#mbus #http #openapi #swagger #http-api #api-client #http-request

mbus-api

A RESTful HTTP API exposing (wired) M-Bus functionality

8 releases

0.3.5 May 6, 2021
0.3.4 Oct 31, 2020
0.3.2 Jun 25, 2020
0.2.0 May 31, 2020
0.1.0 Apr 6, 2019

#2307 in Web programming


Used in mbus

GPL-3.0-or-later

130KB
2.5K SLoC

mbus-api

mbus-api is an HTTP RESTful API designed to control a wired M-Bus. This repo includes:

A fully-featured server implementation for Linux, in Rust, can be found at https://github.com/packom/mbus-httpd.

The text below was automatically generated by the openapi-generator.

Rust API for openapi_client

No description provided (generated by Openapi Generator https://github.com/openapitools/openapi-generator)

Overview

This client/server was generated by the [openapi-generator] (https://openapi-generator.tech) project. By using the OpenAPI-Spec from a remote server, you can easily generate a server stub.

To see how to make this your own, look here:

README

  • API version: 0.3.5
  • Build date: 2021-05-06T09:31:40.740451ZEtc/UTC

This autogenerated project defines an API crate openapi_client which contains:

  • An Api trait defining the API in Rust.
  • Data types representing the underlying data model.
  • A Client type which implements Api and issues HTTP requests for each operation.
  • A router which accepts HTTP requests and invokes the appropriate Api method for each operation.

It also contains an example server and client which make use of openapi_client:

  • The example server starts up a web server using the openapi_client router, and supplies a trivial implementation of Api which returns failure for every operation.
  • The example client provides a CLI which lets you invoke any single operation on the openapi_client client by passing appropriate arguments on the command line.

You can use the example server and client as a basis for your own code. See below for more detail on implementing a server.

Examples

Run examples with:

cargo run --example <example-name>

To pass in arguments to the examples, put them after --, for example:

cargo run --example client -- --help

Running the example server

To run the server, follow these simple steps:

cargo run --example server

Running the example client

To run a client, follow one of the following simple steps:

cargo run --example client Get
cargo run --example client GetMulti
cargo run --example client Hat
cargo run --example client HatOff
cargo run --example client HatOn
cargo run --example client MbusApi
cargo run --example client Scan

HTTPS

The examples can be run in HTTPS mode by passing in the flag --https, for example:

cargo run --example server -- --https

This will use the keys/certificates from the examples directory. Note that the server chain is signed with CN=localhost.

Using the generated library

The generated library has a few optional features that can be activated through Cargo.

  • server
    • This defaults to enabled and creates the basic skeleton of a server implementation based on hyper
    • To create the server stack you'll need to provide an implementation of the API trait to provide the server function.
  • client
    • This defaults to enabled and creates the basic skeleton of a client implementation based on hyper
    • The constructed client implements the API trait by making remote API call.
  • conversions
    • This defaults to disabled and creates extra derives on models to allow "transmogrification" between objects of structurally similar types.

See https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/manifest.html#the-features-section for how to use features in your Cargo.toml.

Documentation for API Endpoints

All URIs are relative to http://localhost

Method HTTP request Description
get POST /mbus/get/{device}/{baudrate}/{address}
getMulti POST /mbus/getMulti/{device}/{baudrate}/{address}/{maxframes}
hat GET /mbus/hat
hatOff POST /mbus/hat/off
hatOn POST /mbus/hat/on
mbus_api GET /mbus/api
scan POST /mbus/scan/{device}/{baudrate}

Documentation For Models

Documentation For Authorization

Endpoints do not require authorization.

Author

Dependencies

~12–26MB
~362K SLoC