- Power on your node in the morning. It is not connected to any smartphone or PC via BT/USB/HTTP;
- In the evening, connect to it via BT/USB/HTTP;
- Access all messages received in Primary channel and/or DMs.
Is it possible? How many messages does a node store in it’s internal memory? How to access them via terminal? If node is restarted, are they erased?
I have a Heltec V3. In Meshtatsic CLI there’s --listen option, but it’s about receiving new packages in real time.
As far as I can tell my RAK stores them. Feels like it stores more than 30 but I’m unsure.
Hmm maybe this is what I want: https://github.com/brad28b/meshtastic-cli-receive-text But I can’t install it currently, I get python stack trace instead…
UPD. Fail. I’ve managed to launch it, but it is same as “listen”, it receives only new messages in real time.
The radio will store a small amount of packets (around 30) in its memory for when it’s not connected to a client app. If it’s full, it will replace the oldest packets with newly incoming text messages only.
https://meshtastic.org/docs/overview/
And yes, they persist if you restart the node. Not sure what you mean by “terminal”, there are a couple of CLI tools for meshtastic, including a practically complete chat app.
This is from memory and anecdotal, so take it with a grain of salt.
On firmwares below 2.7, I think it only stored the last-received message on the node itself. 2.7+ may store the latest message from up to a few different contacts, but not more than that (if even that). Either way, it’s not really meant to operate as a “mailbox” where you can retrieve the messages later; they basically need to go somewhere as they’re received.
There’s a store-and-forward mode that can be enabled, but it stores all messages for everyone and is more of an infrastructure node role. It also requires hardware that has PSRAM which the Heltec V3’s don’t have.
it’s not really meant to operate as a “mailbox” where you can retrieve the messages later
Why not, where’s bottleneck? Internal memory is too small? Packets are 255 bytes each, doesn’t seem like there’s much to store.
AFAIK, yes, memory. There are a lot more packets than just text messages. Telemetry, node info, positions/waypoints, etc.



