Generates Rust messages from a dbc
file.
Install published version using cargo:
cargo install dbc-codegen-cli
Install latest version from the git repository:
cargo install dbc-codegen-cli --git https://github.com/technocreatives/dbc-codegen --branch main
Generate messages.rs
from example.dbc
using the CLI:
dbc-codegen testing/dbc-examples/example.dbc dir/where/messages_rs/file/is/written
Or put something like this into your build.rs
file:
fn main() {
let dbc_path = "../dbc-examples/example.dbc";
let dbc_file = std::fs::read(dbc_path).unwrap();
println!("cargo:rerun-if-changed={}", dbc_path);
let mut out = std::io::BufWriter::new(std::fs::File::create("src/messages.rs").unwrap());
dbc_codegen::codegen("example.dbc", &dbc_file, &mut out, true).unwrap();
}
dbc-codegen generates a Rust file that is expected to be in a cargo project.
Here is an example testing/can-messages/Cargo.toml
which defines dependencies and features that are used in generated message file.
For this to work you need to add following dependencies to Cargo.toml
:
bitvec = { version = "0.21", default-features = false }
arbitrary = { version = "1.0", optional = true } # Enable with `arb` feature
To use the code, add mod messages
to your lib.rs
(or main.rs
).
You will most likely want to interact with the generated Messages
enum, and call Messages::from_can_message(id, &payload)
.
Note: The generated code contains a lot of documentation. Give it a try:
cargo doc --open
The following (optional) features can be specified:
debug
: enables#[derive(Debug)
for messagesrange_checked
: adds range checks in settersarb
: enables implementation of [Arbitrary
] trait. Also requires you to addarbitrary
crate (version 1.x) as a dependency of the feature, usingarb = ["arbitrary"]
. [Arbitrary
]: https://docs.rs/arbitrary/1.0.0/arbitrary/trait.Arbitrary.htmlstd
: Implementsstd::error::Error
forCanError
. This makes it easy to useanyhow
for error handling.
To enable all features add this to your Cargo.toml
:
# features for dbc-codegen `messages.rs` file
[features]
default = ["debug", "arb", "range_checked", "std"]
arb = ["arbitrary"]
debug = []
range_checked = []
std = []
If some field name starts with a non-alphabetic character or is a Rust keyword then it is prefixed with x
.
For example:
VAL_ 512 Five 0 "0Off" 1 "1On" 2 "2Oner" 3 "3Onest";
…is generated as:
pub enum BarFive {
X0off,
X1on,
X2oner,
X3onest,
_Other(bool),
}
Type
here:
SG_ Type : 30|1@0+ (1,0) [0|1] "boolean" Dolor
…conflicts with the Rust keyword type
. Therefore we prefix it with x
:
pub fn xtype(&self) -> BarType {
match self.xtype_raw() {
false => BarType::X0off,
true => BarType::X1on,
x => BarType::_Other(x),
}
}
Licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
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.