mbus-serial 0.3.0

Provides serial transport layer functionalities for modbus-rs project
Documentation

mbus-serial

mbus-serial is a helper crate for modbus-rs.

It provides a standard serial transport implementation for Modbus RTU and Modbus ASCII, built on top of the shared transport abstractions in mbus-core.

If you want an all-in-one entry point, use modbus-rs. If you need direct access to serial transport internals, use mbus-serial directly.

Helper Crate Role

mbus-serial is intentionally focused on transport concerns:

  • Implements Transport from mbus-core.
  • Connects to real serial ports via the serialport crate.
  • Supports both SerialMode::Rtu and SerialMode::Ascii.

This crate does not implement high-level request/response orchestration by itself. That logic lives in mbus-client.

What Is Included

  • StdSerialTransport: concrete serial implementation of modbus_rs::Transport.
  • Serial connection handling (open/close/check connection).
  • ADU send/receive support.
  • Error mapping from I/O errors to TransportError.
  • Utility function to enumerate serial ports.

Public API Surface

The crate currently re-exports:

  • StdSerialTransport

from:

  • management::std_serial

Usage

1) Add dependencies

[dependencies]
modbus-rs = "0.3.0"

2) Create serial config and transport

use modbus_rs::{
	BackoffStrategy, BaudRate, DataBits, JitterStrategy, MbusError, ModbusConfig,
	ModbusSerialConfig, Parity, SerialMode,
	StdSerialTransport, Transport,
};

fn connect_serial() -> Result<(), MbusError> {
	let config = ModbusConfig::Serial(ModbusSerialConfig {
		port_path: "/dev/ttyUSB0".try_into().map_err(|_| MbusError::BufferTooSmall)?,
		mode: SerialMode::Rtu,
		baud_rate: BaudRate::Baud19200,
		data_bits: DataBits::Eight,
		stop_bits: 1,
		parity: Parity::Even,
		response_timeout_ms: 1000,
		retry_attempts: 3,
		retry_backoff_strategy: BackoffStrategy::Immediate,
		retry_jitter_strategy: JitterStrategy::None,
		retry_random_fn: None,
	});

	let mut transport = StdSerialTransport::new(SerialMode::Rtu);
	transport.connect(&config)?;

	// send/recv calls are used by higher-level client code

	transport.disconnect()?;
	Ok(())
}

3) List available serial ports

use modbus_rs::StdSerialTransport;

fn list_ports() {
	match StdSerialTransport::available_ports() {
		Ok(ports) => {
			for p in ports {
				println!("{}", p.port_name);
			}
		}
		Err(e) => eprintln!("failed to list ports: {}", e),
	}
}

Configuration Notes

  • StdSerialTransport::new(mode) must match the mode in ModbusSerialConfig. If they do not match, connect returns TransportError::InvalidConfiguration.
  • stop_bits must be 1 or 2.
  • response_timeout_ms controls serial read timeout behavior.

Logging

mbus-serial supports optional logging via the log facade.

  • Enable feature: logging
  • This only emits through the facade; your application provides a logger backend.

Example dependency setup:

[dependencies]
mbus-serial = { version = "0.3.0", features = ["logging"] }
env_logger = "0.11"

Platform Notes

  • Uses the serialport crate under the hood.
  • Error behavior can vary by driver/OS.
  • Some pseudo-terminals (especially on macOS) may not support all serial parameter operations.

Typical Integration Pattern

In most applications, mbus-serial is used together with mbus-client:

  1. Build ModbusConfig::Serial(...).
  2. Instantiate StdSerialTransport.
  3. Pass transport into ClientServices from mbus-client.
  4. Use client services for function-code operations.

License

Copyright (C) 2025 Raghava Challari

This project is currently licensed under GNU GPL v3.0. See LICENSE for details.

Contact

For questions or support: