serial-monitor

command module
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Published: Feb 21, 2024 License: GPL-3.0 Imports: 10 Imported by: 0

README

Arduino pluggable monitor for serial ports

The serial-monitor tool is a command line program that interacts via stdio. It accepts commands as plain ASCII strings terminated with LF \n and sends response as JSON.

How to build

Install a recent go environment and run go build. The executable serial-monitor will be produced in your working directory.

Usage

After startup, the tool waits for commands. The available commands are: HELLO, DESCRIBE, CONFIGURE, OPEN, CLOSE and QUIT.

HELLO command

The HELLO command is used to establish the pluggable monitor protocol between client and monitor. The format of the command is:

HELLO <PROTOCOL_VERSION> "<USER_AGENT>"

for example:

HELLO 1 "Arduino IDE"

or:

HELLO 1 "arduino-cli"

in this case the protocol version requested by the client is 1 (at the moment of writing there were no other revisions of the protocol). The response to the command is:

{
  "eventType": "hello",
  "message": "OK",
  "protocolVersion": 1
}

protocolVersion is the protocol version that the monitor is going to use in the remainder of the communication.

DESCRIBE command

The DESCRIBE command returns a description of the communication port. The description will have metadata about the port configuration, and which parameters are available:

{
  "eventType": "describe",
  "message": "OK",
  "port_description": {
    "protocol": "serial",
    "configuration_parameters": {
      "baudrate": {
        "label": "Baudrate",
        "type": "enum",
        "value": [
          "300",
          "600",
          "750",
          "1200",
          "2400",
          "4800",
          "9600",
          "19200",
          "38400",
          "57600",
          "115200",
          "230400",
          "460800",
          "500000",
          "921600",
          "1000000",
          "2000000"
        ],
        "selected": "9600"
      },
      "bits": {
        "label": "Data bits",
        "type": "enum",
        "value": [
          "5",
          "6",
          "7",
          "8",
          "9"
        ],
        "selected": "8"
      },
      "parity": {
        "label": "Parity",
        "type": "enum",
        "value": [
          "None",
          "Even",
          "Odd",
          "Mark",
          "Space"
        ],
        "selected": "None"
      },
      "stop_bits": {
        "label": "Stop bits",
        "type": "enum",
        "value": [
          "1",
          "1.5",
          "2"
        ],
        "selected": "1"
      }
    }
  }
}

Each parameter has a unique name (baudrate, parity, etc...), a type (in this case only enum but more types will be added in the future), and the selected value for each parameter.

The parameter name can not contain spaces, and the allowed characters in the name are alphanumerics, underscore _, dot ., and dash -.

The enum types must have a list of possible value.

The client/IDE may expose these configuration values to the user via a config file or a GUI, in this case the label field may be used for a user readable description of the parameter.

CONFIGURE command

The CONFIGURE command sets configuration parameters for the communication port. The parameters can be changed one at a time and the syntax is:

CONFIGURE <PARAMETER_NAME> <VALUE>

The response to the command is:

{
  "eventType": "configure",
  "message": "OK"
}

or if there is an error:

{
  "eventType": "configure",
  "message": "invalid value for parameter baudrate: 123456",
  "error": true
}

The currently selected parameters may be obtained using the DESCRIBE command.

OPEN command

The OPEN command opens a communication with the board, the data exchanged with the board will be transferred to the Client/IDE via TCP/IP.

The Client/IDE must first TCP-Listen to a randomly selected port and send it to the monitor tool as part of the OPEN command. The syntax of the OPEN command is:

OPEN <CLIENT_IP_ADDRESS> <BOARD_PORT>

For example, let's suppose that the Client/IDE wants to communicate with the serial port /dev/ttyACM0 then the sequence of actions to perform will be the following:

  1. the Client/IDE must first listen to a random TCP port (let's suppose it chose 32123)
  2. the Client/IDE sends the command OPEN 127.0.0.1:32123 /dev/ttyACM0 to the monitor tool
  3. the monitor tool opens /dev/ttyACM0
  4. the monitor tool connects via TCP/IP to 127.0.0.1:32123 and start streaming data back and forth

The answer to the OPEN command is:

{
  "eventType": "open",
  "message": "OK"
}

If the monitor tool cannot communicate with the board, or if the tool can not connect back to the TCP port, or if any other error condition happens:

{
  "eventType": "open",
  "error": true,
  "message": "unknown port /dev/ttyACM23"
}

The board port will be opened using the parameters previously set through the CONFIGURE command.

