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zig-gpio
zig-gpio is a Zig library for controlling GPIO lines on Linux systems
This library can be used to access GPIO on devices such as Raspberry Pis or the Milk-V Duo (which is the board I created it for and tested it with).
This is my first Zig project, so I'm open to any suggestions!
There's a companion article available on my website: https://www.elara.ws/articles/milkv-duo.
Compatibility
zig-gpio uses the v2 character device API, which means it will work on any Linux system running kernel 5.10 or above. All you need to do is find out which gpiochip
device controls which pin and what the offsets are, which you can do by either finding documentation online, or using the gpiodetect
and gpioinfo
tools from this repo or from libgpiod
.
Commands
zig-gpio provides replacements for some of the libgpiod
tools, such as gpiodetect
and gpioinfo
. You can build all of them using zig build commands
or specific ones using zig build <command>
(for example: zig build gpiodetect
).
Try it yourself!
Here's an example of a really simple program that requests pin 22 from gpiochip2
and makes it blink at a 1 second interval. That pin offset is the LED of a Milk-V Duo board, so if you're using a different board, make sure to change it.
const std = @import("std");
const gpio = @import("gpio");
pub fn main() !void {
var chip = try gpio.getChip("/dev/gpiochip2");
defer chip.close();
std.debug.print("Chip Name: {s}\n", .{chip.name});
var line = try chip.requestLine(22, .{ .output = true });
defer line.close();
while (true) {
try line.setHigh();
std.time.sleep(std.time.ns_per_s);
try line.setLow();
std.time.sleep(std.time.ns_per_s);
}
}
For more examples, see the _examples directory. You can build all the examples using the zig build examples
command.
Using zig-gpio in your project
If you don't have a zig project already, you can create one by running zig init-exe
in a new folder.
To add zig-gpio
as a dependency, there are two steps:
- Add
zig-gpio
to yourbuild.zig.zon
file - Add
zig-gpio
to yourbuild.zig
file
If you don't have a build.zig.zon
file, create one. If you do, just add zig-gpio
as a dependency. Here's what it should look like:
.{
.name = "my_project",
.version = "0.0.1",
.dependencies = .{
.gpio = .{
.url = "https://gitea.elara.ws/Elara6331/zig-gpio/archive/v0.0.2.tar.gz",
.hash = "1220e3af3194d1154217423d60124ae3a46537c2253dbfb8057e9b550526d2885df1",
}
}
}
Then, in your build.zig
file, add the following before b.installArtifact(exe)
:
const gpio = b.dependency("gpio", .{
.target = target,
.optimize = optimize,
});
exe.root_module.addImport("gpio", gpio.module("gpio"));
And that's it! You should now be able to use zig-gpio
via @import("gpio");