After the Bluetooth mesh dfu is completed, the distribution network information of the node is cleared

I have implemented DFU functionality in my Bluetooth mesh project and used device A as the distributor and device B as the node to be updated. I have already configured both devices and they can communicate with each other. Then I use the distributor to send new firmware to the node. After the node firmware is successfully updated, the original distribution network information of the node is cleared. At this point, the distributor and the node cannot communicate and need to manually reconfigure the distribution network. How can the original distribution network data be retained during DFU updates?

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  • Hi Illy, 
    Please describe how you did the DFU update ? 
    If you use the phone to send the image please check this similar ticket : BLE Mesh NCS: Provisioned data lost after DFU 

  • Hi

    There are two examples in NCS: Bluetooth mesh distributor and Bluetooth mesh target. I am using these two examples to test the performance of mesh DFU.

    After downloading these two examples to two devices, the first step is to use a mobile phone to send the new firmware of the node to be updated (i.e. the device running the Bluetooth mesh target) to the distributor, and then control the distributor to send the new firmware received from the mobile phone to the node to be updated through a shell command. In other words, the node to be updated will not directly communicate with the mobile phone, but will forward the new firmware from the mobile phone to the node to be updated through the distributor. Therefore, the erase option on the mobile phone has no effect (the erase nvs partition option is turned off by default during updates, and can only be manually enabled to erase nvs partitions, but I have never enabled it)

  • Hi

    it is unprovisioned. Perhaps the translation software I am using is not very accurate for these professional terms.

    What part of the log do you need?

    I'll give it a try later.

  • Hi, 
    You may need to turn on mesh logging on the target device and check for the metadata check there. 
    Have you tried to test with one of our sample ? We are not able to reproduce the issue here. 

  • How to open metadata related logs? I couldn't find the relevant config options

  • HI Illy, 
    If you have 

    CONFIG_LOG=y
    and you have UART/RTT log you should be able to see the log. As far as I can see dfu_target.c uses printk() so you should see the log. 
    What you need to look for is this line inside dfu_target.c: 

    This is the logic when the device decide to unprovision itself or not after DFU update. If the img_effect is 
    BT_MESH_DFU_EFFECT_UNPROV then it will be unprovisioned. 
  • Hi

    I found this log and it does show that after the update, it will become an unprovisioned node

    I now understand why he encountered this situation. When I downloaded the mesh dfu target example to the device and used it to build the generated upgrade package for upgrading, the hash he read and calculated were consistent, and it would not become an unprovisioned device after the upgrade was completed.

    But in my own project, the hash calculated based on the metadata of the upgrade package is different from the hash originally included in the upgrade package, resulting in the device becoming an unconfigured device after the unprovisioned is completed.

    So why do the hashes calculated in my project differ? The metadata I filled in is correct, and I have tried using a distributor example to upgrade the nodes of my project. The computed hash is also different, which indicates that the problem lies in the nodes of my project

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  • Hi

    I found this log and it does show that after the update, it will become an unprovisioned node

    I now understand why he encountered this situation. When I downloaded the mesh dfu target example to the device and used it to build the generated upgrade package for upgrading, the hash he read and calculated were consistent, and it would not become an unprovisioned device after the upgrade was completed.

    But in my own project, the hash calculated based on the metadata of the upgrade package is different from the hash originally included in the upgrade package, resulting in the device becoming an unconfigured device after the unprovisioned is completed.

    So why do the hashes calculated in my project differ? The metadata I filled in is correct, and I have tried using a distributor example to upgrade the nodes of my project. The computed hash is also different, which indicates that the problem lies in the nodes of my project

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