/libiio

A cross platform library for interfacing with local and remote Linux IIO devices

Primary LanguageCGNU Lesser General Public License v2.1LGPL-2.1

libiio

Library for interfacing with Linux IIO devices

libiio is used to interface to the Linux Industrial Input/Output (IIO) Subsystem. The Linux IIO subsystem is intended to provide support for devices that in some sense are analog to digital or digital to analog converters (ADCs, DACs). This includes, but is not limited to ADCs, Accelerometers, Gyros, IMUs, Capacitance to Digital Converters (CDCs), Pressure Sensors, Color, Light and Proximity Sensors, Temperature Sensors, Magnetometers, DACs, DDS (Direct Digital Synthesis), PLLs (Phase Locked Loops), Variable/Programmable Gain Amplifiers (VGA, PGA), and RF transceivers. You can use libiio natively on an embedded Linux target (local mode), or use libiio to communicate remotely to that same target from a host Linux, Windows or MAC over USB or Ethernet or Serial.

Although libiio was primarily developed by Analog Devices Inc., it is an active open source library, which many people have contributed to. The library is released under the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL), version 2.1 or (at your option) any later version, this open-source license allows anyone to use the library, on any vendors processor/FPGA/SoC, which may be controlling any vendors peripheral device (ADC, DAC, etc) either locally or remotely. This includes closed or open-source, commercial or non-commercial applications (subject to the LGPL license freedoms, obligations and restrictions). The examples and test applications (sometimes referred to as the iio-utils) are released separately under the GNU General Public License (GPL) version 2.0 (at your option) any later version.

Library License : Library License Tests/Examples License : Application License Latest Release : GitHub release Downloads : Github All Releases

Scans : Coverity Scan Build Status Release docs: Documentation Issues : open bugs closed bugs

Support:
If you have a question about libiio and an Analog Devices IIO kernel driver please ask on : EngineerZone. If you have a question about a non-ADI devices, please ask it on github.

As with many open source packages, we use GitHub to do develop and maintain the source, and Azure Pipelines for continuous integration.

  • If you want to just use libiio, we suggest using the latest release.
  • If you think you have found a bug in the release, or need a feature which isn't in the release, try the latest untested binaries from the master branch and check out the documentation based on the master branch. We provide builds for a few operating systems. If you need something else, we can most likely add that -- just ask.
Operating System GitHub master status Version Primary Installer Package Alternative Package, tarball or zip
Windows Build Status Windows-64 Server 2019 Latest Windows installer
Build Status
Latest Windows zip
Build Status Windows-64 Server 2022 (libiio-setup.exe works for both Windows Server 2019 and Windows Server 2022) Latest Windows zip
OS X Build Status macOS Big Sur
(v 11)
OS-X package 11 OS-X tarball 11
Build Status macOS Catalina
(v 10.15)
OS-X package 10.15 OS-X tarball 10.15
Linux Build Status Ubuntu Focal Fossa
(v 20.04)1
Debian
Build Status Ubuntu Bionic Beaver
(v 18.04)1
Debian
Build Status Fedora 34 Debian RPM File
ARM Build Status Ubuntu-ppc64le Debian
Build Status Ubuntu-x390x Debian
Build Status Ubuntu-arm64v8 Debian
Build Status Ubuntu-arm32v7 Debian

If you use it, and like it - please let us know. If you use it, and hate it - please let us know that too. The goal of the project is to try to make Linux IIO devices easier to use on a variety of platforms. If we aren't doing that - we will try to make it better.

Feedback is appreciated (in order of preference):

Weblinks:

  1. The Ubuntu packages are known to work on their Debian counterpart releases.