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rawcan_c1x

v1.1.4

Published

Bindings for SocketCAN

Downloads

5

Readme

rawcan

Build Status THIS IS A SIMPLE FORK FROM jjkr, I Removed c11 option to be compiled under gcc 4.6.3,which make it possible run under cortex A8 and linux 3.2 Lightweight asynchronous Node.js bindings for SocketCAN. SocketCAN is a socket based implementation of the CAN bus protocol for the Linux kernel, developed primarily by VW.

import * as can from 'rawcan';

const socket = can.createSocket('vcan0');

socket.on('error', err => { console.log('socket error: ' + err); });
socket.on('message', (id, buffer) => {
  console.log('received frame [' + id.toString(16) + '] ' + buffer.toString('hex'));
});

socket.send(can.EFF_FLAG | 0x23c89f, 'hello');

Installing

This package is published to npm, so installing is as simple as:

$ npm install rawcan

Typescript bindings are included, so Typescript should just work.

Development

The workflow is mostly standard for a node addon. There is a native component, so a c++ compiler and make are required. In Ubuntu these dependencies can be installed by running the following in your shell

$ sudo aptitude install build-essential

After you have cloned the repo, run the following to install the npm dependencies and build the code:

$ npm install
$ npm run build

Running the tests requires a virtual CAN network interface called vcan0.

$ sudo modprobe vcan
$ sudo ip link add type vcan
$ sudo ip link set vcan0 up

Then the tests can be run with npm

$ npm test

How is this different from node-can?

There is another node package for SocketCAN called node-can (socketcan in npm). The main difference is that node-can is not evented- sends are synchronous and receives are done on a separate thread. By contrast, this package ties into the libuv based node event system, which uses epoll under the hood. node-can also has some messaging features, while this package is strictly a thin wrapper around raw CAN sockets.