rust-sysfs-gpio is a rust library/crate providing access to the Linux sysfs GPIO interface (https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation). It seeks to provide an API that is safe, convenient, and efficient.
Many devices such as the Raspberry Pi or Beaglebone Black provide userspace access to a number of GPIO peripherals. The standard kernel API for providing access to these GPIOs is via sysfs.
The follow example shows the low-level API. This API maps directly to the functionality provided by the sysfs GPIO interface.
```rust
extern crate sysfs_gpio;
use sysfsgpio::core::{Direction, Pin}; use std::time::Duration; use std::oldio::Timer; use std::io;
// export a GPIO for use. This will not fail // if already exported fn blinkmyled(led : u64, durationms : i64, periodms : i64) -> io::Result<()> { let my_led = Pin::new(led);
try!(my_led.export());
try_unexport!(my_led, my_led.set_direction(Direction::Low));
let mut tmr = match Timer::new() {
Ok(tmr) => tmr,
Err(_) => panic!("Could not create timer!"),
};
let iterations = duration_ms / period_ms / 2;
for _ in 0..iterations {
try_unexport!(my_led, my_led.set_value(0));
tmr.sleep(Duration::milliseconds(period_ms));
try_unexport!(my_led, my_led.set_value(1));
tmr.sleep(Duration::milliseconds(period_ms));
}
try_unexport!(my_led, my_led.set_value(0));
try!(my_led.unexport());
return Ok(());
}
fn main() { match blinkmyled(66, 5000, 200) { Ok(()) => println!("Blinking Complete!"), Err(err) => println!("I have a blinking problem! {}", err), } }
```
The following features are planned for the library:
Most likely, the machine you are running on is not your development machine (although it could be). In those cases, you will need to cross-compile. The following basic instructions should work for the raspberry pi or beaglebone black:
sudo apt-get install g++-arm-linux-gnueabihf
.cargo build --target=arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi
.The following snippet added to my ~/.cargo/config worked for me:
[target.arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf]
linker = "arm-linux-gnueabihf-gcc"
Cargo supports running examples but does not currently support building these examples. In order to cross-compile the examples using cargo, this is what things currently look like:
``
$ cargo run --target=arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf --example blinky
Compiling sysfs_gpio v0.1.0
(file:///home/posborne/Projects/rust-playground/rust-sysfs-gpio)
Running
target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf/debug/examples/blinky`
target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf/debug/examples/blinky: 1:
target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf/debug/examples/blinky:
Syntax error: word unexpected (expecting ")")
An unknown error occurred
To learn more, run the command again with --verbose. $ scp target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf/debug/examples/blinky ... ```
Basically, the run part of the process will fail, but the
cross-compiled example is still available and can be copied over to be
run on your target. Hopefully something like cargo build --example
<ex>
is added to cargo in the future.
Copyright (c) 2015, Paul Osborne ospbau@gmail.com
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0