Establish Serial Connection with ESP32
This section provides guidance how to establish serial connection between ESP32 and PC.
Connect ESP32 to PC
Connect the ESP32 board to the PC using the USB cable. If device driver does not install automatically, identify USB to serial converter chip on your ESP32 board (or external converter dongle), search for drivers in internet and install them.
Below is the list of USB to serial converter chips installed on most of the ESP32 boards produced by Espressif together with links to the drivers:
Please check the board user guide for specific USB to serial converter chip used. The drivers above are primarily for reference. Under normal circumstances, the drivers should be bundled with an operating system and automatically installed upon connecting the board to the PC.
Check port on Windows
Check the list of identified COM ports in the Windows Device Manager. Disconnect ESP32 and connect it back, to verify which port disappears from the list and then shows back again.
Figures below show serial port for ESP32 DevKitC and ESP32 WROVER KIT
Check port on Linux and macOS
To check the device name for the serial port of your ESP32 board (or external converter dongle), run this command two times, first with the board / dongle unplugged, then with plugged in. The port which appears the second time is the one you need:
Linux
ls /dev/tty*
macOS
ls /dev/cu.*
Note
macOS users: if you don’t see the serial port then check you have the USB/serial drivers installed. See Section Connect ESP32 to PC for links to drivers. For macOS High Sierra (10.13), you may also have to explicitly allow the drivers to load. Open System Preferences -> Security & Privacy -> General and check if there is a message shown here about “System Software from developer …” where the developer name is Silicon Labs or FTDI.
Adding user to dialout
on Linux
The currently logged user should have read and write access the serial port over USB. On most Linux distributions, this is done by adding the user to dialout
group with the following command:
sudo usermod -a -G dialout $USER
on Arch Linux this is done by adding the user to uucp
group with the following command:
sudo usermod -a -G uucp $USER
Make sure you re-login to enable read and write permissions for the serial port.
Verify serial connection
Now verify that the serial connection is operational. You can do this using a serial terminal program by checking if you get any output on the terminal after resetting ESP32.
The default console baud rate on ESP32 is 115200.
Windows and Linux
In this example we will use PuTTY SSH Client that is available for both Windows and Linux. You can use other serial programs and set communication parameters like below.
Run terminal and set identified serial port. Baud rate = 115200 (if needed, change this to the default baud rate of the chip in use), data bits = 8, stop bits = 1, and parity = N. Below are example screenshots of setting the port and such transmission parameters (in short described as 115200-8-1-N) on Windows and Linux. Remember to select exactly the same serial port you have identified in steps above.
Then open serial port in terminal and check, if you see any log printed out by ESP32. The log contents will depend on application loaded to ESP32, see Example Output.
Note
Close the serial terminal after verification that communication is working. If you keep the terminal session open, the serial port will be inaccessible for uploading firmware later.
macOS
To spare you the trouble of installing a serial terminal program, macOS offers the screen command.
As discussed in Check port on Linux and macOS, run:
ls /dev/cu.*
You should see similar output:
/dev/cu.Bluetooth-Incoming-Port /dev/cu.SLAB_USBtoUART /dev/cu.SLAB_USBtoUART7
The output will vary depending on the type and the number of boards connected to your PC. Then pick the device name of your board and run (if needed, change “115200” to the default baud rate of the chip in use):
screen /dev/cu.device_name 115200
Replace
device_name
with the name found runningls /dev/cu.*
.What you are looking for is some log displayed by the screen. The log contents will depend on application loaded to ESP32, see Example Output. To exit the screen session type Ctrl-A + \ .
Note
Do not forget to exit the screen session after verifying that the communication is working. If you fail to do it and just close the terminal window, the serial port will be inaccessible for uploading firmware later.
Example Output
An example log is shown below. Reset the board if you do not see anything.
ets Jun 8 2016 00:22:57
rst:0x5 (DEEPSLEEP_RESET),boot:0x13 (SPI_FAST_FLASH_BOOT)
ets Jun 8 2016 00:22:57
rst:0x7 (TG0WDT_SYS_RESET),boot:0x13 (SPI_FAST_FLASH_BOOT)
configsip: 0, SPIWP:0x00
clk_drv:0x00,q_drv:0x00,d_drv:0x00,cs0_drv:0x00,hd_drv:0x00,wp_drv:0x00
mode:DIO, clock div:2
load:0x3fff0008,len:8
load:0x3fff0010,len:3464
load:0x40078000,len:7828
load:0x40080000,len:252
entry 0x40080034
I (44) boot: ESP-IDF v2.0-rc1-401-gf9fba35 2nd stage bootloader
I (45) boot: compile time 18:48:10
...
If you can see readable log output, it means serial connection is working and you are ready to proceed with installation and finally upload of application to ESP32.
Note
For some serial port wiring configurations, the serial RTS & DTR pins need to be disabled in the terminal program before the ESP32 will boot and produce serial output. This depends on the hardware itself, most development boards (including all Espressif boards) do not have this issue. The issue is present if RTS & DTR are wired directly to the EN & GPIO0 pins. See the esptool documentation for more details.
If you got here from Step 5. First Steps on ESP-IDF when installing s/w for ESP32 development, then you can continue with Step 5. First Steps on ESP-IDF.