mbusd is open-source Modbus TCP to Modbus RTU (RS-232/485) gateway. It presents a network of RTU slaves as single TCP slave.
That is a TCP-Slave (or server) which acts as a RTU-master to get data from Modbus RTU-slave devices.
- Small footprint - suitable to run on embedded devices and SBCs like Raspberry Pi
- Multi-master - multiple TCP masters can access slave devices in RTU network using same gateway
- Robustness - can retry requests with mismatched response CRC
- Flexible RTU modes - speed/parity/stop-bits/timeouts can be configured for RTU network
- Support for both of automatic and manual (using RTS bit) direction control types for RS-485 transceivers
- 01: Read coil status
- 02: Read input status
- 03: Read holding registers
- 04: Read input registers
- 05: Force single coil
- 06: Preset single register
- 07: Read exception status
- 15: Force multiple coils
- 16: Preset multiple registers
Please note all other function codes (including vendor-specific extensions) are supported on a "best-effort" basis and most likely will fail.
$ git clone https://github.com/3cky/mbusd.git mbusd.git
$ cd mbusd.git
$ mkdir -p build && cd build
$ cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr ..
$ make
$ sudo make install
Compile time options
can be altered in many ways, e.g. by using the following tools in the build
dir:
- ccmake - usually in the package cmake-curses-gui
- cmake-gui - usually in the package cmake-qt-gui
mbusd [-h] [-d] [-L logfile] [-v level] [-c cfgfile]
[-p device] [-s speed] [-m mode] [-S]
[-t] [-r] [-y sysfsfile] [-Y sysfsfile]
[-A address] [-P port] [-C maxconn] [-N retries]
[-R pause] [-W wait] [-T timeout] [-b]
-h Usage help.
-d Instruct mbusd not to fork itself (non-daemonize).
-L logfile
Specifies log file name ('-' for logging to STDOUT only, relative path or bare filename
will be stored at /var/log, default is /var/log/mbusd.log).
-v level
Specifies log verbosity level (0 for errors only, 1 for warnings and 2 for informational
messages also). If mbusd was compiled in debug mode, valid log levels are up to 9,
where log levels above 2 adds logging of information about additional internal events.
-c cfgfile
Read configuration from cfgfile.
-p device
Specifies serial port device name.
-s speed
Specifies serial port speed.
-m mode
Specifies serial port mode (like 8N1).
-S Enable RS-485 support for given serial port device (Linux only)
-t Enable RTS RS-485 data direction control using RTS, active transmit.
-r Enable RTS RS-485 data direction control using RTS, active receive.
-y sysfsfile
Enable RS-485 direction data direction control by writing '1' to sysfs file
for transmitter enable and '0' to file for transmitter disable.
-Y sysfsfile
Enable RS-485 direction data direction control by writing '0' to sysfs file
for transmitter enable and '1' to file for transmitter disable.
-A address
Specifies TCP server address to bind (default is 0.0.0.0).
-P port
Specifies TCP server port number (default is 502).
-C maxconn
Specifies maximum number of simultaneous TCP connections (default is 32).
-N retries
Specifies maximum number of request retries (0 disables retries, default is 3).
-R pause
Specifies pause between requests in milliseconds (default is 100ms).
-W wait
Specifies response wait time in milliseconds (default is 500ms).
-T timeout
Specifies connection timeout value in seconds (0 disables timeout, default is 60).
-b
Instructs mbusd to reply on a broadcast.
Please note running mbusd on default Modbus TCP port (502) requires root privileges!
mbusd can read the configuration from a file specified by -c
command line flag.
Please see example configuration file
for complete list of available configuration options.
mbusd has systemd support.
The build system detects whether the system has systemd after which sudo make install
installs the [email protected]
file on systems with systemd active.
The mbusd service can be started via:
# systemctl start mbusd@<serial port>.service
where <serial port>
is escaped serial port device short name (like ttyUSB0
for /dev/ttyUSB0
device name or serial-rs485
for /dev/serial/rs485
device name).
mbusd started by systemd will read its configuration from file named /etc/mbusd/mbusd-<serial port>.conf
.
This way it's possible to run multiple mbusd instances with different configurations.
To see the mbusd service status:
# systemctl status mbusd@<serial port>.service
To monitor the mbusd service:
# journalctl -u mbusd@<serial port>.service -f -n 10
To start the mbusd service on system boot:
# systemctl enable mbusd@<serial port>.service
Please check systemd documentation for other usefull systemd commands.
mbusd can be launched in Docker container with the following command:
docker run -d --privileged \
--name=mbusd \
-p 502:502 \
-v /dev:/dev \
-v /path/to/mbusd.conf:/etc/mbusd.conf \
3cky/mbusd:latest
where /path/to/mbusd.conf
is the path to mbusd config file in the local filesystem.
Please file issue with attached debug log in verbose (-v9
) mode, i.e.:
# mbusd -L/tmp/mbusd.log -p /dev/ttyUSB0 -s 9600 -P 502 -d -v9
Unless you were prompted so or there is another pertinent reason (e.g. GitHub fails to accept the bug report), please do not send bug reports via personal email.
- Fork it and clone forked repository
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Make your changes
- Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
Dependencies: please see the correct OS-distribution section in the .gitlab-ci.yml
With all dependencies met, one is able to build and execute tests issuing the following bash commands:
# build
mkdir output.dir/ && cd $_
cmake ../ && make
# execute all tests
(cd ../ && python tests/run_itests.py output.dir/mbusd)
Victor Antonovich ([email protected])
Andrew Denysenko ([email protected]):
- RTS RS-485 data direction control
- RTU response receiving by length
James Jarvis ([email protected]):
- file based RS-485 data direction control
Luuk Loeffen ([email protected]):
- systemd support
Nick Mayerhofer ([email protected]):
- CMake build system
This project is distributed under the BSD license. See the LICENSE file for the full license text.