#linux-cnc #unsafe-bindings #cnc #generated-bindings #ffi #high-level #input-pin

sys linuxcnc-hal-sys

Generated, unsafe Rust bindings to the LinuxCNC HAL submodule

10 releases

0.3.0 Nov 15, 2022
0.2.0 Jan 6, 2021
0.1.7 Jan 29, 2020

#109 in Robotics

48 downloads per month
Used in 2 crates

MIT/Apache

170KB
4K SLoC

Generated LinuxCNC HAL Rust bindings

CircleCI Crates.io Docs.rs Liberapay

Please consider becoming a sponsor so I may continue to maintain this crate in my spare time!

Documentation

This crate provides generated bindings for LinuxCNC's HAL using bindgen.

The high level, safe interface at linuxcnc-hal is recommended for user code.

Development setup

bindgen must be set up correctly. Follow the requirements section of its docs.

To run and debug any HAL components, the LinuxCNC simulator can be set up. There's a guide here for Linux Mint (and other Debian derivatives).

Project setup

The LINUXCNC_SRC environment variable is required to build this crate. The value must be the absolute path to the root of the LinuxCNC source code.

The version of the LinuxCNC sources must match the LinuxCNC version used in the machine control.

# Clone LinuxCNC source code into linuxcnc/
git clone https://github.com/LinuxCNC/linuxcnc.git

# Check out a specific version tag. This may also be a commit, but must match the version in use by the machine control.
cd linuxcnc && git checkout v2.8.0 && cd ..

# Create your component lib
cargo new --lib my_comp

cd my_comp

# Add LinuxCNC HAL bindings as a Cargo dependency with cargo-edit
cargo add linuxcnc-hal-sys

LINUXCNC_SRC=/path/to/linuxcnc/source/code cargo build

Examples

Running the examples in the LinuxCNC simulator

Ensure you have the LinuxCNC source repository cloned, checked out to the desired version and built with the build instructions.

Note that the LinuxCNC source is located in the same parent directory as linuxcnc-hal-rs in the example paths below.

LINUXCNC_SRC=$(realpath ../linuxcnc) cargo build --examples

# Define the correct path to the LinuxCNC source
. ../linuxcnc/scripts/rip-environment

linuxcnc ./linuxcnc-hal-sys/examples/<example>.ini

All functions exported from this crate are unsafe, hence each example is wrapped in a big unsafe block for clarity.

The LinuxCNC HAL requires a certain setup procedure to operate correctly. The basic program structure should be roughly as follows:

  1. Call hal_init to create a new HAL component
  2. Register SIGTERM and SIGINT signals, likely with the signal_hook crate. LinuxCNC will hang if these signals are not registered.
  3. Register pins with hal_pin_float_new, hal_pin_u32_new, etc
  4. Call hal_ready to signal to LinuxCNC that the component is ready
  5. Enter an infinite loop to continuously update input/output pin values and perform component logic

These examples can be loaded into LinuxCNC using a HAL file similar to this:

loadusr -W /path/to/your/component/target/debug/comp_bin_name
net input-1 spindle.0.speed-out pins.input-1

If LinuxCNC is configured to run in place, liblinuxcnchal.so.0 may not be found on startup. To fix, try setting the library path with e.g. export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=~/Repositories/linuxcnc/lib

Create an input pin

This example creates a component called pins and registers an input pin to it that accepts a floating point value using hal_pin_float_new. Each HAL pin requires some memory allocated to store its value which is performed with hal_malloc.

The example can be loaded into LinuxCNC using a HAL file similar to this:

Note that there is no error handling in this example for brevity.

use linuxcnc_hal_sys::*;
use signal_hook::iterator::Signals;
use std::ffi::CString;
use std::mem;
use std::thread;
use std::time::Duration;

unsafe {
    let id = hal_init(CString::new("pins").unwrap().as_ptr() as *const i8);

    println!("ID {}", id);

    let signals = Signals::new(&[signal_hook::SIGTERM, signal_hook::SIGINT]).unwrap();

    let storage = hal_malloc(mem::size_of::<*mut f64>() as i64) as *mut *mut f64;

    println!("Storage {:?}", storage);

    let pin_name = CString::new("pins.input-1").unwrap();

    let ret = hal_pin_float_new(
        pin_name.as_ptr() as *const i8,
        hal_pin_dir_t_HAL_IN,
        storage,
        id,
    );

    println!("Pin init {}", ret);

    let ret = hal_ready(id);

    println!("Ready {}", ret);

    while !signals.pending().any(|signal| match signal {
        signal_hook::SIGTERM | signal_hook::SIGINT | signal_hook::SIGKILL => true,
        _ => false,
    }) {
        println!("Input {:?}", **storage);

        thread::sleep(Duration::from_millis(500));
    }
}

Error handling

Errors are handled in this crate the same way as in the C code. Some consts are exported like EINVAL and EPERM to allow matching of returned error codes.

use linuxcnc_hal_sys::*;
use signal_hook::iterator::Signals;
use std::ffi::CString;
use std::mem;
use std::thread;
use std::time::Duration;

unsafe {
    let ret = hal_init(CString::new("pins").unwrap().as_ptr() as *const i8);

    // Check that component was created successfully
    let component_id = match ret {
        x if x == -(EINVAL as i32) => panic!("Failed to initialise component"),
        x if x == -(ENOMEM as i32) => panic!("Not enough memory to initialise component"),
        id if id > 0 => id,
        code => unreachable!("Hit unreachable error code {}", code),
    };

    println!("Component registered with ID {}", component_id);

    let signals = Signals::new(&[signal_hook::SIGTERM, signal_hook::SIGINT]).unwrap();

    let storage = hal_malloc(mem::size_of::<*mut f64>() as i64) as *mut *mut f64;

    if storage.is_null() {
        panic!("Failed to allocate storage");
    }

    let pin_name = CString::new("pins.input-1").unwrap();

    let ret = hal_pin_float_new(
        pin_name.as_ptr() as *const i8,
        hal_pin_dir_t_HAL_IN,
        storage,
        component_id,
    );

    // Check that pin was registered successfully
    match ret {
        0 => println!("Pin registered successfully"),
        x if x == -(EINVAL as i32) => panic!("Failed to register pin"),
        x if x == -(EPERM as i32) => {
            panic!("HAL is locked. Register pins before calling hal_ready()`")
        }
        x if x == -(ENOMEM as i32) => panic!("Failed to register pin"),
        code => unreachable!("Hit unreachable error code {}", code),
    }

    let ret = hal_ready(component_id);

    // Check that component is ready
    match ret {
        0 => println!("Component is ready"),
        x if x == -(EINVAL as i32) => panic!("HAL component was not found or is already ready"),
        code => unreachable!("Hit unreachable error code {}", code),
    }

    while !signals.pending().any(|signal| match signal {
        signal_hook::SIGTERM | signal_hook::SIGINT | signal_hook::SIGKILL => true,
        _ => false,
    }) {
        println!("Input {:?}", **storage);

        thread::sleep(Duration::from_millis(500));
    }
}

License

Licensed under either of

at your option.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.

Dependencies

~0–2MB
~39K SLoC