A Rust STDF library for process STDF datalogs of Version V4 and V4-2007.
# Cargo.toml
[dependencies]
rust-stdf = "0.3.1"
Available features are listed below:
gzip
: gzip compression (.gz) support powered byflate2
bzip
: bzip compression (.bz2) support powered bybzip2
zipfile
: zip compression (.zip) support powered byzip
atdf
: ATDF reader + STDF -> ATDF convertor (in dev)serialize
: serialize STDF records byserde
Note: zipfile
feature contains unsafe Rust code, and STDF Reader will only open the first file in the zip archive with no password.
rust-stdf
enable gzip
and bzip
by default, you can also control features by yourself.
rust-stdf = { version="0.3.1", default-features = false, features = ["gzip", ...]}
Here is a simple example to show you how to iterate records in a STDF V4 file. There is a rather complex example in the github repo shows how to use existing APIs to convert STDF to Excel xlsx file.
use rust_stdf::{stdf_file::*, stdf_record_type::*, StdfRecord};
fn main() {
let stdf_path = "demo_file.stdf"; // "demo_file.stdf.gz" "demo_file.stdf.bz2"
let mut reader = match StdfReader::new(&stdf_path) {
Ok(r) => r,
Err(e) => {
println!("{}", e);
return;
}
};
// we will count total DUT# in the file
// and put test result of PTR named
// "continuity test" in a vector.
let mut dut_count: u64 = 0;
let mut continuity_rlt = vec![];
// use type filter to work on certain types,
// use `|` to combine multiple typs
let rec_types = REC_PIR | REC_PTR;
// iterator starts from current file position,
// if file hits EOF, it will NOT redirect to 0.
for rec in reader
.get_record_iter()
.map(|x| x.unwrap())
.filter(|x| x.is_type(rec_types))
{
match rec {
StdfRecord::PIR(_) => {dut_count += 1;}
StdfRecord::PTR(ref ptr_rec) => {
if ptr_rec.test_txt == "continuity test" {
continuity_rlt.push(ptr_rec.result);
}
}
_ => {}
}
}
println!("Total duts {} \n continuity result {:?}",
dut_count,
continuity_rlt);
}