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Nunavut is a source-to-source compiler (transpiler) that automatically converts OpenCyphal DSDL definitions into source code in a specified target programming language. It is constructed as a template engine that exposes a PyDSDL abstract syntax tree to Jinja2 templates allowing authors to generate code, schemas, metadata, documentation, etc.
Nunavut ships with built-in support for some programming languages, and it can be used to generate code for other languages if custom templates (and some glue logic) are provided. Currently, the following languages are supported out of the box:
- C11 (generates header-only libraries)
- C++ (generates header-only libraries; work-in-progress)
- Python (generates Python packages)
- HTML (generates documentation pages)
Nunavut is named after the Canadian territory. We chose the name because it is a beautiful word to say and read.
Nunavut depends on PyDSDL.
Install from PIP:
pip install -U nunavut
The examples do not replace the documentation, please do endeavor to read it.
This example assumes that the public regulated namespace directories reg
and uavcan
reside under
public_regulated_data_types/
.
Nunavut is invoked to generate code for the former.
nnvg --target-language c --enable-serialization-asserts public_regulated_data_types/reg --lookup-dir public_regulated_data_types/uavcan
See above assumptions. The below commands generate documentation
for the reg
namespace.
Note that we have to generate documentation for the uavcan
namespace
as well, because there are types in reg
that will link to uavcan
documentation sections.
nnvg --experimental-languages --target-language html public_regulated_data_types/reg --lookup-dir public_regulated_data_types/uavcan
nnvg --experimental-languages --target-language html public_regulated_data_types/uavcan
This example assumes that the public regulated namespace directories reg
and uavcan
reside under
public_regulated_data_types/
.
Nunavut is invoked to generate code for the former.
nnvg --target-language py public_regulated_data_types/reg --lookup-dir public_regulated_data_types/uavcan
Partial example: generating a C struct
/*
* Cyphal data structure definition
*
* Auto-generated, do not edit.
*
* Source file: {{T.source_file_path.as_posix()}}
*/
#ifndef {{T.full_name | ln.c.macrofy}}
#define {{T.full_name | ln.c.macrofy}}
{%- for constant in T.constants %}
#define {{ T | ln.c.macrofy }}_{{ constant.name | ln.c.macrofy }} {{ constant | constant_value }}
{%- endfor %}
typedef struct
{
/*
Note that we're not handling union types properly in this simplified example.
Unions take a bit more logic to generate correctly.
*/
{%- for field in T.fields_except_padding %}
{{ field.data_type | declaration }} {{ field | id }}
{%- if field.data_type is ArrayType -%}
[{{ field.data_type.capacity }}]
{%- endif -%};
{%- if field is VariableLengthArrayType %}
{{ typename_unsigned_length }} {{ field | id }}_length;
{%- endif -%}
{%- endfor %}
...
} {{ T | full_reference_name }};
#endif // {{T.full_name | ln.c.macrofy}}
Where to find more examples to get started:
- See built-in templates under
nunavut.lang.LANGUAGE.templates
. - API usage examples can be found in the Pycyphal library.
Nunavut embeds the following third-party software libraries into its source (i.e. these are not dependencies and do not need to be installed):
- Jinja2 by Armin Ronacher and contributors, BSD 3-clause license.
- markupsafe by Armin Ronacher and contributors, BSD 3-clause license (needed for Jinja).
The documentation for Nunavut is hosted on readthedocs.io:
- nunavut - The python library provided by this project.
- nnvg – Command-line script for using nunavut directly or as part of a build system.
- nunavut template guide – Documentation for authors of nunavut templates.
- nunavut contributors guide – Documentation for contributors to the Nunavut project.
- nunavut licenses – Licenses and copyrights
Nunavut is part of the OpenCyphal project: