OSC subscriber / publisher for Arduino
- almost all apis has have changed and got much simpler
- dropped support for
OscSerial
(recommend to use MsgPacketizer for much smaller packet size)
- simple usage
- flexible callback registration with lambda
- directly binding osc packet to values
- osc packet sending in one-line
- publishing osc packet in one-line
- support basic OSC types based on oscpkt
- TF (
bool
: true, false) - i (
int32_t
) - h (
int64_t
) - f (
float
) - d (
double
) - s (
string
) - b (
bundle
)
- TF (
- support pattern-matching (wildcards)
- does NOT support timestamp values.
Following examples use OscWiFi
.
To use with Ethernet
, please change OscWiFi
to OscEther
.
#include <ArduinoOSC.h>
int i; float f; String s;
void setup()
{
// WiFi stuff
WiFi.begin(ssid, pwd);
WiFi.config(ip, gateway, subnet);
// subscribe osc packet and directly bind to variable
OscWiFi.subscribe(bind_port, "/bind/values", i, f, s);
// publish osc packet in 30 times/sec (default)
OscWiFi.publish(host, publish_port, "/publish/value", i, f, s);
// function can also be published
OscWiFi.publish(host, publish_port, "/publish/func", &millis, µs)
->setFrameRate(1); // and publish it once per second
}
void loop()
{
OscWiFi.update(); // should be called to subscribe + publish osc
}
void setup()
{
// WiFi stuff
// ...
OscWiFi.subscribe(bind_port, "/lambda/bind/args",
[&](int& i, float& f, String& s)
{
Serial.print("/lambda/bind/args ");
Serial.print(i); Serial.print(" ");
Serial.print(f); Serial.print(" ");
Serial.print(s); Serial.println();
// One-Line Send Back
OscWiFi.send(host, send_port, "/reply", i, f, s);
}
);
}
void loop()
{
OscWiFi.update(); // should be called
}
// OscMessage as lambda argument
OscWiFi.subscribe(recv_port, "/lambda/msg",
[](const OscMessage& m)
{
Serial.print(m.remoteIP()); Serial.print(" ");
Serial.print(m.remotePort()); Serial.print(" ");
Serial.print(m.size()); Serial.print(" ");
Serial.print(m.address()); Serial.print(" ");
Serial.print(m.arg<int>(0)); Serial.print(" ");
Serial.print(m.arg<float>(1)); Serial.print(" ");
Serial.print(m.arg<String>(2)); Serial.println();
}
);
// wildcard address pattern matching
OscWiFi.subscribe(recv_port, "/wildcard/*/test",
[](const OscMessage& m)
{
Serial.print(m.remoteIP()); Serial.print(" ");
Serial.print(m.remotePort()); Serial.print(" ");
Serial.print(m.size()); Serial.print(" ");
Serial.print(m.address()); Serial.print(" ");
Serial.print(m.arg<int>(0)); Serial.println();
}
);
// no arguments
OscWiFi.subscribe(recv_port, "/need/reply", []()
{
OscWiFi.send(host, send_port, "/reply", i, f, s);
});
// pre-defined callback
OscWiFi.subscribe(recv_port, "/callback", onOscReceived);
This library currently supports following platforms and interfaces. Please feel free to send PR or request for more board support!
- ESP32
- ESP8266
- Arduino Uno WiFi Rev2
- Arduino MKR VIDOR 4000
- Arduino MKR WiFi 1010
- Arduino MKR WiFi 1000
- Arduino Nano 33 IoT
- ESP8266
- Almost all platforms without WiFi
STL is used to handle packet data by default, but for following boards/architectures, ArxContainer is used to store the packet data because STL can not be used for such boards. The storage size of such boards for packets, queue of packets, max packet binary size, callbacks are limited.
- AVR
- megaAVR
For the boards which has tiny memory size (e.g. Arduino Uno), I reccomend not to use publisher and subscriber.
Though you can use them on such boards, such rich functions requires more memory.
The reccomended way is to use send
and parse
manually.
The example is shown in examples/arduino/OscEtherUno
, so please consider to use it.
#include <ArduinoOSC.h>
// required to use manual packet parsing
OscEtherServer server;
void setup()
{
Ethernet.begin(mac, ip);
server.begin(recv_port); // need to begin with receive port
}
void loop()
{
// manual sending instead of publishers
static uint32_t prev_func_ms = millis();
if (millis() > prev_func_ms + 500)
{
OscEther.send(host, publish_port, "/publish/func", millis(), micros());
prev_func_ms = millis();
}
// manual parsing instead of subscribers
if (server.parse())
{
const OscMessage* msg = server.message();
if (msg->address() == "/need/reply")
{
Serial.println("/need/reply");
int i = millis();
float f = (float)micros() / 1000.f;
String s = F("hello");
OscEther.send(host, send_port, "/reply", i, f, s);
}
}
}
As mentioned above, for such boards like Arduino Uno, the storage sizes are limited. And of course you can manage them by defining following macros. But these default values are optimized for such boards, please be careful not to excess your boards storage/memory.
#define ARDUINOOSC_MAX_ARGUMENT_SIZE 8
#define ARDUINOOSC_MAX_BLOB_BYTE_SIZE 64
#define ARDUINOOSC_MAX_MSG_QUEUE_SIZE 1
#define ARDUINOOSC_MAX_PUBLISH_DESTINATION 4
#define ARDUINOOSC_MAX_SUBSCRIBE_ADDRESS_PER_PORT 4
#define ARDUINOOSC_MAX_SUBSCRIBE_PORTS 2
OSC bundle option is disabled for such boards.
If you want to use that, please use this macro and handle packets manually.
ArduinoOSC
does not use bundle by default.
#define ARDUINOOSC_ENABLE_BUNDLE
#define ARDUINOOSC_MAX_MSG_BUNDLE_SIZE 32
You can see the debug log when you insert following line before include ArduinoOSC
.
#define ARDUINOOSC_ENABLE_DEBUG_LOG
#include <ArduinoOSC.h>
- ArxTypeTraits v0.2.1
- ArxContainer v0.3.10
- ArxSmartPtr v0.2.1
- DebugLog v0.3.1
- TeensyDirtySTLErrorSolution v0.1.0
MIT