This crate provides a safe wrapper around the native libusb library. It applies the RAII pattern
and Rust lifetimes to ensure safe usage of all libusb functionality. The RAII pattern ensures that
all acquired resources are released when they're no longer needed, and Rust lifetimes ensure that
resources are released in a proper order.
In order to use the libusb crate, you must have the native libusb library installed where it can
be found by pkg-config.
All systems supported by the native libusb library are also supported by the libusb crate. It's
been tested on Linux, OS X, and Windows.
The libusb crate can be used when cross-compiling to a foreign target. Details on how to
cross-compile libusb are explained in the libusb-sys crate's
README.
Add libusb as a dependency in Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
libusb = "0.3"Import the libusb crate. The starting point for nearly all libusb functionality is to create a
context object. With a context object, you can list devices, read their descriptors, open them, and
communicate with their endpoints:
extern crate libusb;
fn main() {
    let mut context = libusb::Context::new().unwrap();
    for mut device in context.devices().unwrap().iter() {
        let device_desc = device.device_descriptor().unwrap();
        println!("Bus {:03} Device {:03} ID {:04x}:{:04x}",
            device.bus_number(),
            device.address(),
            device_desc.vendor_id(),
            device_desc.product_id());
    }
}Copyright © 2015 David Cuddeback
Distributed under the MIT License.