--- layout: page title: "Mosquitto MQTT broker" description: "Fast and reliable MQTT broker." date: 2017-04-30 13:28 sidebar: true comments: false sharing: true footer: true featured: true --- Set up [Mosquitto](https://mosquitto.org/) as MQTT broker. ```json { "plain": true, "ssl": false, "anonymous": true, "logins": [ {"username": "testuser", "password": "mypw"} ], "customize": { "active": false, "folder": "mosquitto" }, "certfile": "fullchain.pem", "keyfile": "privkey.pem" } ```
Make sure you use logins and disable anonymous access if you want to secure the system.
Configuration variables: - **plain** (*Optional*): Listen on port 1883 without SSL/TLS. Defaults to `true`. - **ssl** (*Optional*): Listen on port 8883 with SSL/TLS. This requires certificates. Defaults to `false`. - **anonymous** (*Optional*): Allow anonymous connections. If *logins* is set, the anonymous user can only read data. Defaults to `true`. - **logins** (*Optional*): A list of users that will be created with *username* and *password*. - **customize** (*Optional*): If you enable it, it reads additional configuration files (`*.conf`) from `/share/mosquitto`. ### {% linkable_title Home Assistant configuration %} To use the Mosquitto as [broker](/docs/mqtt/broker/#run-your-own) add the following entry to the `configuration.yaml` file. ```yaml # Example configuration.yaml entry mqtt: broker: core-mosquitto ``` If username and password are set up in add-on, your `configuration.yaml` file should contain that data. ```yaml mqtt: broker: core-mosquitto username: YOUR_USERNAME password: YOUR_PASSWORD ```