# trx-rs
`trx-rs` is a modular amateur radio control stack written in Rust.
It 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.
The project is built around two primary binaries:
- `trx-server`: talks to radios and SDR backends
- `trx-client`: connects to the server and exposes frontends such as the web UI
## Web UI Demo
> GIF placeholder: add an animated walkthrough of the website here.
## What It Does
- Controls supported radios over networked client/server boundaries
- Exposes a browser UI, a rigctl-compatible frontend, and JSON-based control
- Supports SDR workflows with live spectrum, waterfall, demodulation, and decode
- Streams Opus audio between server, client, and browser
- Runs multiple decoders including AIS, APRS, CW, FT8, RDS, VDES, and WSPR
- Supports multi-rig deployments and SDR virtual channels
- Loads backends and frontends via plugins
## Architecture
At a high level:
1. `trx-server` owns the radio hardware and DSP pipeline.
2. `trx-client` connects to the server over TCP for control and audio.
3. Frontends hang off `trx-client`, including the HTTP web UI.
This separation is intentional: it keeps hardware access local to one host while
making control and monitoring available elsewhere on the network.
## Workspace Layout
- `src/trx-core`: shared types, rig state, controller logic
- `src/trx-protocol`: client/server protocol types and codecs
- `src/trx-app`: shared app bootstrapping, config, logging, plugins
- `src/trx-server`: server binary and backend integration
- `src/trx-client`: client binary and remote connection handling
- `src/trx-client/trx-frontend`: frontend abstraction
- `src/decoders`: protocol-specific decoder crates
- `examples/trx-plugin-example`: minimal plugin example
## Supported Pieces
### Backends
- Yaesu FT-817
- Yaesu FT-450D
- SoapySDR-based SDR backend
### Frontends
- HTTP web frontend
- rigctl-compatible TCP frontend
- JSON-over-TCP frontend
### Decoders
- AIS
- APRS
- CW
- FT8
- RDS
- VDES
- WSPR
## Build Requirements
You will need Rust plus a few system libraries.
### Common dependencies
- `libopus`
- `pkg-config` or `pkgconf`
- `cmake`
### SDR builds
- `libsoapysdr`
### Audio builds
- Core Audio on macOS, or ALSA development packages on Linux
## Configuration
Both `trx-server` and `trx-client` read from a shared `trx-rs.toml`.
- Default lookup order: current directory, `~/.config/trx-rs`, `/etc/trx-rs`
- Use `--config ` to point at an explicit config file
- Use `--print-config` to print an example combined config
Start from [`trx-rs.toml.example`](trx-rs.toml.example).
## Quick Start
### 1. Build
```bash
cargo build
```
### 2. Create a config file
```bash
cp trx-rs.toml.example trx-rs.toml
```
Adjust backend, frontend, audio, and auth settings for your environment.
### 3. Run the server
```bash
cargo run -p trx-server
```
### 4. Run the client
```bash
cargo run -p trx-client
```
### 5. Open the web UI
Open the configured HTTP frontend address in a browser.
## Web Frontend Highlights
- Real-time spectrum and waterfall
- Frequency, mode, and bandwidth control
- Decoder dashboards and history
- SDR virtual channels
- Browser RX/TX audio
- Optional authentication with read-only and control roles
## Authentication
The HTTP frontend supports optional passphrase-based authentication.
- `rx`: read-only access
- `control`: full control access
When exposing the web UI beyond a trusted LAN, run it behind HTTPS and enable
secure cookie settings in the config.
## Audio
Audio is transported as Opus between server, client, and browser.
- `trx-server` captures and encodes audio
- `trx-client` relays audio to the HTTP frontend
- Browsers connect over `/audio`
## Documentation
- [User Manual](docs/User-Manual.md): configuration, features, and usage
- [Architecture](docs/Architecture.md): system design, crate layout, data flow, and internals
- [`CONTRIBUTING.md`](CONTRIBUTING.md): contribution and commit rules
## Project Status
This is an active project with evolving APIs and frontend behavior. Expect some
rough edges and ongoing refactors.
## License
Licensed under BSD-2-Clause.
See [`LICENSES`](LICENSES) for bundled third-party license files.