Get Started (CMake)

Note

This is documentation for the CMake-based build system which is currently in preview release. If you encounter any gaps or bugs, please report them in the Issues section of the ESP-IDF repository.

The CMake-based build system will become the default build system in ESP-IDF V4.0. The existing GNU Make based build system will be deprecated in ESP-IDF V5.0.

Important

The following features are not yet supported with the CMake-based build system:

  • Eclipse IDE Documentation
  • Secure Boot
  • Flash Encryption
  • ULP toolchain.

Support for these features will be available before CMake becomes the default build system.

This document is intended to help users set up the software environment for development of applications using hardware based on the Espressif ESP32. Through a simple example we would like to illustrate how to use ESP-IDF (Espressif IoT Development Framework), including the menu based configuration, compiling the ESP-IDF and firmware download to ESP32 boards.

Introduction

ESP32 integrates Wi-Fi (2.4 GHz band) and Bluetooth 4.2 solutions on a single chip, along with dual high performance cores, Ultra Low Power co-processor and several peripherals. Powered by 40 nm technology, ESP32 provides a robust, highly integrated platform to meet the continuous demands for efficient power usage, compact design, security, high performance, and reliability.

Espressif provides the basic hardware and software resources that help application developers to build their ideas around the ESP32 series hardware. The software development framework by Espressif is intended for rapidly developing Internet-of-Things (IoT) applications, with Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, power management and several other system features.

What You Need

To develop applications for ESP32 you need:

  • PC loaded with either Windows, Linux or Mac operating system
  • Toolchain to compile code for ESP32
  • Build tools CMake and Ninja to build a full Application for ESP32
  • ESP-IDF that essentially contains API for ESP32 and scripts to operate the Toolchain
  • A text editor to write programs (Projects) in C, e.g. Eclipse
  • The ESP32 board itself and a USB cable to connect it to the PC
Development of applications for ESP32

Development of applications for ESP32

Steps to set up Development Environment:

  1. Setup of Toolchain
  2. Getting ESP-IDF from GitHub

Once the development environment is set up, we will follow these steps to create an ESP-IDF application:

  1. Configuration of a Project and writing the code
  2. Compilation of the Project and linking it to build an Application
  3. Flashing (uploading) the compiled Application to ESP32 over a USB/serial connection
  4. Monitoring / debugging of the Application output via USB/serial

Development Board Guides

If you have one of ESP32 development boards listed below, click on the link for hardware setup:

If you have different board, move to sections below.

Setup Toolchain

The quickest way to start development with ESP32 is by installing a prebuilt toolchain. Pick up your OS below and follow provided instructions.

windows-logo linux-logo macos-logo
Windows Linux Mac OS

Note

We are an using esp subdirectory in your user’s home directory (~/esp on Linux and MacOS, %userprofile%\esp on Windows) to install everything needed for ESP-IDF. You can use any different directory, but will need to adjust the respective commands.

Depending on your experience and preferences, instead of using a prebuilt toolchain, you may want to customize your environment. To set up the system your own way go to section Customized Setup of Toolchain (CMake).

Once you are done with setting up the toolchain then go to section Get ESP-IDF.

Get ESP-IDF

Besides the toolchain (that contains programs to compile and build the application), you also need ESP32 specific API / libraries. They are provided by Espressif in ESP-IDF repository. To get it, open terminal, navigate to the directory you want to put ESP-IDF, and clone it using git clone command.

Linux and MacOS

mkdir -p ~/esp
cd ~/esp
git clone --recursive https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf.git

ESP-IDF will be downloaded into ~/esp/esp-idf.

Windows Command Prompt

mkdir %userprofile%\esp
cd %userprofile%\esp
git clone --recursive https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf.git

Note

Do not miss the --recursive option. If you have already cloned ESP-IDF without this option, run another command to get all the submodules:

cd esp-idf
git submodule update --init

Setup Environment Variables

ESP-IDF requires two environment variables to be set for normal operation:

  • IDF_PATH should be set to the path to the ESP-IDF root directory.
  • PATH should include the path to the tools directory inside the same IDF_PATH directory.

These two variables should be set up on your PC, otherwise projects will not build.

Setting may be done manually, each time PC is restarted. Another option is to set them permanently in user profile. To do this, follow instructions specific to Windows , Linux and MacOS in section Add IDF_PATH & idf.py PATH to User Profile (CMake).

Start a Project

Now you are ready to prepare your application for ESP32. To start off quickly, we will use get-started/hello_world project from examples directory in IDF.

Copy get-started/hello_world to ~/esp directory:

Linux and MacOS

cd ~/esp
cp -r $IDF_PATH/examples/get-started/hello_world .

