20

I'm trying to connect to a BLE device (Heart rate sensor, Polar H7), on a Raspberry Pi 2. I use the last version of bluez (5.35) found here: http://www.bluez.org/download/ But when I'm trying to connect using gatttool, I always have "connection refused" error.

Here is what I do :

pi@raspberrypi ~ $ sudo su
root@raspberrypi:/home/pi# hciconfig dev
hci0:   Type: BR/EDR  Bus: USB
        BD Address: 5C:F3:70:69:54:3D  ACL MTU: 1021:8 SCO MTU: 64:1
        DOWN
        RX bytes:616 acl:0 sco:0 events:34 errors:0
        TX bytes:380 acl:0 sco:0 commands:34 errors:0

root@raspberrypi:/home/pi# hciconfig dev up
root@raspberrypi:/home/pi# hcitool lescan
LE Scan ...
00:22:D0:6D:E0:E6 (unknown)
00:22:D0:6D:E0:E6 Polar H7 6DE0E61C
^Croot@raspberrypi:/home/pi# hcitool lecc 00:22:D0:6D:E0:E6
Connection handle 64
root@raspberrypi:/home/pi# gatttool -b 00:22:D0:6D:E0:E6 -I
[00:22:D0:6D:E0:E6][LE]> connect
Attempting to connect to 00:22:D0:6D:E0:E6
Error connect: Connection refused (111)
[00:22:D0:6D:E0:E6][LE]> 

I tried to follow this topic: BLE gatttool cannot connect even though device is discoverable with hcitool lescan but it did not work for me.

1
  • If you have Bluez, why not just use bluetoothctl?
    – Zimano
    Commented Oct 27, 2015 at 15:17

7 Answers 7

42

I was able to connect via Bluetooth from Raspberry to my Android device using gatttool after setting the LE address type to random with the -t random argument, i.e. :

sudo gatttool -t random -b DD:9D:0B:43:A1:77 -I
connect

From gatttool man

--t, ---addr-type=[public | random] 
# Set LE address type. Default: public

USAGE gatttool [OPTION...]

 Help Options:
     -h, --help                                  Show help options
     -h, --help                                  Show help options
     --help-all                                  Show all help options
     --help-gatt                                 Show all GATT commands
     --help-params                               Show  all  Primary  Services/Characteristics
   arguments
     --help-char-read-write                       Show  all  Characteristics Value/Descriptor
   Read/Write arguments

   Application Options:
     --i, ---adapter=hciX                        Specify local adapter interface
     --b, ---device=MAC                          Specify remote Bluetooth address
     --t, ---addr-type=[public | random]         Set LE address type. Default: public
     --m, ---mtu=MTU                             Specify the MTU size
     --p, ---psm=PSM                             Specify the PSM for GATT/ATT over BR/EDR
     --l, ---sec-level=[low | medium | high]     Set security level. Default: low
     --I, ---interactive                         Use interactive mode
1
  • 1
    What if someone did all of the things in this post? Turning on BLE, using -t random and the connection is still refused? Asking for a friend.
    – Panossa
    Commented Jun 21, 2022 at 8:44
6

By default GATT is not enable. Add the below lines to /etc/bluetooth/main.conf

EnableLE = true           // Enable Low Energy support. Default is false.
AttributeServer = true    // Enable the GATT attribute server. Default is false.
2

I got it running with:

btmgmt le on
1

I had to disable the plugin pnat in /etc/bluetooth/main.conf -> DisablePlugins=pnat. I read that it's unstable, but I don't know much about this plugin.

1
  • 1
    Good grief, this is the most underrated answer ever! This solved every problem I had on a Raspbian system, after days of other attempts. Commented Jul 20, 2022 at 23:16
1

Fixed the connection refused (111) issue in my raspberry pi 3B running raspbian buster by Updating/installing BlueZ via apt-get

> sudo apt-get install --no-install-recommends bluetooth

and re running

> sudo gatttool -t random -b E9:1C:89:B7:16:F9 -I

1

If you are still wondering why the random from @Pedro Lobito's answer worked. I have gone through the code and this what I found.

​-t ​(Addr:Type: Set LE Address Type)     
Public | random    
Default: Public

A random or static address is a 48-bit randomly generated address and shall meet the following requirements:

• The two most significant bits of the static address shall be equal to ‘1’

• All bits of the random part of the static address shall not be equal to ‘1’

• All bits of the random part of the static address shall not be equal to ‘0’

(Source)

2
  • 1
    A link as comment on my answer would be more appropriate than creating a new answer. Commented Sep 11, 2018 at 11:05
  • This also still doesn't explain why random works
    – icc97
    Commented Apr 21 at 20:26
-1

You could try to use gatttool -b 00:22:D0:6D:E0:E6 -I and then connect, just after discovering the MAC without connecting before with hcitool lecc 00:22:D0:6D:E0:E6

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.