Port Legacy C App
This topic describes how to get a POSIX/Linux legacy app written in C running on a Legato device and using Legato APIs to access services like SMS, SIM, voice calling, and data connections.
- Note
- The examples in this topic use the command-line tools. You will need to have your shell configured correctly by running basicBuildLegato_configShell_binlegs in the directory where your framework is installed. $ path/to/LegatoFramework/bin/legs
The examples also use a Sierra Wireless WP85xx target. If your using a different target, substitute your target name wherever you seeWP85
.
The examples use IP address 192.168.2.2. Change it if your target IP uses a different address.
Cross-Build
The most basic way to get your legacy app running on a Legato target device is to recompile it using the provided cross-build tool chain and copy it onto the device using a tool like scp
.
1
. Build a legacy app executable for your target device using the cross tool chain provided.
$ $WP85_TOOLCHAIN_DIR/arm-poky-linux-gnueabi-gcc -o legacyProgram main.c
2
. Copy the legacy app executable onto the target using a tool like scp:
$ scp legacyProgram 192.168.2.2:legacyProgram 100% 9366 9.2KB/s 00:00
3
. Run the legacy app from the target command-line:
root@swi-mdm9x15:~# ./legacyProgramHello world.
Use Legato App Management Tools
By bundling your program as a Legato app, you gain access to a wealth of valuable features:
- Tools for installing and removing apps and checking app status on the target and on the development host.
- Remote (over-the-air) installation, upgrade, removal, start, stop.
- Autonomous fault recovery (automatic restart of process, whole app, or whole device) in the field.
- Automatic mandatory access control (MAC) configuration.
- Optional application sandboxing.
- Optional application signing and/or encryption.
1
. Create a .adef
file (e.g., legacyProgram.adef
) that bundles the cross-compiled executable into an application:
// Disable the sandbox security to make things a little easier.sandboxed: false// Put the cross-compiled legacy program in the app's bin directory.// [x] = make it executable.bundles:{file:{[x] legacyProgram /bin/}}// Tell the Supervisor to start this program when the application is started.processes:{run:{( legacyProgram )}}
2
. Run mkapp
to generate an application bundle for your target:
$ mkapp -t wp85 legacyProgram.adef
3
. Install the app bundle on the target using update:
$ update legacyProgram.wp85.updateInstalling application 'legacyProgram' from file 'legacyProgram.wp85'.Installing app 'legacyProgram'...Created user 'applegacyProgram' (uid 1011, gid 1011).DONE
4
. From the target's command line, use app start
to run the program:
$ ssh root@192.168.2.2Linux swi-mdm9x15 3.4.91-8fcd3d08ac_7e84772e18 #1 PREEMPT Wed Jun 3 23:59:46 PDT 2015 armv7l GNU/Linuxroot@swi-mdm9x15:~# app start legacyProgramStarting app 'legacyProgram'...DONE
5
. Look for the program output in the target device's log using logread
.
- Note
- You can filter the log to show just your program's output by piping the output from
logread
intogrep
.
root@swi-mdm9x15:~# logread | grep legacyProgramJan 16 04:00:53 swi-mdm9x15 user.info Legato: INFO | legacyProgram[27271] | Hello world.
Use Legato Services
Many Legato services are provided through IPC-based APIs. The ifgen
tool can generate the IPC code for you, along with a header (.h) file that you can #include
to gain access to the service.
Here is how to use a Legato modem service API (e.g., le_info). The source code for this example can be found in apps/sample/legacy/useLegatoApi/
.
1
. Run ifgen
to generate the .c and .h files you need to access the interface.
- Use the
--gen-interface
option to generate the interface header (le_info_interface.h
). - Use the
--gen-client
option to generate the client-side IPC implementation (le_info_client.c
). - Use the
--gen-local
option to generate definitions that are shared by both the client side and server side IPC code (le_info_messages.h
).
ifgen --gen-interface --gen-client --gen-local $LEGATO_ROOT/interfaces/modemServices/le_info.api
2
. Include legato.h
in your program.
