Map Your Digi XBee IoT
Network with Digi XCTU
Digi XCTU® software has a wide range of integrated tools and features for managing Digi XBee® devices on your
IoT network. For example, you can quickly and easily configure Digi XBee devices using XCTU. And other Digi
XBee network management tools in XCTU let you map your network, test the communication range between
modules, program intelligent edge networking behaviors into your modules using MicroPython, perform mass
firmware updates and more.
This whitepaper will do a deep-dive into network mapping, a method for visualizing your network and
manipulating the connectivity between devices.
MAPPING YOUR DIGI XBEE NETWORK
Digi XCTU can display a map of your entire wireless IoT network in
a single graphical layout, including all connections. The network
mapping function of Digi XCTU lets you explore your entire system
wirelessly, and for free. The maps display full Digi XBee IoT networks
live, in real time.
The map indicates each node, and all pathways between radio nodes
are shown with their respective signal strengths.
Additionally, you can reconfigure your Digi XBee device connections
right from the map, making it easy to experiment with and optimize
your network.
A variety of layout and filtering tools help focus on what interests you
most. Network maps can be exported as images or as data tables, for
use in spreadsheets, reports and more.
Let’s talk about how to set up and explore a Zigbee network map
hands-on. Once you learn these simple methodologies, you can
add “wireless cartographer” to your resumé.
PARTS REQUIRED
DIGI KIT, P/N
XK3-Z8S-WZM
LAPTOP OR
DESKTOP
COMPUTER
DIGI XCTU
Note: our examples show a network of 17 digi xbee modules,
to illustrate the powerful mapping feature of digi xctu. We
recommend adding more modules to your test network too, if
you have them.
Map Your Digi XBee IoT Network with Digi XCTU
(continued)
RF PROTOCOLS SUPPORTED
The following guide demonstrates how to set up and map a Zigbee network. It will work with a variety of Digi
XBee devices. For example, we created our larger network with a heterogeneous mix of Digi XBee3, Digi XBee S2
and S2C modules, plus several Digi XBee Wall Routers. Everything works well together, and displays correctly in
the XCTU map.
XCTU can also map Digi XBee 802.15.4 networks, as well as DigiMesh protocol networks, while displaying
appropriate diagnostic information for each protocol. These can be tremendously helpful in designing and
debugging, and everything works in a similar manner to the Zigbee network we explore below.
SET UP YOUR DIGI XBEE NETWORK
Every Zigbee network must have one Coordinator node. You can use XCTU to set up the node using the
instructions from the blog post, Manage Digi XBee Networks Wirelessly with XCTU. Set CE to 1 to enable
the coordinator and AP 2 for API mode with escapes. (For modules prior to the Digi XBee3, load the Zigbee
coordinator API firmware.) To make testing easier, enable unlimited join time by setting NJ to FF.
You will also want to configure some nodes as Zigbee routers. All Digi XBee Zigbee modules ship as routers from
the factory. For a more stable prototyping network, use these settings on your routers:
• Set NJ to FF for unlimited join time.
• Set NW to 14 (20 minutes) to trigger a rejoin if the network is lost.
• Set JV to 1 so that if you switch coordinators, your routers will search for the new one on startup.
These settings entirely optional. They are helpful for lab networks you’ll be running for a while, but for these
examples, the factory-default configuration will work just fine too.
Once all your modules are configured, one XBee device must be directly connected to your computer with an
evaluation board and USB cable. The remaining modules do not need any computer connection. Power them
with a plug-in adapter, battery or USB power supply.
Map Your Digi XBee IoT Network with Digi XCTU
(continued)
SET UP YOUR DIGI XBEE NETWORK (continued)
In our last example, we kept the coordinator radio attached to the computer but there’s no requirement to do
it that way. In most real-world networks the coordinator radio will just be another node on the network, so
for added realism you can connect one of your Zigbee router modules to your computer and join the network
that way. Just be sure to switch the locally-connected XBee into API mode (AP=2). In our examples, we will
demonstrate using a local non-coordinator radio connected to XCTU, as that’s more common.
CONFIGURE END DEVICES - Digi XBee3 End Device Configuration
If you’d like to create some sleeping end devices to explore Zigbee’s power saving modes including parentchild network topographies, you can configure cyclic sleep mode on a Digi XBee3 by setting SM to 4. The other
settings can remain at factory default as illustrated below.
Map Your Digi XBee IoT Network with Digi XCTU
(continued)
LEGACY DIGI XBEE END DEVICE - FIRMWARE CHANGE
For Digi XBee models prior to the Digi XBee3, you can create end devices by loading the Zigbee End Device AT
firmware and resetting the module. This will automatically enable cyclic sleep mode.
Remember that end devices will only talk to their “parent” radio module, a relationship negotiated when the
module starts up. They are not directly part of the mesh so you will only see one connection to the current
parent on the map.
