# serial2
Serial port communication for Rust.
The `serial2` crate provides a cross-platform interface to serial ports.
It aims to provide a simpler interface than other alternatives.
Currently supported features:
* Simple interface: one [`SerialPort`] struct for all supported platforms.
* List available ports.
* Custom baud rates on all supported platforms except Solaris and Illumos.
* Concurrent reads and writes from multiple threads, even on Windows.
* Purge the OS buffers (useful to discard read noise when the line should have been silent, for example).
* Read and control individual modem status lines to use them as general purpose I/O.
* Cross platform configuration of serial port settings:
* Baud rate
* Character size
* Stop bits
* Parity checks
* Flow control
* Read/write timeouts
* Full access to platform specific serial port settings using target specific feature flags (`"unix"` or `"windows"`).
You can open and configure a serial port in one go with [`SerialPort::open()`].
The second argument to `open()` must be a type that implements [`IntoSettings`].
In the simplest case, it is enough to pass a `u32` for the baud rate.
Doing that will also configure a character size of 8 bits with 1 stop bit and disables parity checks and flow control.
For full control over the applied settings, pass a closure that receives the current [`Settings`] and return the desired settings.
If you do, you will almost always want to call [`Settings::set_raw()`] before changing any other settings.
The standard [`std::io::Read`] and [`std::io::Write`] traits are implemented for [`SerialPort`] and [`&SerialPort`][`SerialPort`].
This allows you to use the serial port concurrently from multiple threads through a non-mutable reference.
There are also non-trait [`read()`][SerialPort::read()] and [`write()`][SerialPort::write()] functions,
so you can use the serial port without importing any traits.
These take `&self`, so they can also be used from multiple threads concurrently.
The [`SerialPort::available_ports()`] function can be used to get a list of available serial ports on supported platforms.
## Example
This example opens a serial port and echoes back everything that is read.
```rust
use serial2::SerialPort;
// On Windows, use something like "COM1" or "COM15".
let port = SerialPort::open("/dev/ttyUSB0", 115200)?;
let mut buffer = [0; 256];
loop {
let read = port.read(&mut buffer)?;
port.write_all(&buffer[..read])?;
}
```
[`SerialPort`]: https://docs.rs/serial2/latest/serial2/struct.SerialPort.html
[`SerialPort::open()`]: https://docs.rs/serial2/latest/serial2/struct.SerialPort.html#method.open
[`IntoSettings`]: https://docs.rs/serial2/latest/serial2/trait.IntoSettings.html
[`Settings`]: https://docs.rs/serial2/latest/serial2/struct.Settings.html
[`Settings::set_raw()`]: https://docs.rs/serial2/latest/serial2/struct.Settings.html#method.set_raw
[`std::io::Read`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/trait.Read.html
[`std::io::Write`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/trait.Write.html
[SerialPort::read()]: https://docs.rs/serial2/latest/serial2/struct.SerialPort.html#method.read
[SerialPort::write()]: https://docs.rs/serial2/latest/serial2/struct.SerialPort.html#method.write
[`SerialPort::available_ports()`]: https://docs.rs/serial2/latest/serial2/struct.SerialPort.html#method.available_ports