table of contents
| MOSQUITTO_PUB(1) | Commands | MOSQUITTO_PUB(1) |
NAME¶
mosquitto_pub - an MQTT version 5/3.1.1/3.1 client for publishing simple messages
SYNOPSIS¶
mosquitto_pub [options] -t topic {payload-options}
options:
[auth-options] [connection-options] [misc-options] [mqtt-options]
[output-options] [publish-options] [tls-certificate-options |
tls-psk-options]
auth-options:
[-u username] [-P password]
connection-options
{[-h hostname] [--unix socket path] [-p port-number]
| -L URL}
[-A bind-address] [--nodelay] [-S]
[--ws]
[--proxy socks-url]
misc-options:
[-o config-file]
mqtt-options:
[-c]
[-D command identifier value]
[-i client-id]
[-I client-id-prefix]
[-k keepalive-time]
[-x session-expiry-interval]
[-V protocol-version]
[--will-topic topic [--will-payload payload] [--will-qos qos] [--will-retain]]
output-options:
[-d] [--quiet]
payload-options:
-f file | -l | -m message |
-n | -s
publish-options:
[-q message-QoS] [-r]
[--repeat count]
[--repeat-delay seconds]
tls-certificate-options:
[--no-tls]
{--cafile file | --capath dir}
[--tls-use-os-certs]
[--cert file] [--key file]
[--ciphers ciphers] [--insecure]
[--tls-alpn protocol]
[--tls-keylog file]
[--tls-version version]
[--tls-engine engine]
[--keyform {pem | engine}]
[--tls-engine-kpass-sha1 kpass-sha1]
tls-psk-options:
--psk hex-key
--psk-identity identity
[--ciphers ciphers]
[--tls-version version]
mosquitto_pub [--help]
DESCRIPTION¶
mosquitto_pub is a simple MQTT version 5/3.1.1 client that will publish a single message on a topic and exit.
ENCRYPTED CONNECTIONS¶
This client supports TLS encrypted connections. It is strongly recommended that you use an encrypted connection for anything more than the most basic setup.
To enable TLS connections when using x509 certificates, one of either --cafile or --capath can be provided as an option.
Alternatively, if the -p 8883 option is used then the OS provided certificates will be loaded and neither --cafile or --capath are needed.
To enable TLS connections when using TLS-PSK, you must use the --psk and the --psk-identity options.
OPTIONS¶
There are three ways to provide options to mosquitto_pub: the default config file, a specified config file, or options on the command line.
Default Config File¶
The default config file is located at $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/mosquitto_pub or $HOME/.config/mosquitto_pub on POSIX systems, or %USERPROFILE%\mosquitto_pub on Windows.
The contents of the config file should consist of options, one per line in the format: -option value. If options are also specified on the command line, those options will override the same options set in the config file. The exceptions to this are the message type options, of which only one can be specified. Note also that currently some options cannot be negated, e.g. -S. TLS encryption options can be negated with the --no-tls option.
Config file lines that have a # as the first character are treated as comments and not processed any further.
It is suggested that config files are primarily used for authentication purposes. Use of a config file allows you to authenticate without the need to show the username and password on the command line.
Config File¶
Available from version 2.1.
A config file can be specified on the command line using -o config-file. If the -o option is used, the default config file will not be loaded.
The format is the same as for the default config file.
The options¶
-A
-c, --disable-clean-session
When a session is persisted on the broker, the subscriptions for the client will be maintained after it disconnects, along with subsequent QoS 1 and QoS 2 messages that arrive. When the client reconnects and does not clean the session, it will receive all of the queued messages.
If using this option, the client id must be set manually with --id.
--cafile
See also --capath
--capath
For --capath to work correctly, the certificate files must have ".crt" as the file ending and you must run "openssl rehash <path to capath>" each time you add/remove a certificate.
See also --cafile
--cert
See also --key and the Encrypted Connections section.
--ciphers
-d, --debug
-D, --property
-D command identifier value
-D command identifier name value
command is the MQTT command/packet identifier and can be one of CONNECT, PUBLISH, PUBACK, PUBREC, PUBCOMP, SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE, DISCONNECT, AUTH, or WILL. The properties available for each command are listed in the Properties section.
identifier is the name of the property to add. This is as described in the specification, but with '-' as a word separator. For example: payload-format-indicator. More details are in the Properties section.
value is the value of the property to add, with a data type that is property specific.
name is only used for the user-property property as the first of the two strings in the string pair. In that case, value is the second of the strings in the pair.
-f, --file
--help
-h, --host
-i, --id
-I, --id-prefix
--insecure
-k, --keepalive
--key
See also --cert and the Encrypted Connections section.
--keyform
See also --tls-engine.
-L, --url
Depending on the scheme, the port will default to different values. mqtt:// - 1883, mqtts:// - 8883, ws:// - 80, wss:// - 443.
-l, --stdin-line
-m, --message
-n, --null-message
--nodelay
--no-tls
Disable all use of TLS encryption. This is useful if you specify TLS options in a configuration file but want to disable those options. It also stops the automatic use of TLS when connecting to port 8883.
-o config-file
Load options from a config file. See the Default Config File and Config File sections at the start of the Options section.
-p, --port
-P, --pw
See also the --username option.
--proxy
If username is not given, then no authentication is attempted. If the port is not given, then the default of 1080 is used.
If the host is given as an IPv6 address, it must be enclosed in square brackets, e.g. socks5h://[::1]:1080. Note that square brackets have special meaning in some shells, so the proxy url may need quoting in double or single quotes.
More SOCKS versions may be available in the future, depending on demand, and will use different protocol prefixes as described in curl(1).
--psk
--psk-identity
-q, --qos
--quiet
-r, --retain
--repeat
See also --repeat-delay.
--repeat-delay
Note that there is no guarantee as to the actual interval between messages, this option simply defines the minimum time from delivery of one message to the start of the publish of the next.
-s, --stdin-file
-S
-t, --topic
--tls-alpn
--tls-engine
See also --keyform.
--tls-engine-kpass-sha1
See also --tls-engine.
--tls-keylog file
Log TLS connection information to file. This option allows tools such as tcpdump, wireshark and mqttshark to decrypt TLS traffic and inspect the MQTT traffic. In Wireshark this can be done by setting the (Pre)-Master-Secret log filename option for the Transport Layer Security protocol.
This option should be used for debugging only, it must not be used in production.
--tls-use-os-certs
--tls-version
-u, --username
See also the --pw argument.
--unix
See the socket_domain option in mosquitto.conf(5) to configure Mosquitto to listen on a unix socket.
-V, --protocol-version
--will-payload
--will-qos
--will-retain
--will-topic
--ws
-x
If the session is set to never expire, either with -x or -c, then a client id must be provided.
WILLS¶
The client can register a message with the broker that will be sent out if it disconnects unexpectedly. See mqtt(7) for more information.
The minimum requirement for this is to use --will-topic to specify which topic the will should be sent out on. This will result in a non-retained, zero length message with QoS 0.
Use the --will-retain, --will-payload and --will-qos arguments to modify the other will parameters.
PROPERTIES¶
The -D / --property option allows adding properties to different stages of the mosquitto_pub run. The properties supported for each command are as follows:
Connect¶
Publish¶
Disconnect¶
Will properties¶
EXIT STATUS¶
Zero on success, or non-zero on error. If the connection is refused by the broker at the MQTT level, then the exit code is the CONNACK reason code. If another error occurs, the exit code is a libmosquitto return value.
MQTT v3.1.1 CONNACK codes:
MQTT v5 CONNACK codes:
Other codes:
EXAMPLES¶
Publish temperature information to localhost with QoS 1:
Publish timestamp and temperature information to a remote host on a non-standard port and QoS 0:
Publish light switch status. Message is set to retained because there may be a long period of time between light switch events:
Send the contents of a file in two ways:
Send parsed electricity usage data from a Current Cost meter, reading from stdin with one line/reading as one message:
Power on an appliance using zigbee2mqtt and an appropriately configured power socket:
FILES¶
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/mosquitto_pub, $HOME/.config/mosquitto_pub, $HOME/snap/mosquitto/current/.config/mosquitto_pub (for snap installs)
BUGS¶
mosquitto bug information can be found at https://github.com/eclipse-mosquitto/mosquitto/issues
SEE ALSO¶
mosquitto(7), mqtt(7), mosquitto_rr(1), mosquitto_sub(1), mosquitto(8), libmosquitto(3), mosquitto-tls(7)
AUTHOR¶
Roger Light <roger@atchoo.org>
| 05/14/2026 | Mosquitto Project |