libcsp-rust
This project aims to provide libraries and tools to build and use
the libcsp C library in your Rust project.
It provides 3 crates for this:
libcspprovides a safe and ergonomic Rust interface on top of thelibcsp-syscrate.libcsp-sysprovides the Rust bindings tolibcsp.libcsp-cargo-buildprovides an API to build thelibcspusingcargowith thecccrate.
In addition, it provides a workspace to allow updating the libcsp C sources and the corresponding
bindings more easily inside the clib directory. Some of the examples libcsp provides were ported
to Rust and are showcased in the examples directory.
Please note that this is early-stage/experimental software. Important features might be missing. PRs and improvement suggestions are welcome! This project was primarily tested on a Linux/POSIX system so far.
How it works
We assume that cargo should also take care of building the library.
- Add the
libcsp-cargo-buildas a build dependency inside yourCargo.toml. - Add the
libcspas a regular dependency inside yourCargo.toml. - Create a custom
build.rsscript which takes care of building thelibcspC library using the API provided bylibcsp-cargo-build. You have to provide the source code forlibcspinside some directory and pass the directory path to the builder API. - You can now write regular Rust code and use the Rust API provided by the
libcspcrate to use thelibcspC library.
It is recommended to have a look at the example build script which should give you a general idea of how a build script which does the 4 steps above might look like.
Running the example
The example uses both the builder crate and the bindings and API crate and implements the server/client example in Rust. You can run the example using the following steps:
- Clone/Copy
libcspinto thelibfolder, for example by using the providedlib/clone-csp.shscript or addinglibcspas a git submodule. - You can now use
cargo run -p libcsp-rust-examplesto run the server/client example.
Compile-time configuration of the libcsp-sys library
The libcsp-sys requires some compile-time configuration file to be included to work
properly. You can see an example version of the file for the workspace
here.
The user has to provide the path to a directory containing this autoconfig.rs file using the
CSP_CONFIG_DIR environmental variable.
You can automatically generate this file when using libcsp-cargo-build by using the
[generate_autoconf_rust_file](here be link soon) method of the Builder object as done in the
example build script.
In this workspace, the CSP_CONFIG_DIR variable is hardcoded using the following .cargo/config.toml
configuration:
[env]
CSP_CONFIG_DIR = { value = "examples", relative = true }
Generating and update the bindings using the clib folder
The lib folder in this repository serves as the staging directory for the libcsp library to
build. However, it can also be used to update the bindings provided in libcsp-sys by providing
some tools and helpers to auto-generate and update the bindings file bindings.rs.
If you want to do this, you should install bindgen-cli first:
cargo install bindgen-cli --locked
bindgen needs some additional information provided by the user to generate the bindings:
An autoconfig.h file which is used to configure libcsp. Normally, this file is generated
by the C build system. This file is located at clib/cfg/csp and is also updated automatically
when running the example application.
After cloning the repository, you can now run the following command to re-generate the bindings file:
bindgen --use-core wrapper.h -- "-I./libcsp/include" "-I./cfg" "-I./libcsp/src" > bindings.rs
With the bindings file, you can now manually update the FFI bindings provided in
libcsp-sys/src/lib.rs or in your own CSP library.