#cip #eip #ethernet #industry #codec

rseip

rseip - Ethernet/IP (CIP) client in pure Rust

6 releases

0.3.1 Nov 14, 2022
0.3.0 Apr 16, 2022
0.2.1 Mar 1, 2022
0.2.0 Feb 25, 2022
0.1.1 Dec 9, 2021

#308 in Asynchronous

MIT license

275KB
7K SLoC

EN | 中文

rseip

crates.io docs build license

Ethernet/IP (CIP) client in pure Rust, for generic CIP and AB PLC

Features

  • Pure Rust Library
  • Asynchronous
  • Prefer static dispatch
  • Extensible
  • Explicit Messaging (Connected / Unconnected)
  • Open Source

Services Supported for AB PLC

  • Read Tag
  • Write Tag
  • Read Tag Fragmented
  • Write Tag Fragmented
  • Read Modify Write Tag
  • Get Instance Attribute List (list tag)
  • Read Template

How to use

Add rseip to your cargo project's dependencies

rseip="0.3"

Please find detailed guides and examples from below sections.

Example

Tag Read/Write for Allen-bradley CompactLogIx device

use anyhow::Result;
use rseip::client::ab_eip::*;
use rseip::precludes::*;

#[tokio::main]
pub async fn main() -> Result<()> {
    let mut client = AbEipClient::new_host_lookup("192.168.0.83")
        .await?
        .with_connection_path(PortSegment::default());
    let tag = EPath::parse_tag("test_car1_x")?;
    println!("read tag...");
    let value: TagValue<i32> = client.read_tag(tag.clone()).await?;
    println!("tag value: {:?}", value);
    client.write_tag(tag, value).await?;
    println!("write tag - done");
    client.close().await?;
    Ok(())
}

Please find more examples within examples.

Guides

Quick start

Add rseip to your cargo project's dependencies

rseip="0.3"

Then, import modules of rseip to your project

use rseip::client::ab_eip::*;
use rseip::precludes::*;

Then, create an unconnected client

let mut client = AbEipClient::new_host_lookup("192.168.0.83")
    .await?
    .with_connection_path(PortSegment::default());

or create a connection

let mut client =
    AbEipConnection::new_host_lookup("192.168.0.83", OpenOptions::default()).await?;

Read from a tag

let tag = EPath::parse_tag("test_car1_x")?;
println!("read tag...");
let value: TagValue<i32> = client.read_tag(tag.clone()).await?;

Write to a tag

let tag = EPath::parse_tag("test_car1_x")?;
let value = TagValue {
  tag_type: TagType::Dint,
  value: 10_i32,
};
client.write_tag(tag, value).await?;
println!("write tag - done");

About TagValue, Decode, and Encode

As you may know, there are atomic types, structure types, and array type of tags. The library provides Encode to encode values, Decode to decode values, and TagValue to manipulate tag data values. The library already implements Encode and Decode for some rust types: bool,i8,u8,i16,u16,i32,u32,i64,u64,f32,f64,i128,u128,(),Option,Tuple,Vec,[T;N],SmallVec. For structure type, you need to implement Encode and Decode by yourself.

Read

To get a single value (atomic/structure), and you know the exact mapped type, do like this

let value: TagValue<MyType> = client.read_tag(tag).await?;
println!("{:?}",value);

To get the tag type, and you do not care about the data part, do like this:

let value: TagValue<()> = client.read_tag(tag).await?;
println!("{:?}",value.tag_type);

To get the raw bytes whatever the data part holds, do like this:

let value: TagValue<Bytes> = client.read_tag(tag).await?;

To iterate values, and you know the exact mapped type, do like this:

let iter: TagValueTypedIter<MyType> = client.read_tag(tag).await?;
println!("{:?}", iter.tag_type());
while let Some(res) = iter.next(){
  println!("{:?}", res);
}

To iterate values, and you do not know the exact mapped type, do like this:

let iter: TagValueIter = client.read_tag(tag).await?;
println!("{:?}", iter.tag_type());
let res = iter.next::<bool>().unwrap();
println!("{:?}", res);
let res = iter.next::<i32>().unwrap();
println!("{:?}", res);
let res = iter.next::<MyType>().unwrap();
println!("{:?}", res);

To read more than 1 elements of an Array, do like this:

let value: TagValue<Vec<MyType>> = client.read_tag((tag,5_u16)).await?;
println!("{:?}",value);

Write

You must provide the tag type before you write to a tag. Normally, you can retrieve it by reading the tag. For structure type, you cannot reply on or persist the tag type (so called structure handle), it might change because it is a calculated value (CRC based).

To write a single value (atomic/structure), do like this:

let value = TagValue {
  tag_type: TagType::Dint,
  value: 10_i32,
};
client.write_tag(tag, value).await?;

To write raw bytes, do like this:

let bytes:&[u8] = &[0,1,2,3];
let value = TagValue {
  tag_type: TagType::Dint,
  value: bytes,
};
client.write_tag(tag, value).await?;

To write multiple values to an array, do like this:

let items: Vec<MyType> = ...;
let value = TagValue {
  tag_type: TagType::Dint,
  value: items,
};
client.write_tag(tag, value).await?;

Moreover

For some reasons, TagValue does not work for all type that implements Encode or Decode.

But you can work without TagValue. You can define your own value holder, as long as it implements Encode and Decode.

For simple cases, Tuple should be a good option.

let (tag_type,value):(TagType, i32) = client.read_tag(tag).await?;
client.write_tag(tag, (tag_type, 1_u16, value)).await?;

License

MIT

Dependencies

~4–13MB
~141K SLoC