Windows Command Prompt

cd %userprofile%\esp
xcopy /e /i %IDF_PATH%\examples\get-started\hello_world hello_world

You can also find a range of example projects under the examples directory in ESP-IDF. These example project directories can be copied in the same way as presented above, to begin your own projects.

It is also possible to build examples in-place, without copying them first.

Important

The esp-idf build system does not support spaces in the path to either esp-idf or to projects.

Connect

You are almost there. To be able to proceed further, connect ESP32 board to PC, check under what serial port the board is visible and verify if serial communication works. If you are not sure how to do it, check instructions in section Establish Serial Connection with ESP32 (CMake). Note the port number, as it will be required in the next step.

Configure

Naviagate to the directory of the hello_world application copy, and run the menuconfig project configuration utility:

Linux and MacOS

cd ~/esp/hello_world
idf.py menuconfig

Windows Command Prompt

cd %userprofile%\esp\hello_world
idf.py menuconfig

Note

If you get an error about idf.py not being found, check the tools directory is part of your Path as described above in Setup Environment Variables. If there is no idf.py in the tools directory, check you have the correct branch for the CMake preview as shown under Get ESP-IDF.

Note

Windows users, the Python 2.7 installer will try to configure Windows to associate files with a .py extension with Python 2. If a separate installed program (such as Visual Studio Python Tools) has created an association with a different version of Python, then running idf.py may not work (it opens the file in Visual Studio instead). You can either run C:\Python27\python idf.py each time instead, or change the association that Windows uses for .py files.

Note

Linux users, if your default version of Python is 3.x then you may need to run python2 idf.py instead.

If previous steps have been done correctly, the following menu will be displayed:

Project configuration - Home window

Project configuration - Home window

Here are couple of tips on navigation and use of menuconfig:

  • Use up & down arrow keys to navigate the menu.
  • Use Enter key to go into a submenu, Escape key to go up a level or exit.
  • Type ? to see a help screen. Enter key exits the help screen.
  • Use Space key, or Y and N keys to enable (Yes) and disable (No) configuration items with checkboxes “[*]
  • Pressing ? while highlighting a configuration item displays help about that item.
  • Type / to search the configuration items.

Attention

When using ESP32-DevKitC board with ESP32-SOLO-1 module, enable single core mode (CONFIG_FREERTOS_UNICORE) in menuconfig before flashing example applications.

Build The Project

Now you can build the project. Run:

idf.py build

This command will compile the application and all the ESP-IDF components, generate bootloader, partition table, and application binaries.

$ idf.py build
Running cmake in directory /path/to/hello_world/build
Executing "cmake -G Ninja --warn-uninitialized /path/to/hello_world"...
Warn about uninitialized values.
-- Found Git: /usr/bin/git (found version "2.17.0")
-- Building empty aws_iot component due to configuration
-- Component names: ...
-- Component paths: ...

... (more lines of build system output)

[527/527] Generating hello-world.bin
esptool.py v2.3.1

Project build complete. To flash, run this command:
../../../components/esptool_py/esptool/esptool.py -p (PORT) -b 921600 write_flash --flash_mode dio --flash_size detect --flash_freq 40m 0x10000 build/hello-world.bin  build 0x1000 build/bootloader/bootloader.bin 0x8000 build/partition_table/partition-table.bin
or run 'idf.py -p PORT flash'

If there are no errors, the build will finish by generating the firmware binary .bin file.

Flash To A Device

Now you can flash the application to the ESP32 board. Run:

idf.py -p PORT flash

Replace PORT with the name of your ESP32 board’s serial port. On Windows, serial ports have names like COM1. On MacOS, they start with /dev/cu.. On Linux, they start with /dev/tty. See Establish Serial Connection with ESP32 (CMake) for full details.

This step will flash the binaries that you just built to your ESP32 board.

Note

Running idf.py build before idf.py flash is not actually necessary, the flash step will automatically build the project if required before flashing.

