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rust-embedded/wg: Coordination repository of the embedded devices Working Group

Embedded devices Working Group

Coordination repository of the embedded devices Working Group (WG)

This repository issue tracker is used by the embedded WG to coordinate efforts towards making Rust a great choice for embedded development.

Want to get started with embedded development with Rust? Check out our embedded Rust book and the rest of our bookshelf.

Want to stay up-to-date with community progress? Check out our newsletter.

Join the discussion on Matrix! #rust-embedded:matrix.org

What is it that we really want? At a broad level:

At a high level we have two main tasks:

We work with the community to improve the embedded ecosystem.

And, we serve as a bridge between the Rust teams and the embedded community.

Everyone can contribute to the embedded WG efforts! There are several ways to help out:

The WG is composed of several teams whose functions are defined in RFC #136. The embedded WG develops and maintains a large set of projects under the rust-embedded organization. This section lists all the teams and all the projects owned by the WG.

The functions of the core team are:

The Arm team develops and maintains the crates related to Arm microprocessors and microcontrollers, including Cortex-A, Cortex-R, and Cortex-M.

Projects maintained by this team.

The embedded Linux team develops and maintains the core of the embedded Linux crate ecosystem.

Projects maintained by the embedded Linux team

The HAL team develops and maintains crates containing shared traits and related code that enables the development of hardware abstraction layers and drivers which can interoperate across all embedded Rust devices on all architectures.

Projects maintained by the HAL team.

The infrastructure team manages our domains, DNS records, e-mail aliases, etc.

Projects maintained by this team

The libs team manages library code that is not architecture-specific.

Projects maintained by this team

The MS430 team develops and maintains the core of the MSP430 crate ecosystem.

Projects maintained by this team

The RISC-V team develops and maintains the core of the RISC-V crate ecosystem.

Projects maintained by this team

The resources team develops, maintains and curates documentation, books, our social media accounts and websites, and similar resources on embedded Rust.

Projects maintained by the resources team

The tools team maintains and develops software for embedded development which typically runs on your development machine rather than the embedded targets themselves.

Projects maintained by the tools team

The triage team is charge of keeping PR queues moving; they ensure no PR is left unattended.

The following alumni have put themselves into the hibernation state, due to being absent or busy for an extended amount of time. See ops/hibernating.md.

Each team can be privately contacted via the following e-mail addresses:

You can usually find the members of the embedded WG on the Rust Embedded Matrix room (#rust-embedded:matrix.org).

Our Matrix room is logged by on the bridged IRC channel, and you can find the logs at: https://libera.irclog.whitequark.org/rust-embedded/

These are other projects you may be interested in but that (currently) are not owned by the WG.

Ongoing community efforts Device specific communities

Several device specific communities exist that are not part of the working group. These communities maintain crates for peripheral access, hardware abstraction, examples, and more that are specific to a particular family of devices. The list below is not exhaustive and will be updated as device support increases.

embedded-hal is a project that aims to build a standard set of traits (interfaces) for I/O functionality common in embedded devices: Serial, I2C, etc. with the goal of serving as a base for building reusable driver crates, crates to interface with external components like sensors.

There are plenty of traits that still need to be designed, in particular ones that involve async I/O. Join the discussion and help us design the missing traits so that they'll fulfill your needs.

The community is building a curated list of crates useful for embedded development. In this list you'll find driver crates, board support crates and general purpose no-std crates. Help us improve this list by adding your crate via PR or by tackling any of our help wanted issues.

As an experiment the Rust lang user forum has gained a new embedded category.

This is meant as a friendly exchange for anyone interested in embedded topics with Rust.

So if you want to discuss ideas, problems or solutions please feel free to chime in on existing topics or create a new one!

When the team deems it necessary the RFC process may be used to make decisions or to design processes, user interfaces, APIs, etc.

Learn more about the Rust's RFC process (which is the same as our own) here.

To create an RFC, simply:


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