Once the port is opened, it may be unexpectedly closed at any time due to hardware failure, or because the Client/IDE closes the TCP/IP connection. In this case an asynchronous port_closed message must be generated from the monitor tool:

{
  "eventType": "port_closed",
  "message": "serial port disappeared!",
  "error": true
}

or

{
  "eventType": "port_closed",
  "message": "lost TCP/IP connection with the client!",
  "error": true
}
CLOSE command

The CLOSE command will close the currently opened port and close the TCP/IP connection used to communicate with the Client/IDE. The answer to the command is:

{
  "eventType": "close",
  "message": "OK"
}

or in case of error

{
  "eventType": "close",
  "error": true,
  "message": "port already closed"
}
QUIT command

The QUIT command terminates the monitor. The response to QUIT is:

{
  "eventType": "quit",
  "message": "OK"
}

after this output the monitor exits. This command is supposed to always succeed.

Invalid commands

If the client sends an invalid or malformed command, the monitor should answer with:

{
  "eventType": "command_error",
  "error": true,
  "message": "Command XXXX not supported"
}
Example of usage

A possible transcript of the monitor usage:

HELLO 1 "test"
{
  "eventType": "hello",
  "message": "OK",
  "protocolVersion": 1
}
DESCRIBE
{
  "eventType": "describe",
  "message": "OK",
  "port_description": {
    "protocol": "serial",
    "configuration_parameters": {
      "baudrate": {
        "label": "Baudrate",
        "type": "enum",
        "value": [
          "300",
          "600",
          "750",
          "1200",
          "2400",
          "4800",
          "9600",
          "19200",
          "38400",
          "57600",
          "115200",
          "230400",
          "460800",
          "500000",
          "921600",
          "1000000",
          "2000000"
        ],
        "selected": "9600"
      },
      "bits": {
        "label": "Data bits",
        "type": "enum",
        "value": [
          "5",
          "6",
          "7",
          "8",
          "9"
        ],
        "selected": "8"
      },
      "parity": {
        "label": "Parity",
        "type": "enum",
        "value": [
          "None",
          "Even",
          "Odd",
          "Mark",
          "Space"
        ],
        "selected": "None"
      },
      "stop_bits": {
        "label": "Stop bits",
        "type": "enum",
        "value": [
          "1",
          "1.5",
          "2"
        ],
        "selected": "1"
      }
    }
  }
}
CONFIGURE baudrate 19200
{
  "eventType": "configure",
  "message": "OK"
}
DESCRIBE
{
  "eventType": "describe",
  "message": "OK",
  "port_description": {
    "protocol": "serial",
    "configuration_parameters": {
      "baudrate": {
        "label": "Baudrate",
        "type": "enum",
        "value": [
          "300",
          "600",
          "750",
          "1200",
          "2400",
          "4800",
          "9600",
          "19200",
          "38400",
          "57600",
          "115200",
          "230400",
          "460800",
          "500000",
          "921600",
          "1000000",
          "2000000"
        ],
        "selected": "19200"
      },
      "bits": {
        "label": "Data bits",
        "type": "enum",
        "value": [
          "5",
          "6",
          "7",
          "8",
          "9"
        ],
        "selected": "8"
      },
      "parity": {
        "label": "Parity",
        "type": "enum",
        "value": [
          "None",
          "Even",
          "Odd",
          "Mark",
          "Space"
        ],
        "selected": "None"
      },
      "stop_bits": {
        "label": "Stop bits",
        "type": "enum",
        "value": [
          "1",
          "1.5",
          "2"
        ],
        "selected": "1"
      }
    }
  }
}
OPEN 127.0.0.1:5678 /dev/ttyACM0
{
  "eventType": "open",
  "message": "OK"
}
CLOSE
{
  "eventType": "close",
  "message": "OK"
}
QUIT
{
  "eventType": "quit",
  "message": "OK"
}
$

On another terminal tab to test it you can run nc -l -p 5678 before running the OPEN 127.0.0.1:5678 /dev/ttyACM0 command. After that you can write messages in that terminal tab and see them being echoed.

Security

If you think you found a vulnerability or other security-related bug in this project, please read our security policy and report the bug to our Security Team 🛡️ Thank you!

e-mail contact: [email protected]

License

Copyright (c) 2018 ARDUINO SA (www.arduino.cc)

The software is released under the GNU General Public License, which covers the main body of the serial-monitor code. The terms of this license can be found at: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.en.html

See LICENSE.txt for details.

Documentation

The Go Gopher

There is no documentation for this package.

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