Skip to main content

Hardware drivers for the PUDA platform.

This project has been archived.

The maintainers of this project have marked this project as archived. No new releases are expected.

Project description

puda-drivers

Hardware drivers for the PUDA (Physical Unified Device Architecture) platform. This package provides Python interfaces for controlling laboratory automation equipment.

Features

  • Gantry Control: Control G-code compatible motion systems (e.g., QuBot)
  • Liquid Handling: Interface with Sartorius rLINE® pipettes and dispensers
  • Serial Communication: Robust serial port management with automatic reconnection
  • Logging: Configurable logging with optional file output to logs folder
  • Cross-platform: Works on Linux, macOS, and Windows

Installation

From PyPI

pip install puda-drivers

Available machines

  • Biologic
  • First

Quick Start

Logging Configuration

Configure logging for your application with optional file output:

import logging
from puda_drivers.core.logging import setup_logging

# Configure logging with file output enabled
setup_logging(
    enable_file_logging=True,
    log_level=logging.DEBUG,
    logs_folder="logs", # Optional: default to logs
    log_file_name="my_experiment"  # Optional: custom log file name
)

# Or disable file logging (console only)
setup_logging(
    enable_file_logging=False,
    log_level=logging.INFO
)

Logging Options:

  • enable_file_logging: If True, logs are written to files in the logs/ folder. If False, logs only go to console (default: False)
  • log_level: Logging level constant (e.g., logging.DEBUG, logging.INFO, logging.WARNING, logging.ERROR, logging.CRITICAL) (default: logging.DEBUG)
  • logs_folder: Name of the folder to store log files (default: "logs")
  • log_file_name: Custom name for the log file. If None or empty, uses timestamp-based name (e.g., log_20250101_120000.log). If provided without .log extension, it will be added automatically.

When file logging is enabled, logs are saved to timestamped files (unless a custom name is provided) in the logs/ folder. The logs folder is created automatically if it doesn't exist.

Device Support

The following device types are supported:

  • GCode - G-code compatible motion systems (e.g., QuBot)
  • Sartorius rLINE® - Electronic pipettes and robotic dispensers
  • Camera - Webcams and USB cameras for image and video capture

Logging Best Practices

For production applications, configure logging at the start of your script:

import logging
from puda_drivers.core.logging import setup_logging

# Configure logging first, before initializing devices
setup_logging(
    enable_file_logging=True,
    log_level=logging.INFO,
    log_file_name="experiment"
)

# Now all device operations will be logged
# ... rest of your code

This ensures all device communication, movements, and errors are captured in log files for debugging and audit purposes.

Finding Serial Ports

To discover available serial ports on your system:

from puda_drivers.core import list_serial_ports

# List all available ports
ports = list_serial_ports()
for port, desc, hwid in ports:
    print(f"{port}: {desc} [{hwid}]")

# Filter ports by description
sartorius_ports = list_serial_ports(filter_desc="Sartorius")

Requirements

  • Python >= 3.8
  • pyserial >= 3.5
  • See pyproject.toml for full dependency list

Development

Setup Development Environment

This package is part of a UV workspace monorepo. First, install uv if you haven't already. See the uv installation guide for platform-specific instructions.

From the repository root:

# Or install dependencies for all workspace packages
uv sync --all-packages

This will:

  • Create a virtual environment at the repository root (.venv/)
  • Install all dependencies for all workspace packages
  • Install puda-drivers and other workspace packages in editable mode automatically

Using the package:

# Run Python scripts with workspace context (recommended, works from anywhere in the workspace)
uv run python your_script.py

# Or activate the virtual environment (from repository root where .venv is located)
source .venv/bin/activate  # On Windows: .venv\Scripts\activate
python your_script.py

Adding dependencies:

# From the package directory
cd libs/drivers
uv add some-package

# Or from repository root
uv add --package puda-drivers some-package

Note: Workspace packages are automatically installed in editable mode, so code changes are immediately available without reinstalling.

Testing

Run tests using pytest with uv run:

# Run all tests
uv run pytest tests/

# Run a specific test file
uv run pytest tests/test_deck.py

# Run a specific test class
uv run pytest tests/test_deck.py::TestDeckToDict

# Run a specific test function
uv run pytest tests/test_deck.py::TestDeckToDict::test_to_dict_empty_deck

# Run with verbose output
uv run pytest tests/ -v

# Run with coverage report
uv run pytest tests/ --cov=puda_drivers --cov-report=html

Note: Make sure you're in the libs/drivers directory or use the full path to the tests directory when running pytest commands.

Building and Publishing

# Build distribution packages
uv build

# cd to puda project root
cd ...

# Publish to PyPI
uv publish
# Username: __token__
# Password: <your PyPI API token>

Version Management

# Set version explicitly
uv version 0.0.1

# Bump version (e.g., 1.2.3 -> 1.3.0)
uv bump minor

Documentation

License

MIT License - see LICENSE file for details.

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Please open an issue or submit a pull request on GitHub.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

puda_drivers-0.0.36.tar.gz (59.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

puda_drivers-0.0.36-py3-none-any.whl (71.4 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file puda_drivers-0.0.36.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: puda_drivers-0.0.36.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 59.1 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: uv/0.9.18 {"installer":{"name":"uv","version":"0.9.18","subcommand":["publish"]},"python":null,"implementation":{"name":null,"version":null},"distro":{"name":"Fedora Linux","version":"43","id":"","libc":null},"system":{"name":null,"release":null},"cpu":null,"openssl_version":null,"setuptools_version":null,"rustc_version":null,"ci":null}

File hashes

Hashes for puda_drivers-0.0.36.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 4e7e95e864542eb8d002e72f512f99289d9800294633a1da90651feb91cbeebd
MD5 7ece46adc0135451382bea6de73f36fc
BLAKE2b-256 e8e5599f79d561ec32f6c85f14159249d8fd8e376c98f815604b11fea0e9881a

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file puda_drivers-0.0.36-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: puda_drivers-0.0.36-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 71.4 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: uv/0.9.18 {"installer":{"name":"uv","version":"0.9.18","subcommand":["publish"]},"python":null,"implementation":{"name":null,"version":null},"distro":{"name":"Fedora Linux","version":"43","id":"","libc":null},"system":{"name":null,"release":null},"cpu":null,"openssl_version":null,"setuptools_version":null,"rustc_version":null,"ci":null}

File hashes

Hashes for puda_drivers-0.0.36-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 04fb7989be24e3ac6008e9a845224e6dc8caf6dd96aff5fc2fa554bc5be34d5a
MD5 691c3bc4b0985be186713961f271b0df
BLAKE2b-256 16fbb754b6ab103ab5bdad95f9ce58e21cb703a9e16c48e944d659f378719344

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page