trx-rs splits radio hardware access from user-facing interfaces so you can run
rig control, SDR DSP, decoding, audio streaming, and web access as separate,
composable pieces.
| Backends | Yaesu FT-817, Yaesu FT-450D, SoapySDR |
| Frontends | Web UI, rigctl-compatible TCP, JSON-over-TCP |
| Decoders | AIS, APRS, CW, FT8, RDS, VDES, WSPR |
| Audio | Opus streaming between server, client, and browser |
Debian / Ubuntu
sudo apt install build-essential pkg-config cmake libopus-dev libasound2-dev
# Optional — SDR support
sudo apt install libsoapysdr-devFedora
sudo dnf install gcc pkg-config cmake opus-devel alsa-lib-devel
# Optional — SDR support
sudo dnf install SoapySDR-develArch Linux
sudo pacman -S base-devel pkgconf cmake opus alsa-lib
# Optional — SDR support
sudo pacman -S soapysdrmacOS (Homebrew)
brew install cmake opus
# Optional — SDR support
brew install soapysdrSee Build Requirements in the wiki for details on each library.
cargo build --releaseBuild without SDR support: cargo build --release --no-default-features
Run the interactive setup wizard to generate config files for your station:
./target/release/trx-configuratorThe wizard walks you through rig selection, serial port detection, audio
settings, and frontend options, then writes trx-server.toml and
trx-client.toml.
Alternatively, generate example configs and edit them by hand:
./target/release/trx-server --print-config > trx-server.toml
./target/release/trx-client --print-config > trx-client.toml./target/release/trx-server --config trx-server.toml
./target/release/trx-client --config trx-client.tomlOpen the configured HTTP frontend address in a browser (default http://localhost:8080).
graph TD
SDR1["SDR #1"] & SDR2["SDR #2"] <-->|USB| S1["trx-server A"]
SDR3["SDR #3"] & FT817["FT-817"] <-->|USB / serial| S2["trx-server B"]
S1 <-->|"JSON-TCP :4530"| C1["trx-client"]
S1 -->|"Opus-TCP per rig"| C1
S2 <-->|"JSON-TCP :4530"| C1
S2 -->|"Opus-TCP per rig"| C1
C1 <-->|internal channels| F1["Web UI :8080"]
C1 <-->|internal channels| F2["rigctl :4532"]
Each trx-server owns one or more rigs and runs DSP, decoding, and audio capture locally.
A trx-client connects to any number of servers over TCP and exposes them through
a unified set of frontends.
| Resource | Description |
|---|---|
| User Manual | Configuration, features, and usage |
| Architecture | System design, crate layout, data flow, and internals |
| Optimization Guidelines | Performance guidelines for the real-time DSP pipeline |
| Planned Features | Roadmap and design notes |
| Contributing | Commit conventions, workflow, and code style |
BSD-2-Clause. See LICENSES for bundled third-party license files.
