forked from galaktor/gorf24
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
Golang bindings for RF24 (Raspberry Pi) libraries, which can be used to control a Nordic nRF24L01 type radio transceiver on the Raspberry Pi.
License
Draal/gorf24
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
*************************** HOW TO INSTALL *************************** TODO! More detail (on the way) The gist of it: 1) install and set up basic developer tools, git as well as golang on your RPi e.g. on Arch ARM: $> sudo pacman -S base-devel git go be sure to export GOPATH and add $GOPATH/bin to your PATH; e.g. $> mkdir ~/mygo $> echo "export GOPATH=~/mygo" >> ~/.bashrc $> echo "export PATH=$PATH:$GOPATH/bin" >> ~/.bashrc log off and on again for GOPATH changes to take effect 2) fetch gorf24 using $> go get github.com/galaktor/gorf24 (you will get an "ld" type error; ignore!) 3) $> cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/galaktor/gorf24 4) $> chmod +x build.sh 5) $> sudo ./build.sh 6) you might have to add /usr/local/lib to your /etc/ld.so.conf file (see below) 7) include gorf24 in your golang source code as usual, i.e. 'import "github.com/galaktor/gorf24"' 8) Accessing GPIO on Rpi requies elevated permissions, so it makes sense to build normally ("go build") then run the executable as sudo, i.e. $> go build mycode.go $> sudo ./mycode If you do not use sudo, you will get segfaults and panics (Tested on an overclocked (900 MHz) Model A RPi running Arch Linux for Rpi/ARM.) Note that this is project is in progress, and the golang or ansi C wrapper haven't been fully tested yet. Basic send/receive testing has occured, but many functions might have bugs. Please log any issue you might find and I will try to address it when I get a chance! Or even better, fork and contribute, that would be much appreciated. *************************** ADD /USR/LOCAL/LIB LDCONFIG *************************** On Arch ARM for RPi, /usr/local/lib had to be added to ld.so.conf in order for golang to find the librf24*.so files at runtime. you can check if the librf shared objects are detected by running: $> ldconfig -v | grep librf If the result is empty, then you need to add /usr/local/lib to /etc/ld.so.conf so that the golang runtime will detect the librf libraries. NOTE: despite the "include ld.so.conf.d/*.conf" line in /etc/ld.so.conf, adding such a file had no effect. Needed to add directly to ld.so.conf! ### 1. Open /etc/ld.so.conf with a text editor: $> sudo nano /etc/ld.so.conf ### 2. Add the line "/usr/local/lib" and save (in nano, "Ctrl+X", "Y" then "Return") ### 3. Run ldconfig to update $> sudo ldconfig ### 4. Verify detection of librf* shared objects using ldconfig $> ldconfig -v | grep rf librf24.so.1 -> librf24.so.1.0 librf24_c.so -> librf24_c.so *************************** TODOS *************************** * Makefiles instead of shell scripts * maybe better way of installing via go get? * more testing of correct wrapping, data types etc * branch that includes verified-working snap of RF24-rpi * download with RPi binaries for armv6? *************************** COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE *************************** Copyright 2013, Raphael Estrada gorf24 is licensed under the MIT license. You should have received a copy of the MIT License along with gorf24 (file "LICENSE"). If not, see <http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT> ************************** THE GIANTS' SHOULDERS ************************** NOTE: gorf24 dynamiclly links to the C++ RF24 library for Raspberry Pi by Stanley Seow. At the time gorf24 was created, Seow's software had no apparent license included. The license for gorf24 described here applies exclusively to the software provided as part of gorf24, but does not extend to Seow's RF24 software. https://github.com/stanleyseow/RF24 Seow's work is stronly derived from maniacbug's original RF24 library. Much kudos to maniacbug for the great work. https://github.com/maniacbug/RF24 http://maniacbug.wordpress.com/
About
Golang bindings for RF24 (Raspberry Pi) libraries, which can be used to control a Nordic nRF24L01 type radio transceiver on the Raspberry Pi.
Resources
License
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Releases
No releases published
Packages 0
No packages published
Languages
- Go 36.1%
- C++ 34.6%
- C 20.4%
- Shell 8.9%