Jacob Dahl 8bd42e728e feat(crsf_rc): add CRSF receiver bind command (#26790)
* feat(crsf_rc): add CRSF receiver bind command

Add ability to initiate CRSF receiver binding from QGroundControl or
the NSH console. When MAV_CMD_START_RX_PAIR is received with
RC_TYPE_CRSF, the driver sends the CRSF bind command frame over UART.

Binding is rejected when armed or on singlewire configurations.

Also adds RC_TYPE and RC_SUB_TYPE constants to VehicleCommand.msg and
replaces magic numbers in DsmRc and RCInput drivers.

Based on PX4/PX4-Autopilot#23294.

* style(crsf_rc): use C++ style comment

* style(crsf_rc): zero-init vcmd, remove noisy comments, drop unused enum value

* fix(rc): check write return value in BindCRSF, guard Spektrum bind against invalid sub-type

* fix(rc): warn and deny invalid Spektrum bind sub-type

Previously, an unrecognized param2 sub-type would silently leave
dsm_bind_pulses at 0 and return the generic UNSUPPORTED ACK. Add an
explicit else-branch that logs a PX4_WARN and returns DENIED so users
get clear feedback in QGC.
2026-05-15 19:42:53 -06:00
2026-02-27 12:39:32 -08:00
2026-05-15 16:10:52 +00:00

PX4 Autopilot

The autopilot stack the industry builds on.

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About

PX4 is an open-source autopilot stack for drones and unmanned vehicles. It supports multirotors, fixed-wing, VTOL, rovers, and many more experimental platforms from racing quads to industrial survey aircraft. It runs on NuttX, Linux, and macOS. Licensed under BSD 3-Clause.

Why PX4

Modular architecture. PX4 is built around uORB, a DDS-compatible publish/subscribe middleware. Modules are fully parallelized and thread safe. You can build custom configurations and trim what you don't need.

Wide hardware support. PX4 runs on a wide range of autopilot boards and supports an extensive set of sensors, telemetry radios, and actuators through the Pixhawk ecosystem.

Developer friendly. First-class support for MAVLink and DDS / ROS 2 integration. Comprehensive SITL simulation, hardware-in-the-loop testing, and log analysis tools. An active developer community on Discord and the weekly dev call.

Vendor neutral governance. PX4 is hosted under the Dronecode Foundation, part of the Linux Foundation. Business-friendly BSD-3 license. No single vendor controls the roadmap.

Supported Vehicles

Multicopter
Multicopter
Fixed Wing
Fixed Wing
VTOL
VTOL
Rover
Rover

…and many more: helicopters, autogyros, airships, submarines, boats, and other experimental platforms. These frames have basic support but are not part of the regular flight-test program. See the full airframe reference.

Try PX4

Run PX4 in simulation with a single command. No build tools, no dependencies beyond Docker:

docker run --rm -it -p 14550:14550/udp px4io/px4-sitl:latest

Open QGroundControl and fly. See PX4 Simulation Quickstart for more options.

Build from Source

git clone https://github.com/PX4/PX4-Autopilot.git --recursive
cd PX4-Autopilot
make px4_sitl

Note

See the Development Guide for toolchain setup and build options.

Documentation & Resources

Resource Description
User Guide Build, configure, and fly with PX4
Developer Guide Modify the flight stack, add peripherals, port to new hardware
Airframe Reference Full list of supported frames
Autopilot Hardware Compatible flight controllers
Release Notes What's new in each release
Contribution Guide How to contribute to PX4

Community

Contributing

We welcome contributions of all kinds — bug reports, documentation, new features, and code reviews. Please read the Contribution Guide to get started.

Citation

If you use PX4 in academic work, please cite it. BibTeX:

@software{px4_autopilot,
  author    = {Meier, Lorenz and {The PX4 Contributors}},
  title     = {{PX4 Autopilot}},
  publisher = {Zenodo},
  doi       = {10.5281/zenodo.595432},
  url       = {https://px4.io}
}

The DOI above is a Zenodo concept DOI that always resolves to the latest release. For a version-pinned citation, see the Zenodo record or our CITATION.cff.

Governance

The PX4 Autopilot project is hosted by the Dronecode Foundation, a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project. Dronecode holds all PX4 trademarks and serves as the project's legal guardian, ensuring vendor-neutral stewardship — no single company owns the name or controls the roadmap. The source code is licensed under the BSD 3-Clause license, so you are free to use, modify, and distribute it in your own projects.

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Languages
C++ 51.7%
C 37.6%
CMake 4.7%
Python 3.7%
Shell 1.3%
Other 0.8%