disables the diagnostic
features like logs and command-line interface, run the following command:
$ west build -b build-target -- -DCONF_FILE=prj_release.conf
Remember to replace _build-target_ with the build target name of the Nordic
Semiconductor's kit you own.
### Building with Device Firmware Upgrade support
Support for DFU using Matter OTA is enabled by default.
To enable DFU over Bluetooth LE, run the following command with _build-target_
replaced with the build target name of the Nordic Semiconductor kit you are
using (for example `nrf52840dk_nrf52840`):
```
$ west build -b build-target -- -DCONFIG_CHIP_DFU_OVER_BT_SMP=y
```
To completely disable support for DFU, run the following command with
_build-target_ replaced with the build target name of the Nordic Semiconductor
kit you are using (for example `nrf52840dk_nrf52840`):
$ west build -b build-target -- -DCONF_FILE=prj_no_dfu.conf
> **Note**:
>
> There are two types of Device Firmware Upgrade modes: single-image DFU and
> multi-image DFU. Single-image mode supports upgrading only one firmware image,
> the application image, and should be used for single-core nRF52840 DK devices.
> Multi-image mode allows to upgrade more firmware images and is suitable for
> upgrading the application core and network core firmware in two-core nRF5340
> DK devices.
#### Changing bootloader configuration
To change the default MCUboot configuration, edit the `prj.conf` file located in
the `child_image/mcuboot` directory.
Make sure to keep the configuration consistent with changes made to the
application configuration. This is necessary for the configuration to work, as
the bootloader image is a separate application from the user application and it
has its own configuration file.
#### Changing flash memory settings
In the default configuration, the MCUboot uses the
[Partition Manager](https://developer.nordicsemi.com/nRF_Connect_SDK/doc/latest/nrf/scripts/partition_manager/partition_manager.html#partition-manager)
to configure flash partitions used for the bootloader application image slot
purposes. You can change these settings by defining
[static partitions](https://developer.nordicsemi.com/nRF_Connect_SDK/doc/latest/nrf/scripts/partition_manager/partition_manager.html#ug-pm-static).
This example uses this option to define using an external flash.
To modify the flash settings of your board (that is, your _build-target_, for
example `nrf52840dk_nrf52840`), edit the `pm_static_dfu.yml` file located in the
`configuration/build-target/` directory.
## Configuring the example
The Zephyr ecosystem is based on Kconfig files and the settings can be modified
using the menuconfig utility.
To open the menuconfig utility, run the following command from the example
directory:
$ west build -b build-target -t menuconfig
Remember to replace _build-target_ with the build target name of the Nordic
Semiconductor's kit you own.
Changes done with menuconfig will be lost if the `build` directory is deleted.
To make them persistent, save the configuration options in the `prj.conf` file.
### Example build types
The example uses different configuration files depending on the supported
features. Configuration files are provided for different build types and they
are located in the application root directory.
The `prj.conf` file represents a debug build type. Other build types are covered
by dedicated files with the build type added as a suffix to the prj part, as per
the following list. For example, the release build type file name is
`prj_release.conf`. If a board has other configuration files, for example
associated with partition layout or child image configuration, these follow the
same pattern.
Before you start testing the application, you can select one of the build types
supported by the sample. This sample supports the following build types,
depending on the selected board:
- debug — Debug version of the application - can be used to enable
additional features for verifying the application behavior, such as logs or
command-line shell.
- release — Release version of the application - can be used to enable
only the necessary application functionalities to optimize its performance.
- no_dfu — Debug version of the application without Device Firmware
Upgrade feature support - can be used only for the nRF52840 DK and nRF5340
DK, as those platforms have DFU enabled by default.
For more information, see the
[Configuring nRF Connect SDK examples](../../../guides/nrfconnect_examples_configuration.md)
page.
## Flashing and debugging
To flash the application to the device, use the west tool and run the following
command from the example directory:
$ west flash --erase
If you have multiple development kits connected, west will prompt you to pick
the correct one.
To debug the application on target, run the following command from the example
directory:
$ west debug
## Testing the example
Check the [CLI tutorial](../../../guides/nrfconnect_examples_cli.md) to
learn how to use command-line interface of the application.
### Testing using Linux CHIPTool
Read the [CHIP Tool user guide](../../../guides/chip_tool_guide.md) to see
how to use [CHIP Tool for Linux or mac OS](../../chip-tool/README.md) to
commission and control the application within a Matter-enabled Thread network.
### Testing using Android CHIPTool
Read the
[Android commissioning guide](../../../guides/nrfconnect_android_commissioning.md)
to see how to use [CHIPTool](https://github.com/project-chip/connectedhomeip/blob/master/examples/android/CHIPTool/README.md) for
Android smartphones to commission and control the application within a
Matter-enabled Thread network.
### Testing Device Firmware Upgrade
Read the
[DFU tutorial](../../../guides/nrfconnect_examples_software_update.md) to
see how to upgrade your device firmware.