SWRA615A June   2019 CC1352P , CC1352R , CC2530 , CC2531 , CC2538 , CC2652P , CC2652R , CC2652R7 , CC2652RB , CC2652RSIP

 

  1.   What's New in Zigbee 3.0
    1. 1 Overview
    2. 2 Zigbee PRO Specification
      1. 2.1 Child Device Management
      2. 2.2 Parent Announce Command
      3. 2.3 Trust Center (TC) Link Key Updates
      4. 2.4 Install Codes
      5. 2.5 Outgoing NWK Frame Counter
      6. 2.6 Changes to Network Joining
      7. 2.7 New Mandatory Command Support
      8. 2.8 Optional Distributed Networks
    3. 3 Base Device Behavior (BDB)
      1. 3.1 BDB Commissioning Modes
      2. 3.2 BDB Security
      3. 3.3 Reset Methods Available with BDB
    4. 4 Green Power Basic Proxy
    5. 5 Zigbee Cluster Library
    6. 6 Zigbee Application Architecture
      1. 6.1 Zigbee Node
      2. 6.2 Zigbee Cluster
      3. 6.3 Zigbee Device
    7. 7 Zigbee Lighting & Occupancy (ZLO) Device Specification
    8. 8 Zigbee 3.0 Certification
    9. 9 References
      1.      Trademarks

Zigbee Node

A Zigbee node represents a single testable implementation. This could be a standalone Zigbee device that runs on a single processor or application processor (ZAP) plus network processor (ZNP) that work together to form a single Zigbee device. Each node is a single Zigbee application on a single Zigbee stack, with one NWK address and one PAN ID. A Zigbee node can host multiple Zigbee device instances, where each device instance is hosted on its own endpoint. It is possible that a single physical product may support more than one Zigbee node, such as a device that bridges two separate Zigbee networks together.