Running esptool.py in directory [...]/esp/hello_world
Executing "python [...]/esp-idf/components/esptool_py/esptool/esptool.py -b 460800 write_flash @flash_project_args"...
esptool.py -b 460800 write_flash --flash_mode dio --flash_size detect --flash_freq 40m 0x1000 bootloader/bootloader.bin 0x8000 partition_table/partition-table.bin 0x10000 hello-world.bin
esptool.py v2.3.1
Connecting....
Detecting chip type... ESP32
Chip is ESP32D0WDQ6 (revision 1)
Features: WiFi, BT, Dual Core
Uploading stub...
Running stub...
Stub running...
Changing baud rate to 460800
Changed.
Configuring flash size...
Auto-detected Flash size: 4MB
Flash params set to 0x0220
Compressed 22992 bytes to 13019...
Wrote 22992 bytes (13019 compressed) at 0x00001000 in 0.3 seconds (effective 558.9 kbit/s)...
Hash of data verified.
Compressed 3072 bytes to 82...
Wrote 3072 bytes (82 compressed) at 0x00008000 in 0.0 seconds (effective 5789.3 kbit/s)...
Hash of data verified.
Compressed 136672 bytes to 67544...
Wrote 136672 bytes (67544 compressed) at 0x00010000 in 1.9 seconds (effective 567.5 kbit/s)...
Hash of data verified.

Leaving...
Hard resetting via RTS pin...

If there are no issues, at the end of flash process, the module will be reset and “hello_world” application will be running there.

Monitor

To see if “hello_world” application is indeed running, type idf.py -p PORT monitor. This command is launching IDF Monitor application:

$ idf.py -p /dev/ttyUSB0 monitor
Running idf_monitor in directory [...]/esp/hello_world/build
Executing "python [...]/esp-idf/tools/idf_monitor.py -b 115200 [...]/esp/hello_world/build/hello-world.elf"...
--- idf_monitor on /dev/ttyUSB0 115200 ---
--- Quit: Ctrl+] | Menu: Ctrl+T | Help: Ctrl+T followed by Ctrl+H ---
ets Jun  8 2016 00:22:57

rst:0x1 (POWERON_RESET),boot:0x13 (SPI_FAST_FLASH_BOOT)
ets Jun  8 2016 00:22:57
...

Several lines below, after start up and diagnostic log, you should see “Hello world!” printed out by the application.

...
Hello world!
Restarting in 10 seconds...
I (211) cpu_start: Starting scheduler on APP CPU.
Restarting in 9 seconds...
Restarting in 8 seconds...
Restarting in 7 seconds...

To exit the monitor use shortcut Ctrl+].

Note

If instead of the messages above, you see a random garbage similar to:

e���)(Xn@�y.!��(�PW+)��Hn9a؅/9�!�t5��P�~�k��e�ea�5�jA
~zY��Y(1�,1�� e���)(Xn@�y.!Dr�zY(�jpi�|�+z5Ymvp

or monitor fails shortly after upload, your board is likely using 26MHz crystal. Most development board designs use 40MHz and the ESP-IDF uses this default value. Exit the monitor, go back to the menuconfig, change CONFIG_ESP32_XTAL_FREQ_SEL to 26MHz, then build and flash the application again. This is found under idf.py menuconfig under Component config –> ESP32-specific –> Main XTAL frequency.

Note

You can combine building, flashing and monitoring into one step as follows:

idf.py -p PORT flash monitor

Check the section IDF Monitor for handy shortcuts and more details on using the monitor.

Check the section idf.py for a full reference of idf.py commands and options.

That’s all what you need to get started with ESP32!

Now you are ready to try some other examples, or go right to developing your own applications.

Updating ESP-IDF

After some time of using ESP-IDF, you may want to update it to take advantage of new features or bug fixes. The simplest way to do so is by deleting existing esp-idf folder and cloning it again, exactly as when doing initial installation described in sections Get ESP-IDF.

Another solution is to update only what has changed. This method is useful if you have a slow connection to GitHub. To do the update run the following commands:

Linux and MacOS

cd ~/esp/esp-idf
git pull
git submodule update --init --recursive

Windows Command Prompt

cd %userprofile%\esp\esp-idf
git pull
git submodule update --init --recursive

The git pull command is fetching and merging changes from ESP-IDF repository on GitHub. Then git submodule update --init --recursive is updating existing submodules or getting a fresh copy of new ones. On GitHub the submodules are represented as links to other repositories and require this additional command to get them onto your PC.

It is also possible to check out a specific release of ESP-IDF, e.g. v2.1.

Linux and MacOS

cd ~/esp
git clone https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf.git esp-idf-v2.1
cd esp-idf-v2.1/
git checkout v2.1
git submodule update --init --recursive

Windows Command Prompt

cd %userprofile%\esp
git clone https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf.git esp-idf-v2.1
cd esp-idf-v2.1/
git checkout v2.1
git submodule update --init --recursive

After that remember to Add IDF_PATH & idf.py PATH to User Profile (CMake), so the toolchain scripts know where to find the ESP-IDF in it’s release specific location.

Note

Different versions of ESP-IDF may have different setup or prerequisite requirements, or require different toolchain versions. If you experience any problems, carefully check the Getting Started documentation for the version you are switching to.