* Autogenerate packet code in Rust from PDL (packet file copied from rootcanal)
* Implement parsing of packets that have a type header
* Expose Python APIs for sending HCI commands
* Expose Python APIs for instantiating a local controller
- Added Rust wrappers where relevant
- Edited a couple logs in python l2cap_bridge to be more symmetrical
- Created cli subcommand for running the rustified l2cap bridge
Further adventures in porting tools to Rust to flesh out the supported
API.
These tools didn't feel like `example`s, so I made a top level `bumble`
CLI tool that hosts them all as subcommands. I also moved the usb probe
not-really-an-`example` into it as well. I'm open to suggestions on how
best to organize the subcommands to make them intuitive to explore with
`--help`, and how to leave room for other future tools.
I also adopted the per-OS project data dir for a default firmware
location so that users can download once and then use those .bin files
from anywhere without having to sprinkle .bin files in project
directories or reaching inside the python package dir hierarchy.
Following up on the [loose end from the initial
PR](https://github.com/google/bumble/pull/207#discussion_r1278015116),
we can avoid accessing the Python company id map at runtime by doing
code gen ahead of time.
Using an example to do the code gen avoids even the small build slowdown
from invoking the code gen logic in build.rs, but more importantly,
means that it's still a totally boring normal build that won't require
any IDE setup, etc, to work for everyone. Since the company ID list
changes rarely, and there's a test to ensure it always matches, this
seems like a good trade.
This contains Rust wrappers around enough of the Python API to implement Rust versions of the `battery_client` and `run_scanner` examples. The goal is to gather feedback on the approach, and of course to show that it is possible.
The module structure mirrors that of the Python. The Rust API is not optimally Rust-y, but given the constraints of everything having to delegate to Python, it's at least usable.
Notably, this does not yet solve the packaging problem: users must have an appropriate virtualenv, libpython, etc. [PyOxidizer](https://github.com/indygreg/PyOxidizer) may be a viable path there.