This crate provides macros to generate bitfield-like struct.
This a complete rewrite of the bitfield crate.
You can find the previous version in the rust-bitfield-legacy repository. This version works on the stable version of rustc and use a different syntax with different possibility.
An IPv4 header could be described like that:
bitfield!{
/// A IPV4 header
struct IpV4Header(MSB0 [u8]);
u32;
/// The version field
get_version, _: 3, 0;
/// The Internet Header Length (IHL) field
get_ihl, _: 7, 4;
/// ...
get_dscp, _: 13, 8;
get_ecn, _: 15, 14;
get_total_length, _: 31, 16;
get_identification, _: 47, 32;
get_df, _: 49;
get_mf, _: 50;
get_fragment_offset, _: 63, 51;
get_time_to_live, _: 71, 64;
get_protocol, _: 79, 72;
get_header_checksum, _: 95, 79;
get_source_address, _: 127, 96;
get_destination_address, _: 159, 128;
}In this example, all the fields are read-only, the _ as setter name signals to skip the setter method. The range at the end (e.g. 3, 0) defines the bit range where the information is encoded.
The documentation of the released version is available on doc.rs.
When defining a field, the MSB comes first and the LSB second.
When the type of a field is signed (i8, i16, ...) sign extension is done when reading the field. THis means that if the MSB of the read bits is 1, the returned values will be negative.
This also means that the valid range of value for the field is different that a unsigend field. A 4 bits field got from -8 (-23) to 7 (23-1) instead of 0 to 15.
Licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.