#include "legato.h"
3
. Include the API's generated "interface" header file.
#include "le_info_interface.h"
4
. Connect to the service by calling le_info_ConnectService() (using legacy main function).
int main(int argc, char** argv){return EXIT_SUCCESS;}
- Note
- At runtime, if the
le_info
service isn't available, this will block until it becomes available. In the meantime, you'll see your app in the WAITING CLIENTS list if you run sdir list.
5
. Add a call to one of the le_info
API functions (e.g., le_info_GetDeviceModel() ).
int main(int argc, char** argv){char deviceModelStr[256];if (result == LE_OK){printf("Hello world from %s.\n", deviceModelStr);}else{printf("Failed to get device model. Error = '%s'.\n", LE_RESULT_TXT(result));}return EXIT_SUCCESS;}
- Note
- For hand-written C code, you need to use
\n
to terminate messages asstdout
only displays info in the buffer after it reaches a new line.
6
. Compile and link your executable with the code generated by ifgen:
$ export CC=$WP85_TOOLCHAIN_DIR/arm-poky-linux-gnueabi-gcc$ $CC -c main.c -I$LEGATO_ROOT/framework/include$ $CC -c le_info_client.c -I$LEGATO_ROOT/framework/include$ $CC -o legacyProgram main.o le_info_client.o -L${LEGATO_ROOT}/build/${TARGET}/bin/lib -llegato -lpthread -lrt
7
. Build app:
$ mkdir _build$ $CC -o _build/legacyProgram main.o le_info_client.o -L$LEGATO_ROOT/build/$TARGET/framework/lib -llegato -lpthread -lr
8
. Create a extern:
requires:
section for the le_info
interface in the .adef
file:
extern:{requires:{le_info = $LEGATO_ROOT/interfaces/modemServices/le_info.api}}
9
. Specify which instance of the le_info
service your app should use by creating a binding in the .adef
file:
bindings:{\*.le_info -> modemService.le_info}
- Note
- Actually, there's only one instance of
le_info
today, but if there were multiple, this would specify which one to use; and even when there's only one instance, we create a binding anyway to explicitly grant access permission so access is never unknowingly granted.
9
. Re-generate your application bundle, install it, and run it on target:
$ mkapp -t wp85 legacyProgram.adef$ update legacyProgram.update.wp85 192.168.2.2Installing application 'legacyProgram' from file 'legacyProgram.wp85'.Removing app 'legacyProgram'...Deleted user 'applegacyProgram'.Installing app 'legacyProgram'...Created user 'applegacyProgram' (uid 1011, gid 1011).DONE$ app start legacyProgram 192.168.2.2
Callbacks from Legato APIs
If you need asynchronous callbacks (i.e., handlers), you'll need to service the Legato event loop for your thread. To do this, use le_event_GetFd() and le_event_ServiceLoop(). See Integrating with Legacy POSIX Code for more details.
The sample app for this is found in apps/sample/legacy/useLegatoHandler
.
Here's some sample code:
struct pollfd pollControl;pollControl.fd = le_event_GetFd();pollControl.events = POLLIN;while (true){int result = poll(&pollControl, 1, -1);if (result > 0){while (le_event_ServiceLoop() == LE_OK){/* Work was done by le_event_ServiceLoop(), and it has more to do. */}}else{// Poll failed. You could check for zero if you're ultra paranoid,// but poll should never return zero when timeout is -1.LE_FATAL("poll() failed with errno %m.");}}
Sandboxing Your App
To tell the Supervisor to run your app inside a sandbox, remove the following line from your app's .adef
file:
sandboxed: false
Or, you can change false
to true:
sandboxed: true
Then re-bundle your app using mkapp
.
The most commonly-used system libraries, such as libc
and libpthread
, will be visible inside your app's sandbox by default, but you may now find that your app won't run because some other files are missing from its sandbox.
Use the requires: section in the app's .adef file to add things to the sandbox.
Sample Legacy Apps
Sample Legacy C apps are available in the Legato/apps/sample/legacy
directory.
Copyright (C) Sierra Wireless Inc.