The libusb1-sys
crate provides declarations and linkage for the libusb
C library. Following the
*-sys
package conventions, the libusb1-sys
crate does not define higher-level abstractions over
the native libusb
library functions.
In order to use the libusb1-sys
crate, you must have the libusb
library installed where it can be
found by pkg-config
.
All systems supported by libusb
are also supported by the libusb1-sys
crate. It's been tested on
Linux, OS X, and Windows.
To link to a cross-compiled version of the native libusb
library, it's necessary to set several
environment variables to configure pkg-config
to work with a cross-compiler's sysroot. Autotools
Mythbuster has a good explanation of supporting
cross-compilation with pkg-config
.
However, Rust's pkg-config
build helper doesn't
support calling a $CHOST
-prefixed pkg-config
. It will always call pkg-config
without a prefix.
To cross-compile libusb1-sys
with the pkg-config
build helper, one must define the environment
variables PKG_CONFIG_DIR
, PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR
, and PKG_CONFIG_SYSROOT_DIR
for the default
pkg-config
. It's also necessary to set PKG_CONFIG_ALLOW_CROSS
to tell Rust's pkg-config
helper
that it's okay to proceed with a cross-compile.
To adapt the pkg-config
wrapper in the Autotools Mythbuster guide so that it works with Rust, one
will end up with a script similar to the following:
#!/bin/sh
SYSROOT=/build/root
export PKG_CONFIG_DIR=
export PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR=${SYSROOT}/usr/lib/pkgconfig:${SYSROOT}/usr/share/pkgconfig
export PKG_CONFIG_SYSROOT_DIR=${SYSROOT}
export PKG_CONFIG_ALLOW_CROSS=1
cargo build
Add libusb1-sys
as a dependency in Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
libusb-sys = "0.3"
Import the libusb1_sys
crate and use the functions as they're defined in the native libusb
library. See the libusb
1.0 API documention for more
usage information.
extern crate libusb1_sys as ffi;
fn main() {
let version = unsafe { ffi::libusb_get_version() };
println!("libusb v{}.{}.{}.{}", version.major, version.minor, version.micro, version.nano);
}
Since libusb1-sys
is no more than a wrapper around the native libusb
library, the best source for
help is the information already available for libusb
:
Copyright © 2015 David Cuddeback
Distributed under the MIT License.