NOTE: You can change firmware over the air in most cases. However in certain situations the
same model hardware must be connected to XCTU as your remote target. If your firmware Update
icon is grayed out and disabled, as shown below, make sure your local and remote Digi XBees
match.
Map Your Digi XBee IoT Network with Digi XCTU
(continued)
LEGACY DIGI XBEE END DEVICE - FIRMWARE CHANGE (continued)
You are ready to go once you have the following set up:
• One Digi XBee configured as a Zigbee coordinator.
• One Digi XBee (Zigbee coordinator or router mode) connected to your computer and configured for API
mode.
• All your remaining Digi XBees configured as either Zigbee routers or end devices, and powered on.
XCTU NETWORK MODE
With a Digi XBee in API mode connected to your computer over USB, launch the Digi XCTU program. Add this
Digi XBee to your Radio Module list using the plus icon in the upper left. Once that radio is in your list, click the
Network mode icon in the upper right to display the mapping screen.
It’s simple to get started. Click on the Scan button to begin a continuous
scan of the Zigbee network. It will start by discovering the locally connected
module. After that, it will scan the network for the remaining modules, then
query each, one at a time, to determine their neighbors and connection
strengths. Whenever additional modules are discovered in this process, they
are added to the map and the scan will be extended to include them.
CHECKING YOUR NETWORK ADDRESSES AND CONNECTIONS
YFor Zigbee networks, you’ll see a link quality indicator (0255) that describes the connection strength in each direction
between the radio modules. This can help in finding weak
connections that might benefit from repositioning, antenna
adjustment or additional mesh routers. Drag the module icons
around to better understand the connections and relationships
that make up your network.
Each Digi XBee module icon shows a role badge and two address
numbers. For Zigbee networks, the role badge at the top will be
C for coordinator, R for router and E for non-routing end device.
The long hexadecimal number in the white box is the 64-bit MAC
or serial number for that node, which is selected at the factory
and unique in the world. The second short hex number is the
Map Your Digi XBee IoT Network with Digi XCTU
(continued)
CHECKING YOUR NETWORK ADDRESSES AND CONNECTIONS (continued)
16-bit network address. This is what the radios store in their network routing tables. It’s assigned at runtime and
unique only for the current network. You can double-click any module’s icon to directly launch configuration
mode for that radio over the air.
Zigbee router and coordinator nodes will have many mesh network connections to each other, usually with
varied link qualities. But you’ll notice that end devices are different. They only connect to a single “parent”
router node that handles all communications for the device when it is sleeping.
FILTERS
Zigbee networks can have a bewildering number of connections.
This is what makes mesh networking so reliable and resilient.
However, it can be confusing to look at all at once. XCTU allows
you to filter the connections displayed based upon their quality. By
selecting filters you can easily determine the best connections in
the mesh or the worst ones, depending upon your task.
Map Your Digi XBee IoT Network with Digi XCTU
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LAYOUTS
Various graphical layouts are available. Try starting with the simple Grid layout to show everything neatly
organized on the screen. Then begin experimenting with the other layouts to see which visual organization
depicts your network topography the best.
SEARCH
The find and zoom features provide additional assistance in managing and navigating the map.
TABLES
The graph view of the network provides excellent information on the layout and relationships between the
network nodes. However, it can become overwhelming as networks get larger, or when the task at hand is better
suited to a sorted list. Table view on the Mode menu will display the network in a spreadsheet view—much
better for networks with hundreds of nodes to sort through.
Map Your Digi XBee IoT Network with Digi XCTU
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SUPPORTING FEATURES - Settings
There are several ways to scan Digi XBee networks, and these depend on the protocol being used. Small Zigbee
networks can be quickly discovered in “flood” mode. Larger ones and DigiMesh networks are better explored
with “cascade” mode to avoid saturating the network with requests. Cascade mode is slower. Other timings can
also be adjusted, though the defaults should work well in most cases.
Map Your Digi XBee IoT Network with Digi XCTU
(continued)
SUPPORTING FEATURES - Exports
XCTU’s maps can be saved and exported in a couple different
ways. You can capture a screenshot by selecting the Screenshot
function on the Tools menu. You can save network map images
as PNG files, or as JPEG or BMP files if desired. This is a great
way to capture information for explanatory presentations,
or to clearly communicate with customers about networking
situations that might otherwise be difficult to understand.
Data can also be exported in tabular format, as a CSV file. This
is perfect for creating spreadsheets or for capturing detailed
debugging and network tuning data into a log repository or
database.
Great visualizations are key to understanding and communicating how a wireless network is structured. Maps
turn abstract descriptions of invisible communications into a concrete picture of relationships that would
otherwise go unseen. Digi XCTU’s graphical layout tools are terrific for finding trouble-spots, enhancing
reliability, removing redundancy, monitoring live changes, and fully documenting your findings. With XCTU’s
impressive array of mapping tools at your command, you’ll become a master of radio network exploration.
Need help with an IoT project? Digi has wireless design and professional services to
help. Contact us.