- 1- Activate
- 2- Deploy
- 3- Integrate
- 4- Maintain
1- ACTIVATE
Enable the embedded LoRaWAN server
From the gateway interface:
- Select an operating mode (in this case, LoRa server).
- Complete the settings specific to this mode.
1- ACTIVATE
Access the embedded LoRaWAN server
When the embedded LoRaWAN server is enabled, open the network server from the web interface and log in with the LoRaWAN server credentials you just set up.
2- DEPLOY
View your gateway fleet
The IRIS gateway is automatically pre-registered on the LoRa server interface, where you can view its details.
From this same interface, you can also view other gateways that send their frames to this LoRaWAN server via the Semtech UDP Packet Forwarder.
2- DEPLOY
Create/configure an application
The application groups LoRaWAN devices by usage, location or type, and forwards their data to the same server. By default, an application is created when the gateway is registered on the LoRa server.
From the ‘Application details’ menu, you can:
- “Devices”: view the device list and add a new device (Add device),
- “Multicast groups”: create and manage multicast groups, assign devices, and schedule multicast downlinks,
- “Relays”: manage relay nodes and the devices operating through a relay,
- “Application configuration”: edit application settings such as name and description.
2- DEPLOY
Create/assign a device profile
To register a sensor on the gateway, you must associate it with an equipment profile. The server uses this profile to interpret uplinks, queue downlinks and display measurements.
Adeunis sensor profiles are preloaded on the LoRaWAN server. For all other third-party sensors, you can easily create a profile using the information provided by the sensor manufacturer.
2- DEPLOY
Register a device
Once your Application and Device Profiles are in place, you can now register devices on the embedded LoRaWAN server.
2- DEPLOY
Declare a batch of sensors
You can also perform bulk imports.
2- DEPLOY
Power up the device
At this point, all that’s left is to power up the sensor. It will join the network, and you’ll start seeing frames coming in live.
Here, an Adeunis COMFORT sensor, started via the IoT Configurator application.
3- INTEGRATE
Send a downlink from the server
To change a sensor configuration parameter, you can easily send a downlink from the server.
You can also configure a multicast group to send the same command to multiple sensors in a single operation.
3- INTEGRATE
Route data to an IoT platform
Once the LoRaWAN network is configured and the gateway and sensors are online on the LoRa server, all that remains is to send the decoded (or undecoded) frames from the devices to your IoT platform via MQTT/MQTT(s) or HTTP/HTTP(s).
You can also activate and configure a JSON transformation script to adapt the data format to the platform.
4- MAINTAIN
Maintaining operational condition
In the Maintenance section, you will find the following MCO functions:
- Periodic auto-reset if the customer requests scheduled reboots,
- AT commands to troubleshoot the cellular link,
- Syslog to view and export logs,
- Backup & Restore: after commissioning, export the configuration and store it with the site documentation,
- Firmware upgrade: a controlled update process—always take a backup first.

